T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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329.1 | Rock and a Hard Place | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Fri Sep 14 1990 08:52 | 23 |
| Difficult situation....
I would now do 2 things if it were me. First have your daughter tell
her friend that she is welcome anytime at your house. We may need some
time away to sort out what's going on. If your daughter suggests it, it
is out of friendship (not pity, safety, authority, etc).
The second thing I would do, if you feel close enough to the situation
and it is appropriate, ask the girl if she wants you to get involved in
making sure the beating doesn't happen again. If she says to stay out
of it, respect her wishes. She needs to find an adult to trust right
now. But do let her know you are willing to help anytime she requests
it. You don't want her to resent you or your daughter for trying to
help, even though it is for her own good.
I'm sure this kid is scared right now and wondering if she says something
or reports it, will she be placed in a foster home (I'd be scared witless
if I thought I would lose my whole world because I spoke up). And even
worse, if she doesn't say anything, will these beating become common-place.
It's nice to know there are still neighbors who really care!!!
Andrea
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329.2 | THIS IS CHILD ABUSE | SCARGO::GALPIN | | Fri Sep 14 1990 13:14 | 9 |
| I would report this to the division of child services. This is a
child abuse case and should not go unreported. A phone call to them
anonomously will prompt a social worker to go over and investigate the
situation. The mother could be held responsible along with the older
sister for not stopping the sister from beating her younger sister. My
heart goes out to your daughter's friend.
Diane
|
329.3 | Maybe not, be careful | LDYBUG::BOMBARDIER | Wherever you go, there you are | Fri Sep 14 1990 13:40 | 32 |
|
Be careful .. this may not be child abuse at all.
I totally agree with letting this girl know that she is welcome in
your house anytime and that you'll try to help with any problem, but
before you accuse anyone of child abuse, you should make sure that you
really have the complete story.
All the basenoter said was that she *thought* the girl said she had
been beaten. She also said she went into the living room with her to
talk. Wouldn't it have been apparent at that time if she had really
been beaten? What did her guidance counselor say? It doesn't appear
that any other problems had been reported to the school (or at least
the base noter didn't mention any).
Don't confuse being *beaten* with a teenager getting a well-deserved
slap for defiance. If this girl was having a fight with her mother,
she may very well had pushed her mother to the brink, and wasn't
*beaten*, just slapped. I don't think a quick slap is the same as
child abuse. If it is, then only those of us who have NEVER slapped
or spanked our kids would not also be guilty.
If you do turn this woman in (AND BY ALL MEANS DO IF YOU REALLY THINK
SHE'S BEING ABUSED !!), and it turns out to be just a teenage threat, be
prepared for it to have an effect on your relationship with this
neighbor and on your daughter's relationship with this friend.
Just my opinion. Only you know the girl and her mother and I'm sure
you'll do what you think is best. Good luck ....
-Kathy
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329.4 | Agree w/.3 | HYSTER::DELISLE | | Fri Sep 14 1990 17:14 | 13 |
| I have to agree with .3, this may not be child abuse as we think of it.
I can remember a time when I was about 16, and my older brother slapeed
me right across the face. Sent me flying off my chair and onto the
floor. Of course I was furious, sobbing with anger and humiliation.
But over time I realized I had just pushed him too far, he had been
left in charge by my mother of five of us, he asked me to do something
(like set the table or something) and I said no, about five times.
Finally he hauled back and wallopped me. Had I fled to a neighbor's at
the time, it easily could have been mis-perceived as child abuse.
You need the WHOLE story, from both parties, before a serious
allegation like that should be made. And you may not get it.
|
329.5 | She Came for HELP, GIVE It To HER!! | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Thu Sep 20 1990 12:30 | 14 |
| I'm trying to summarize what I see here, and what I see is this;
The girl seems to have been physically punished by someone, whether it
was a sibling or parent. She seems to have come to your house to seek
help, you did just that. Her mother came after her and as you said
took her home "protesting". If the child was unwilling to go home, and
expressed fear Of ANY kind, then that's abuse.
Bottom line, abuse doesn't have to be Physical...Mental abuse is as, if
not more damaging. This needs to be investigated NOW!! You shouldn't
have to worry future implications, this girl may not have a future if
she is injured or worse! Sounds like family counceling might be an
answer before it's too late.
Lyn
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329.6 | Child Abuse? | EXPRES::GILMAN | | Thu Sep 20 1990 15:12 | 8 |
| You said 'if the child expresses fear of any kind then thats abuse'.
Hmm. I can sure remember times when I did something wrong as a kid
and I was scared xxxxless on the way home or whatever. THAT was abuse?
You can't be saying that. Can you? I don't think fear is a valid sole
criteria for child abuse, do you!?
Jeff
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329.7 | A Clarification | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Mon Sep 24 1990 13:08 | 16 |
| Sorry about the confusion, it was my EMT training getting in the way
again. The legal definition says "ongoing" physical or mental abuse is
enough to warrant an investigation. (the form specifically is called a
51A report) I also believe that unless you are a "professional" such as
teacher, guidance councelor, social worker, health care provider etc,
you cannot make the report anonymously. Professionals are mandated by
law to report any cases of susupected abuse, I'd push back on the
guidance councelor or teacher for help.
Unfortunately times have changed since we were growing up. I too was
scared sh***less to go home several times after school, but that's not
the abuse we're talking about here IMO. Someone told me recently that
if I spanked my child in public I could be charged with child abuse,
seems some things DO get carried too far.
Hope this helps
Lyn
|
329.8 | response from basenoter | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Sep 25 1990 10:27 | 35 |
| This is a response from the basenoter:
====================================================================
I did indeed call the guidance counselor the next day. He said he had
been counseling this family for a while and was aware that there were
some problems. He pointed out some stress points in the family that I
was already aware of and said that if the girl didn't come in to see
him that he would call her in. I saw him socially a few days ago and
he took me aside to tell me that the girl had come to see him and had
been examined by the school nurse. He didn't go into details about
what was happening now, but did say that the situation was being
monitored.
I have told my daughter to pass on to this girl that she is welcome in
our home at ANY time and under ANY condition.
Also, I have seen the girl a few times, and she seems cheerful. I keep
hoping this was an isolated incident, but am keeping my eyes and ears
open.
More questions:
I was told that if I knew there was something happening in that house
and I did not inform the authorities, that I would be liable for some
sort of legal charges. I assume that contacting the guidance counselor
qualifies as informing the authorities?
I was also told that if I let the girl stay in my house overnight
without telling the parents that I would be guilty of abduction. So,
assuming the girl can make it into my home without her mother knowing
where she is, and I felt she needed protecting, then I should call the
police and then the mother?
|
329.9 | Be careful | EXPRES::GILMAN | | Tue Sep 25 1990 12:53 | 4 |
| Be careful, your on legal thin ice I think. Expecially allowing the
girl into your house 'under any condition at any time'. I am not
saying you shouldn't be involved, I am saying that I think you should
be clear about the risks you are taking before you take them. Jeff
|
329.10 | Good point | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Tue Sep 25 1990 14:20 | 3 |
| Jeff may be right, I am waiting to hear back from my friends at the
Police station before giving wrong advise. Will keep you posted.
|
329.11 | we aren't lawyers | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Sep 25 1990 17:11 | 18 |
| Keep in mind that whatever we tell you here is only our opinion
and isn't a substitute for legal advice. Remember too that it
might be different in your state -- sometimes even in your town.
In NH, I think reporting to the guidance counsellor counts as
"authorities," but I'm not positive.
What little experience I have is from 15 years ago in the state of
Montana -- when my mother used to give shelter and comfort to
various of my brother's lost-kitten friends. I think it saved one
girl from suicide, though my mother did get a pretty stern lecture
from the juvenile department about "interfering in situations she
didn't understand" and "setting back the work of trained
professionals." Never mind that the trained professional didn't
believe that the girl was pregnant by her father . . . but I
digress.
--bonnie
|
329.12 | check it out for sure | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Tue Sep 25 1990 18:26 | 19 |
|
As Bonnie said, we are not lawyers, so definitely consult one if you plan to
take (or not take) action.
I had always been told that teachers, counselors (school counselors), doctors,
etc... were the ones REQUIRED to report suspected abuse. Everyday citizens
are not required to do so (although your own moral codes may require it). Of
course this contradicts what you and some others have been told, so definitely
check on it!
As for having her over to your house..... I would say that if you kept her
overnight and withheld information from her parents (or kept her from returning)
that you could get in trouble. There are shelters for such purposes. But if
you let her come over and lean on you whenever she needs to, I can't see how
you could get in trouble for it........ (I may be naive, who knows?)
Good luck to you, your daughter, and especially her friend!
Kristen
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329.13 | this is what "states' rights" is all about | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Sep 26 1990 11:23 | 18 |
| Kristen,
It's not that what we've been told contradicts your understanding
of the situation, it's that the situation varies from state to
state.
You're probably perfectly right for what the law is in Texas.
I've always been under the impression that Massachusetts has a
similar law that covers only professionals who work with kids, not
everyday citiziens. But the laws of NH do require ANYONE who
suspects abuse to report it. I haven't found a lot of people,
even helping professionals, who know who we're supposed to report
it to, or what happens if we don't, but it is required.
That's why it's important for anyone who's faced with a situation
like this to check out the laws in their own area.
--bonnie
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329.14 | Caution is required. | HDLITE::FLEURY | | Thu Sep 27 1990 09:26 | 22 |
| RE: a few
One of the real problems of our society IMHO is that we tend to be
judgemental. I will be the first person to try to help when I suspect
abuse. But within reason we must be careful not to take incidents out
of context. I agree that the base noter's situation suggests a greater
problem than just fear due to a single action. However, I would also
be a bit cautious about intervening in the general case.
I know of a mother that was charged with child abuse because someone
witnessed her child being spanked for misbehavior. The spanking was
not severe (in my opinion it shouldn't have happened anyway, but...)
The embarassment that the entire family went through was devastating.
The family moved to another area because of this one incident. The
case was thrown out of court by the way. The "witness" was somewhat of
a religious fanatic that had lost a child due to other family problems.
Moral of the story is just to be careful. Repeated incidents should be
reported. Spot incidents should be recorded so that if there are
further incidents, the pattern can be reported to the proper people.
Dan
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