Posted on 05/19/2004 11:40:05 PM PDT by kattracks
Little Angelo finally got justice, though he died too young to even know what justice meant. Angelo Marinda lived only eight months and it took more than twice that long to convict his father of his murder.
Tragically, the policies and the mindset among the authorities responsible for the well-being of children -- the practices and notions that put this baby at risk -- are still in place and more such tragedies are waiting to happen. Little Angelo came to the authorities' attention just 12 days after he was born, when he turned up at a hospital with broken bones.
How would a baby less than two weeks old have broken bones? And what do you do about it?
Many of us would say that you get that baby away from whoever broke his bones and never let them near him again. But that is not what the "experts" say. Experts always have "solutions." How else are they going to be experts?
The fashionable solution is called "family reunification services." The severity of little Angelo's injuries would have made it legally possible to simply take him away and put him up for adoption by one of the many couples who are hoping to adopt a baby.
But no. Through the magic of "family reunification services" parents are supposed to be changed so that they will no longer be abusive.
A social worker told the court two years ago that the San Mateo County Children and Family Services Agency "will be recommending reunification services, as the parents are receptive to receiving services." The fact that little Angelo's sister had already had to be removed from that same home did not seem to dampen this optimism.
At the heart of all this is the pretense to knowledge that we simply do not have and may never have. There are all sorts of lofty phrases about teaching "parenting skills" or "anger management" or other pious hopes. And children's lives are being risked on such notions.
Little Angelo himself apparently knew better. After months in a foster home, he was allowed back for a visit with his parents and "had a look of fear in his eyes" when he saw them.
But "expertise" brushes aside what non-experts believe -- and little Angelo was not an expert, at least not in the eyes of the social workers who were in charge of his fate. The fact that he had returned from a previous visit with bruises did not make a dent on the experts.
Social workers thought it would be nice if little Angelo could have a two-day unsupervised visit with his parents at Christmas. It was a visit from which he would not return alive.
Now, more than 16 months after the baby's death, Angelo's father has been convicted of having literally shaken him to death. Incidentally, there were experts who testified on the father's behalf at the trial, one of whom gave testimony that contradicted what he himself had written in a book. This expert had never seen little Angelo, dead or alive.
The time is long overdue for us to stop pretending to know things that nobody knows -- not even people with impressive letters in front of their names or behind their names. Whether these experts are simply cynical guns for hire or really believe their own theories and rhetoric is beside the point. Unsubstantiated theories are no foundation for risking the lives of the helpless.
How anyone could break the bones of a newborn baby is something that people may speculate about. But to claim to know how to turn such parents into decent human beings is reckless. And to risk a baby's life on such speculation is criminal.
It is too bad that only one man will go to jail for this crime. There ought to be room in a cell somewhere for the social workers and their bosses who made this murder possible in the face of blatant evidence about the dangers that an infant could see, even if the responsible adults refused to see.
The pretense of knowledge allows judges, social workers, and others to "do something" by sending people to "training" in "parenting skills" and other psychobabble with no track record of success. And it allows children like little Angelo to be killed.
©2004 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
Bump... just horrible.
Less than 8 months old and this little baby was cognizant enough to have "fear in his eyes" the first time he saw his parents since his removal a few months earlier?
He knew what it meant if he saw them again - pain.
Who ARE THESE PEOPLE WHO GIVE ABUSED CHILDREN BACK TO THE ABUSERS???
I'm not trying to take anything away from this article, but social services goes too far the "other way". It seems that they're on the hunt for "adoptable children". In some cases, they terrorize homeschooling parents by threatening to remove their children from healthy, stabile homes.
Imo, little Angelo wasn't adoptable. If it was little white Anthony, it would probably be different. The states get federal money for each child they snatch and adopt out, btw...
Having said that, I feel so sorry for little Angelo. May he rest in peace with Jesus.
I'm not defending this a-hole father, but let's be realistic about what 8 month olds can remember. My then 8 month old son cried and was scared of me when I first held him after being gone on deployment for 4 months. It was a little painful even though I was prepared for that possibility.
It's instinct. Not in your case, however. Your baby was probably used to being around women and not men. He's daddy's little man now, right :-)
Now babies do know when they're looking at dangerous people. I've heard stories about my ex trying to hold our grand daughter. When she was an infant, she screamed blue murder. The last time she saw him was when he dropped off our 9 yr old...why yes there is a huge gap in ages, she took one look at him and ran screaming into the house. That was Mother's Day weekend. She's two yrs old now.
Babies know. They have primitive instincts at that age. Food, comfort, and safety. That poor kid.
Very true... and at that age it may have been a (the only) consideration to the authorities who gave him back to his birth parents that he was just afraid of them because they were now strangers.
BTW - Thank you for your service!
You're probably right about him not being used to men at the time. And he did get over his fear real quick. He's 9 years old now, so yeah, he's my little man.
Awww :-)
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