Author Topic: Group home security:  (Read 1780 times)

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Offline Oscar

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Group home security:
« on: September 20, 2011, 03:09:06 AM »
Police seek teen who ran away from group home on Muskowekwan First Nation
LEADER-POST AUGUST 8, 2011
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REGINA —The RCMP are using a plane Monday morning to search an area near the Muskowekwan First Nation where a missing teen was last seen on the weekend.

Moondust Star Walton, 15, was among nine youths to run away from a group home on Saturday afternoon before Walton ventured off on her own after being involved in a dispute with the other youths. The girl’s disappearance was reported to the RCMP on Sunday after the eight other youths were found and returned home.

On Monday morning, a search plane was being used to look for Walton, who was wearing a green T-shirt when she was last seen on Saturday at 5 p.m.

“You can get a better view of the area from a plane … with the fact that she was wearing green, we hope that she will be easy to spot,” said RCMP Sgt. Paul Dawson.

While investigators say skies were clear on Saturday, there has been significant rain and hail and low temperatures in the evenings since the girl’s disappearance.

Monday’s search was being aided by Yorkton police and the RCMP Search and Rescue Team.

At the time of her disappearance on Saturday at 5 p.m., Walton was wearing a lime green T-shirt and grey sweatpants. She is 5-foot-6 and weights 130 pounds.

Anyone with information is asked to call Punnichy RCMP at 306-835-5200 or Saskatchewan Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS.

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Losing 9 teenagers at the same time makes me wonder how the conditions are. In general that place must be far from funny.
« Last Edit: September 20, 2011, 03:24:29 AM by Oscar »

Offline Oscar

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Death on I-5 near Seattle
« Reply #1 on: September 20, 2011, 03:23:53 AM »
A story about another group home in another state:

The boy who killed himself on I-5
by Linda Thomas, My North West, March 28, 2011

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Last Friday a teenager jumped off a I-5 overpass, fell to the freeway below, was struck by a van, and died. Many people heard a little bit about what happened because Northbound I-5 was closed for several hours and traffic backed up miles during the afternoon commute.

Who was he?

He was 15 years old, born in December of 1995. The Snohomish County Medical Examiner identifies him as Roger Eugene Benson.

When Benson was three years old, he was taken away from his parents.

"Any child who becomes a dependent of child welfare is a victim of child abuse or neglect," says Sherry Hill, with the state Children's Administration. "It has to reach a point of questions of a child's safety in order to be actually removed from their parents."

For the next 12 years the bounced around from one home or facility to the next. During that time the state worked "cooperatively" with the Yakama Tribal Court and the Yakama Tribal Child Welfare Agency to provide services for the boy.

Hill says it's not typical for a child to be a ward of the state for that many years.

"In most cases we do whatever we can to find permanency for children, whether they return home or whether they end up with relatives," she says.

This wasn't one of those cases of "permanency." He was involved in several crimes over the years.

On January 7, 2011 he was placed in a group home in Lynnwood. The facility describes itself as a behavioral rehabilitation service.

"On Janu-ary 21st he ran away from the facility in the afternoon at 1:45 p.m. and law enforcement was immediately notified," says Hill.

He left the group home at 1:45 in the afternoon. Fifteen minutes later he was on an I-5 overpass. A witness, who was also walking on the overpass, told investigators it looked like the 15 year old kneeled down momentarily. At 2:06 in the afternoon he jumped to his death. He committed suicide.

There are people who know more about Benson, but they can't talk about him due to privacy laws. While the state will investigate "the fatality," as they call it, there's not more more they'll say.

Hill says, "Everyone needs to always pay attention to the youth around them, whether they're in State care or whether they're at home."

A spokesperson for the Lynnwood facility the teen ran away from says it "was extremely sad to hear of a young life that has been lost, and this is a very tragic situation. Our hearts and our prayers go out to the family and friends of this young man."

---+---+---

Victim list will be updated.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline 325troll

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Re: Group home security:
« Reply #2 on: September 20, 2011, 03:28:23 AM »
Oscar you're so worried about children in the United States of America, worry about your own country!  lol
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Oscar

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Re: Group home security:
« Reply #3 on: September 20, 2011, 03:35:06 AM »
More on the Lynwood group home case:

Teen who committed suicide had been in 22 foster homes
By Rikki King, The Herald Weekly,  July 21, 2011

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LYNNWOOD -- A boy who jumped to his death from a Lynnwood overpass in January had been on a waiting list for a bed at a state-run psychiatric hospital. He had been in 22 different foster homes since 1998.

The boy, 14, ran away from his Lynnwood-area group home Jan. 21. Just 20 minutes later, he jumped from the Alderwood Mall Parkway overpass onto I-5 below.

His public death, which played out in front of shocked witnesses and stalled traffic on I-5 for hours, haunted many. The state's Children's Administration on July 20 released an executive fatality review of the boy's death. The administration is a division of the state Department of Social and Health Services.

The boy was a dependent of a Yakama tribal child welfare agency and had been a ward of the state since he was a toddler. The Herald is not naming him because of his age and the circumstances surrounding his death.

State law requires the Children's Administration to conduct a fatality review every time a child dies unexpectedly while in its care or while receiving its services, spokeswoman Sherry Hill said.

The fatality reviews don't seek to explain all the circumstances surrounding a child's death.

"We look at ways to improve education, policy, training and then if there are any legislative changes that may be needed," Hill said.

During the boy's life, the Children's Administration had worked with the welfare agency and tribal courts to provide services to him.

Tribal leaders and tribal health care workers were involved in the fatality review. So were representatives from multiple districts within the Children's Administration where the boy had lived, Hill said.

Since June 2009, the boy had been in group homes supervised by staff. Just weeks before his death he was placed at Cypress House in the Lynnwood area awaiting room at the psychiatric hospital.

In the year leading up to his being placed in tribal care as a toddler, the boy was visited at least six times by Child Protective Services, records show. Each visit investigated allegations that the boy's mother was abusing or neglecting her children.

Social workers for years tried to involve the boy's parents in his care.

His mother committed suicide in 2001. A few years later, his father was sent to prison.

The boy and his siblings' longest stay in one place was several years in a Yakama Nation foster home. The stability of the home was good for them while they dealt with their mother's death, the review says. However, the foster father died in 2004, and the grieving foster mother asked for the children to be removed.

After that, the boy had a history of struggling to adjust to new homes. He had significant behavioral and mental health issues, the details of which are blacked out in the report.

The boy in 2009 faced legal trouble in Benton and Yakima counties, court records show. Both cases involved assaults. He was still under active court supervision at the time of his death.

Late last summer, caseworkers started trying to get him into a psychiatric hospital.

The fatality review found that case workers did not consistently convey information about the boy's history to all involved in his care, especially regarding his behavior issues and safety planning. People at the group home in Lynnwood may not have known about the behaviors that led the state to seek a hospital placement. He was supposed to be under constant "visual and earshot" supervision at the home.

The review team concluded more supervision may have been needed. It also suggested more scrutiny for placing young people with such complex cases outside their home communities.

The review recommends that Children's Administration workers in similar cases make sure every caregiver has a comprehensive summary of the case. That discussion should occur before the child is placed at the home. The administration also may want to develop additional training for foster parents who care for children with complex mental health and behavioral issues, the team suggested.

In the week after his death, the boy's body was returned to his family for burial. An obituary that ran in an Eastern Washington newspaper said he was an enrolled member of the Yakama Nation. He spent at least part of his life on the Yakama Reservation and was a member of the Shaker and Longhouse religions.

Memorial services took place over several days in the Yakima area shortly after his body was sent back home.

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22 places is not that seldom. Even here in Denmark we experience breakdown in 41 percent of the placements the social services conduct. A report released by our national research center in Denmark teach us a very important message. Only if the placement is something the youth want there is a chance of success (SUMMARY: THE COLLAPSE OF THE PLACEMENTS OF ADOLESCENTS. RISK FACTORS IN YOUNG PEOPLE, PARENTS, PLACEMENT LOCATIONS AND IN THE PROCEEDINGS)
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Che Gookin

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Re: Group home security:
« Reply #4 on: September 20, 2011, 03:48:18 AM »
Holy shit.. I lived near that area when I was a kid.  :jawdrop:
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Oscar

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Re: Group home security:
« Reply #5 on: September 20, 2011, 04:02:23 AM »
Quote from: "325troll"
Oscar you're so worried about children in the United States of America, worry about your own country!  lol

We do worry. In fact we work together with a number of organizations in Denmark working to protect the security of children placed in group homes, foster care, treatment centers and boarding schools.

Right now our parliament are talking about how to increase supervision of the families have children in their care after a number of scandals where we pushed the stories so they became nation wide headlines instead of a small story on page 39.

This summer the authorities toughened the rules schools have to apply to when they take students out in smaller boats. We helped by letting them know that the Dragon boat tragedy where a teacher died and several students will be on welfare eating tube food for years when they capsized in icy waters could have been avoided because another student lost his life in a similar accident years before. But the boarding school which lost a student had a smart marketing agency and continues to be the largest employer in that part of our country so they avoided legal complications and the death was too soon forgotten.

This time is was different and it was partly due to a massive blog attack where we participated. As result of our effort the entire number of Danish students attending the boarding schools have dropped.

But we also have to help out in the States because the various abuse therapy methods invented here find their way to Denmark. In Denmark we about to enter the 1990's 3-strike-and-you-are-out, boot camps and kids should be punished as adults decade. All things you have used and you now know don't work.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Xelebes

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Re: Group home security:
« Reply #6 on: September 20, 2011, 08:33:09 AM »
Muskowekwan is a native reserve and they have deplorable economic conditions there (I can't think of many native reserves where economic hardship is not an everyday problem.)  There needs to be greater efforts in amending the idiocies of the Indians & Metis Act.
« Last Edit: September 20, 2011, 11:41:48 AM by Xelebes »

dragonfly

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Re: Group home security:
« Reply #7 on: September 20, 2011, 11:40:27 AM »
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Che Gookin

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Re: Group home security:
« Reply #8 on: September 20, 2011, 07:20:30 PM »
Quote from: "325troll"
Oscar you're so worried about children in the United States of America, worry about your own country!  lol

Coverguard or whatever he was called used to be far easier of the danish lot to get worked up over Danish or Scandinavian nationalism. Coverguard went on some hilarious rants from time to time which made him prime trolling material.

Oscar isn't such an easy target. I've tried a few times.

Quote
Muskowekwan is a native reserve and they have deplorable economic conditions there (I can't think of many native reserves where economic hardship is not an everyday problem.) There needs to be greater efforts in amending the idiocies of the Indians & Metis Act.

Yeah as much as people bitch about the Native American groups getting a free ride off the government there is a distinct reason for them getting government subsidies in the first place. The reservations they live on make them separate from state jurisdiction and most reservations do not have the tax base to support the proper schools and hospitals.

Hence Federal government subsidies.. duhh..

We do the same thing for other rural poor and disadvantage urban areas, not sure why some people think the Native Americans are getting something everyone else isn't. The Native American issues are going to take a few more generations to break out of their traditional patterns of poverty and apathy, but I predict more or less full integration into mainstream society within fifty or so years given the wide spread use of the internet and the flight of so many young Native Americans off the reservations to get educated and to get good jobs elsewhere.

In the meantime though I think we should expect more articles in the line of those posted. Bleh.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Xelebes

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Re: Group home security:
« Reply #9 on: September 20, 2011, 09:30:37 PM »
There is also the issue of the residential schools.  On the bus home, there was a native couple who sat beside to me who sounded a intoxicated.  They looked like they were amongst the last ones to get out of the schools (the last one closed in 1982,) so it was no surprise that they tottered from being giddy and cracking jokes to talking about extremely dark stuff: suicide, domestic abuse, health problems and griping about their inability to read.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »