Showing posts with label Blogger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogger. Show all posts

Monday, July 22, 2013

Justice Department Files Lawsuit Against the State of Florida for Unnecessarily Segregating Children with Disabilities

Department of Justice
Office of Public Affairs
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, July 22, 2013

The Justice Department announced today that it has filed a lawsuit against the state of Florida alleging the state is in violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) in its administration of its service system for children with significant medical needs, resulting in nearly 200 children with disabilities being unnecessarily segregated in nursing facilities when they could be served in their family homes or other community-based settings.  The lawsuit, filed in federal district court in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., further alleges that the state’s policies and practices place other children with significant medical needs in the community at serious risk of institutionalization in nursing facilities.  The ADA and the Supreme Court’s decision in Olmstead v. L.C. require states to eliminate unnecessary segregation of persons with disabilities.  The department’s complaint seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as compensatory damages for affected children.

In September of last year, the department issued an extensive findings letter, notifying the state that it is in violation of the ADA.  The letter found that the state’s failure to provide access to necessary community services and supports was leading to children with significant medical needs being unnecessarily institutionalized in, or being placed at serious risk of entering nursing facilities.  The letter identified the numerous ways in which state policies and practices have limited the availability of access to medically necessary in-home services for children with significant medical needs.  Additionally, the state’s screening and transition planning processes have been plagued with deficiencies.  Some children have spent years in a nursing facility before receiving screening required under federal law to determine whether they actually need to be in a nursing facility.

As a result of the state’s actions and inaction, the state has forced some families to face the cruel choice of fearing for their child’s life at home or placing their child in a nursing facility.  In one instance, the state cut one child’s in-home health care in half.  Her family could not safely provide care themselves to make up for this reduction in services, and they felt they had no choice but to place her in a nursing home.  Another child who entered a nursing facility as a young child spent almost six years in a facility before the state completed her federally mandated screening.

“Florida must ensure that children with significant medical needs are not isolated in nursing facilities, away from their families and communities,” said Eve Hill, Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division.  “Children have a right to grow up with their families, among their friends and in their own communities.  This is the promise of the ADA’s integration mandate as articulated by the Supreme Court in Olmstead.  The violations the department has identified are serious, systemic and ongoing and require comprehensive relief for these children and their families.”

Since late 2012, the department has met with Florida officials on numerous occasions in an attempt to resolve the violations identified in the findings letter cooperatively.  While the state has altered some policies that have contributed to the unnecessary institutionalization of children, ongoing violations remain.  Nearly two hundred children remain in nursing facilities.  Deficient transition planning processes, lengthy waiting lists for community-based services and a lack of sufficient community-based alternatives persist.  The department has therefore determined that judicial action is necessary to ensure that the civil rights of Florida’s children are protected.

The ADA prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability by public entities, including state and local governments.   

The ADA requires public entities to ensure that individuals with disabilities are provided services in the most integrated setting appropriate to their needs. The department’s Civil Rights Division enforces the ADA, which authorizes the Attorney General to investigate allegations of discrimination based upon disability and to conduct compliance reviews regarding the programs and services offered by public entities. Visit www.justice.gov/crt to learn more about the ADA and other laws enforced by the Civil Rights Division.  

For more information on the Civil Rights Division’s Olmstead Enforcement, please visit: www.ada.gov/olmstead/index.htm .

http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2013/July/13-crt-823.html

Using social media to find missing kids:


http://m.news4jax.com/news/facebook-twitter-powerful-tools-in-finding-missing-children/-/16626108/21098536/-/rxnlhz/-/index.html

Friday, July 19, 2013

Missing: CHAFOULAIS, FIONA - 5 Years Old

Missing:
CHAFOULAIS, FIONA
Present family name :CHAFOULAIS
Forename :FIONA
Sex :Female
Date of birth :03/12/2007 (5 years old)
Place of birth : CLERMONT FERRAND , France
Nationality : France
Father's family name & forename :CHAFOULAIS NICOLAS
Mother's family name & forename :BOURGEON CECILE
Height :1.1 meter
Colour of hair : Blond
Colour of eyes : Light
Language spoken : French
Date of disappearance : 12/05/2013 When 5 years old
Place of disappearance : CLERMONT-FERRAND, France.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

CHP to offer free child safety seat check-ups Saturday:

The California Highway Patrol will conduct a free child passenger safety seat check-up event Saturday at the Target store, 2505 Riverside Blvd., Sacramento.

Certified child passenger safety technicians will be on hand from 8 to 11 a.m. to check car seats for proper installation, and to advise parents and caregivers how to choose appropriate car seats and properly install them in their vehicle.

Drive-up visits are welcome. Parents or caregivers are encouraged to have their children present during the fitting and installation of the car seat or booster seat.

A California law that took effect Jan. 1, 2012 extended by two years the length of time a child must use a child passenger restraint or safety seat while riding in a motor vehicle. A car seat or booster seat is required until the age of 8, unless the child is at least 4 feet 9 inches tall.

Funding for the safety seat check-up event is provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Safety office offers Halloween safety tips:

Belvoir Eagle
Safety office offers Halloween safety tips


Injury to a loved one or a missing child can turn Halloween into a miserable experience.
The Fort Belvoir Safety Office offers several safety tips for Families to use so they spend the night trick or treating and not dealing with an emergency during Halloween Wednesday.
Patricia Borel, Safety Office occupational health and safety specialist, said a Family’s safety starts with Halloween attire.
Avoid costumes made with flimsy materials and outfits with big, baggy sleeves or billowing skirts to minimize the risk of falling.
Families should also purchase flame resistance costumes, masks, beards and other accessories. Parents are encouraged to trick or treat with their children. Borel recommends parents who don’t chaperone their children leave detailed trick or treat instructions.
"When your children are leaving the house you should ensure they are with at least two friends for the entire evening, and designate a specific route for them to take," Borel said.
Parents should also remind their children not to accept rides from strangers, to not take short cuts through backyards, alleys, or parks and to not go inside anyone’s home.
Christopher McCormick, Fort Belvoir Safety Office, occupational healty and safety specialist, recommends decorators use artificial lights and candles, which are safer to use than real candles. Families providing candy to children should keep dogs and other pets away from doors to avoid frightening children.
"Make sure your yard and sidewalk are free of anything a person could trip over," McCormick said. "Costume masks make it much harder to see where you are going."
When a child returns home from trick or treating, Borel said parents should check candy bags and only allow their children to consume treats that show no signs of tampering.
Halloween is also a fun time for adults as McCormick estimated nearly 1 in 3 adults will attend a Halloween party this year. Families hosting parties should move breakable pieces of furniture away from the party area. Hosts using dry ice in a punch bowl should use a large punch bowl for the ice and a smaller bowl, one that fits inside the large bowl, for the punch.
"Keep them separate, dry ice is not for ingestion and can cause serious damage to internal organs if swallowed," McCormick said.
Guest should consider staying overnight, especially if they intend to consume alcohol. People can ask to stay at a friend’s house or research hotel accommodations within walking distance. Many hotels offer special Halloween weekend rates and promotions, according to McCormick.
"Do not let impaired guests drive," McCormick said. "Prepare a list of local taxi companies in advance to have ready should guests need to call one."
Drivers should exercise caution when maneuvering around the installation during Halloween to avoid hitting pedestrians. McCormick recommends motorists avoid cutting through residential areas and party hosts should avoid providing directions to their home that involves unnecessarily cutting through residential areas.
"Motorists should scan far ahead when driving in residential areas, watch for children, and cautiously monitor their actions," McCormick said. "When driving through residential areas where trick-or-treaters are likely out, consider driving five miles per hour less than the posted speed limit."

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

DOJ - National Alliance for Drug Endangered Children Conference:


Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole Speaks at the National Alliance for Drug Endangered Children Conference
Des Moines, Iowa ~ Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Thank you, Chuck, for your kind words and for inviting me to join you today.   It is an honor to address all of you here from across the country who are doing so much to protect our children. I’m especially grateful for Chuck Noerenberg and Lori Moriarty’s leadership at the National Alliance for DEC, as well as the remarkable work that the Iowa Alliance for Drug Endangered Children is doing throughout this great State.   I am also pleased that some of our fine ambassadors from the Department, including COPS Director Melekian, U.S. Attorney Barry Grissom and U.S. Attorney Nick Klinefeldt will be here to share ways that we are trying to better serve DEC.  

Just as each of you has made protecting our children a priority, so too has the Department of Justice.   And I welcome this opportunity to share with you just a few of the Department’s many initiatives to support and enhance your work on the ground.  

Protecting our children has long been a priority for Attorney General Holder – and I can say that with authority, having known him since he was a line attorney at the Department’s Public Integrity section.   I know that one of his proudest achievements since becoming Attorney General was the launch of the Defending Childhood initiative in 2010 to specifically address the issue of children exposed to violence.   This program seeks to enhance efforts nationwide by leveraging federal resources, by boosting funding, and by creating government-wide partnerships.   Though we have much work to do, I am proud of the progress we have made in that time to end the cycle of violence and defend every child’s right to a safe and secure childhood.  

Two years ago, as part of our broader efforts to better identify and serve child victims and to promote the first-ever comprehensive threat assessment of the dangers children face through exploitation, we issued an innovative blueprint to fight these crimes, known as the National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention and Interdiction.  

In 2006, the Department launched Project Safe Childhood (PSC) to combat the proliferation of technology-facilitated crimes involving the sexual exploitation of children. Just last year, we expanded that initiative to address all federal crimes involving the sexual exploitation of children.   Through that program, we obtained over 2,700 indictments for offenses involving the sexual exploitation of a minor, representing a 42 percent increase in the number of indictments over fiscal year 2006.   More importantly, from the launch of PSC through last August, over 4,700 children depicted in child pornography images have been identified and many have been taken out of harm’s way, through enhanced law enforcement coordination, multi-jurisdictional collaborative efforts, and additional contributions by the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.

In addition to PSC, our Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force Program has grown from a small, loose-knit program into a highly-trained, coordinated, and effective network of 61 task forces that has seen remarkable success.

The Department of Justice is also committed to a related initiative of great mutual interest— Drug Endangered Children.  

Over the years, the Department of Justice has invested millions of dollars in the DEC initiative, including funding for the National Alliance for Drug Endangered Children, or National DEC, since its incorporation in 2006.   This year alone, the Department has awarded over $1.2 million in funding to further National DEC’s ability to meet the increasingly troubling challenges facing young children in communities nationwide.

Because of this support, the National DEC and its state affiliates have grown from an informal association of a few state leaders into a national voice for training, technical assistance, and advocacy on behalf of abused and neglected children.   And despite the tight fiscal climate that we’re seeing at every level of government, the Justice Department has been – and will remain – committed to stand with you and our other stakeholders on the ground to take this work to the next level.  

But of course, funding is only one part of the answer to better serve and protect Drug Endangered Children.   Beyond financial assistance and grants, we must continue working with our   state, local and tribal partners to ensure better collaboration and to put our energy and efforts to more effective uses.   This is exactly the role the Federal Interagency Task Force on Drug Endangered Children, or DEC Task Force, seeks to play.

We established the DEC Task Force in 2010 in response to the Administration’s 2010 National Drug Control Strategy.   It has been my honor to chair this Task Force, which benefits from active participation from multiple department components, as well interagency partners, including the Office of National Drug Control Policy and the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services, Education, and Homeland Security.

I know that I don’t need to explain to any of you why this effort is so important, but one of our first missions with this Task Force was to make sure that the importance of DEC was understood more broadly.   We wanted to use this Task Force to expand the partnership on a federal government level and engage new partners.   To do this we just needed to highlight that helping DEC is not only the right thing to do, but also part of our responsibility in ensuring justice, health and safety of vulnerable young members of our communities.

We shared the sad fact that, all too often, today’s drug endangered child becomes tomorrow’s substance abuser or criminal offender.   By helping these children as early as possible, we can benefit them in two fundamental ways.   Not only can we provide a better future for each child served, but we can also create safer communities around them.   Others recognized the importance and value of this work, and as a result, we developed a Task Force that enjoys active participation by over eight federal agencies and over 80 participants in total.

As you know, the DEC movement has grown both in focus and impact over the past ten years.  And while some DEC efforts in the field remain meth-specific, many others now include a broad spectrum of drugs.   One of our first tasks at our initial DEC Task Force meeting in May of 2010 was to create a consensus on our use of the term “Drug Endangered Children.”   We agreed to a definition that would include a person under the age of 18 who lives in or is exposed to an environment where drugs, including pharmaceuticals, are used, possessed, trafficked, diverted or manufactured illegally.

Many of you will recognize aspects of our definition—but you may also notice some variances.  For instance, we wanted our efforts to include all children under 18—including infants and older teens.   Our definition also includes illegal use of legal, pharmaceutical drugs, which has recently become a fast-growing area of crime.   Additionally, our definition includes the children harmed by the many facets of the drug industry—from the childcare provider who is a trafficker to the parent who is a user—and from the many types of drugs causing these harms, not just methamphetamine.

Our Task Force members quickly realized that there was no end to the ways these children need and deserve our help, but that there were limits to the impact we might have—both because of the unfortunate reality that we don’t have infinite resources and because most of the necessary efforts would need to occur outside of our purview on the state and local level.   We also agreed that we wanted to be both ambitious and realistic in setting our goals to raise awareness of DEC, to identify promising practices, and to increase opportunities for DEC training.

In order to accomplish these objectives, we engaged partners within and far beyond government to gather critical information about how to carry this work forward.   And in doing so – and after realizing that there was not even a consolidated review of the DEC-related efforts already underway at the federal level – we set out to collect and review the current DEC efforts within two months of the Task Force’s formation.  

In our outreach, we also learned how critical it is to simply raise awareness of the existence of DEC in our communities.   In order to accomplish this goal, we launched a public awareness campaign in May of 2011.   At this event, I was joined by Attorney General Holder, ONDCP Director Kerlikowske and DEA Administrator Michele Leonhart, who moderated a panel discussion featuring the Attorney General and actors from the HBO hit series, The Wire.   We used that opportunity to announce the launch of the DEC website, which is linked to the White House’s homepage at White House.gov.   With the support of our COPS office we also released a CD based toolkit which provides resources identified and created by the Task Force.   We continue to seek additional opportunities —on the local, state and federal levels—to bring these children out from the isolation of their homes and into the general awareness of their communities.   

From speaking with you and other partners in the field, we learned that the most successful efforts are those that capitalize on the resources of a multi-disciplinary team.   That is the model we created at the Federal level and asked others to do at the local, state and tribal level.

As a result, several of our U.S. Attorneys have taken on this challenge.   One great example is our US Attorney in South Carolina, Bill Nettles, who convened an Orangeburg DEC Task Force with the county Solicitor and Department of Public Safety Chief - together with federal, state, and local law enforcement - as well as a strong contingent of community leaders, including first responders, educators, ministers, social service professionals, victim advocates, child advocates, and health care and treatment professionals.   Since their initial meeting in March of 2011, they have made great strides in better serving DEC.   They have created a Protocol, which has been signed by 10 regional agencies and service providers.   As part of this Protocol, children now are declared victims on the police reports, opening them up for more potential funding for services.   As a result, within just a month of signing the Protocol, children who before would not have been declared victims of their situation had a multi-disciplinary team monitoring their progress and providing support.   In addition, at the inaugural Orangeburg DEC Task Force training seminar last January, which included over 60 local individuals representing multiple disciplines and professions, three officers from the North Charleston, SC Police Department were so moved that they decided to start their own DEC program, now dubbed the Low Country DEC Coalition.  

Another promising practice you, in the field, identified is having checklists available to help first responders identify and plan, in advance, when children may be present on the scene of an arrest.    As a result, our Task Force now offers specific checklists for Law Enforcement, Child Protective and Child Welfare Services, Medical First Responders, Prosecutors, and Educators.  We have made these and other resources available in one, easy to use toolkit, which is available on our CD, from our COPS office, and on the DEC website.

We also know how important it is to provide DEC training, so we have increased DEC training for law enforcement on the Federal level.   Our Task Force partner, the Department of Homeland Security, has made great strides in including DEC training at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center.   The DEA, as you may know, has also been on the forefront of the DEC initiative for a long time by mandating training at all domestic offices and by heightening DEC awareness in presentations at conferences and trainings across the country.  

The US Marshals Service (USMS) is yet another key partner in providing Federal DEC training.  The USMS arrests over 120,000 fugitives per year and covers over 100 houses each day while conducting fugitive and other USMS investigations.   After participating in the DEC Task Force and attending this conference last year, the USMS created DEC lesson plans in their Basic Deputy Training and their Advanced Deputy Training Program.   To date, they have taught DEC in nine classes, and are scheduled to offer eight training courses in FY 13, starting next week.   The USMS is creating an online DEC course for all operational personnel, which they hope to develop this fiscal year.   I commend Inspector Taker and Inspector Nelson, who are representing the USMS here today, for the great work that USMS is doing to better serve DEC.

Most importantly, we recognize that it takes all of us working together to make this effort successful.    Outstanding training events such as this annual conference demonstrate the benefits of increased collaboration and partnership.   Your participation in this conference not only helps to improve your individual skills, but also helps to advance our critical efforts to protect our children from child exploitation, neglect and abuse.

At the Department of Justice, we are fully aware of how critically important, and oftentimes life-saving, this work really is for countless children nationwide.   It is critically important to the children whom we prevent from experiencing the trauma of living in a drug-abusing home or being torn from parent during a drug arrest.   And it is critically important to the health and prosperity of our country to end the cycle of crime and substance abuse.  

I am proud that protecting our children has been one of the Department’s highest priorities.  But we cannot do it alone.   We cannot simply arrest and prosecute our way out of the growing epidemic of drug abuse, trafficking, and addiction by parents and childcare providers.   Saving these children requires a multi-disciplinary approach involving coordinated teams comprised of law enforcement, child protective services, healthcare professionals, educators, victim service specialists, child advocates, courts, and the community.   It requires all of us.

This work is difficult and gut wrenching.   I want to thank you for your willingness to take this on.  We are grateful for your dedication to serve and protect Drug Endangered Children.   Every day we work to identify and help a drug endangered child is a day that gets us closer to our goal – a world in which every child can grow up safe and able to realize his or her full potential.

Thank you.

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Traffic, not candy, at top of the fright list:



Lifestyle

October 23, 2012 at 1:00 am

By Beth J. Harpaz - Associated Press

Children should carry a flashlight or glowstick to make themselves visible while crossing streets Halloween night. (Daniel Mears / The Detroit News)
Hey, mom and dad: Halloween's not really all that scary — except when it comes to traffic safety.
Despite warnings about tainted candy, candle fires and even child abductions, real Halloween headlines are rarely about any of those things. Instead, tragedies related to the holiday typically involve trick-or-treaters hit by cars. Fortunately even those accidents are relatively few in number.
And here's something that might surprise you. A study published in 2010 in the Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics found that the most emergency room visits involving children around Halloween are related to sports.
The report stated nearly 18 percent of injuries on Halloween were to the finger and hand, and a third of those were lacerations, with some likely resulting from pumpkin-carving. But the report added that "a much higher proportion of injuries that occurred on Halloween were associated with sports, including football and basketball, than with knives."
Which is not to say parents should spend Oct. 31 relaxing. (Are parents ever allowed to relax?) Obviously, you need to know where kids are, monitor candy hauls, and make sure they can see out of their masks and won't trip on their costumes. But here are some statistics to provide a reality check on what's really scary about Halloween.

Fear of tainted candy

Is the danger of tainted candy urban legend or reality?
Of course you should examine goodies and make sure kids avoid treats that aren't sealed. But know this: "There isn't any case of a child killed or injured from a contaminated treat picked up in the course of trick or treating," according to Joel Best, a professor at the University of Delaware who has extensively researched the subject.
Best says there have been more than 100 reports of tainted treats going back to 1958, but they include a father who poisoned his child to collect insurance money, incidents where someone gave out booby-trapped goodies but nobody was injured, and cases where kids had food allergies.

Car accidents

According to statistics from the U.S. Department of Transportation, in four out of six years from 2006 to 2010, more pedestrians younger than 21 were killed by cars on Oct. 31 than on Oct. 30 or Nov. 1.
The numbers are small: A total of 16 deaths took place on Oct. 31 during those five years, compared to 11 on Oct. 30 and 10 on Nov. 1.
But a quick survey of news stories from 2011 suggests that traffic safety on Halloween is one area where parental vigilance is warranted. Last year, children and teenagers trick-or-treating or heading to Halloween parties were injured or killed in Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Egg Harbor Township, N.J., Port Bolivar, Texas, Lower Allen Township, Pa., and Colorado Springs, Colo. Most cases involved pedestrians hit while crossing streets or walking along roads; one case resulted in a drunken driving arrest. In another case, parents were injured along with their child.
One way to increase pedestrian visibility on Halloween: Have kids carry a flashlight or glowstick, or add glow-in-the-dark necklaces or reflective tape to costumes.

Where are your kids?

Statistically it's rare for children to be kidnapped by strangers, but it seems like there's always a case in the news. In the last few weeks, a girl was found murdered in Colorado and another child was abducted, then found, in Wyoming. So it's understandable that Halloween makes parents nervous, with kids out after dark, sometimes unaccompanied by parents, often approaching strangers to ask for candy.
Obviously parents should keep track of kids, stay in touch by cellphone with teens, and make sure younger children have adult supervision.
But perhaps you'll find this reassuring: There is no data to suggest an increase in reports of missing children on Halloween, according to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children.

Fire and Devil's Night

Candles are often used for spooky decor and to light pumpkins. Be mindful if kids in billowy costumes are nearby.
But the fact is, according to Dr. John Hall, division director of the National Fire Protection Association, "there is no localized spike in reported fire injuries around Halloween."
In past years, there has been a phenomenon called "Devil's Night," especially in the Detroit area, of arson at abandoned properties. A 2005 report from the U.S. Fire Administration noted that "on Halloween, and the night before, incendiary and suspicious structure fires are about 60 percent more frequent than on an average day."
But the number of fires has been decreasing thanks to community and police patrols and other efforts. In 1984, more than 800 fires were started in Detroit during the Halloween period, compared to 169 in 2010 and 94 last year.

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Advocates: Let lights shine for Jacob Wetterling:

Postbulletin.com Logo
Posted: Oct 22, 2012, 9:53 am


Advocates: Let lights shine for Jacob Wetterling


ST. PAUL — The Jacob Wetterling Resource Center is asking people to leave their porch lights on to honor the St. Joseph boy abducted 23 years ago.

Jacob was 11 when he was abducted on Oct. 22, 1989, by a masked gunman along a rural road. He hasn't been seen since and the case remains unsolved.

Every Oct. 22, the resource center that bears his name asks individuals to leave a porch light on to remember Jacob. This year, the center is also asking people to honor all missing children by talking to others about child safety.

The resource center was founded in 1990, originally as the Jacob Wetterling Foundation. It merged with the National Child Protection Training Center in 2010 with the goal of ensuring every child grows up safely.


Jacob's Story

The Jacob Wetterling Foundation was established on January 22, 1990, four months after eleven year old Jacob Wetterling was abducted near his home in St. Joseph, Minnesota.
Jacob Wetterling was born on February 17, 1978. He grew up in St. JosephMinnesotawith his parents, Patty and Jerry Wetterling, and his three siblings. On the evening of October 22, 1989, Jacob, his brother Trevor, and friend Aaron rode their bikes to a local convenience store to pick up a movie and snack. On the way back home, a man wearing a mask and carrying a gun stopped the boys. The gunman told the boys to throw their bikes into a nearby ditch and lie face down on the ground. He then asked each of the boys their age. After the boys responded, he instructed Trevor to run into the woods and told him not to look back or he would shoot him. Next, the gunman turned Aaron over, looked into his face, and told him to run into woods without looking back or he would shoot him. As Trevor and Aaron were running away, they glanced back to see the gunman grab Jacob's arm. When Aaron and Trevor reached the wooded area they turned around again and the gunman and Jacob were gone.
The local police were called to the scene of the abduction only minutes later and a search ensued that involved hundreds of volunteers, local law enforcement, FBI agents, and others. Jacob’s case has resulted in over 50,000 leads and has been studied by staff and trainees at the FBI academy in QuanticoVirginia. The case is highly unusual in a number of ways. Rarely are children abducted, especially by non-family members or while playing in groups. There are only 115 cases of long-term, non-family abduction called stereotypical kidnappings each year.
To date, law enforcement and Jacob’s family still do not know what happened to Jacob or his abductor or where they are now. Above is an image of Jacob shortly before the abduction and below is his age progressed photo as to what he may look like now.



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Trinity Mount Family - Child Abuse Resources:








Child Abuse Resources:


National Child Abuse Hotline http://www.childhelp.org/ 1-800-4-A-CHILD



National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC)  http://www.ncmec.org  National clearinghouse for information on missing children and prevention of child victimization. Website offers wealth of child protection information. Offers toll-free phone and web response to report sexual exploitation, abuse, or abduction of children.



Report Child Pornography
CyberTipline is toll-free line to report information about sexual exploitation of children on the web or other child pornography. 1-800-LOST to report sexually exploited, abused, or missing children.  http://www.cybertipline.com

mosac
Mothers of Sexually Abused Children (MOSAC) http://www.mosac.net  The MOSAC site is designed specifically for mothers who have experienced the sexual abuse of one of their children. Life is difficult for mothers following the disclosure of a child’s abuse, and they often have few, if any, resources available to them. This site is designed to be a comprehensive source of information about sexual abuse and to offer support and resources.




Jeffery Herman, Esq.  http://www.HermanLaw.com   Jeffrey M. Herman is a nationally-recognized trial lawyer and advocate for survivors of childhood sexual abuse. He devotes 100% of his practice to representing survivors of sexual abuse, and has had the honor of advocating for hundreds of these brave men, women and children. He is the founding partner of Herman, Mermelstein & Horowitz, P.A., a national, Miami-based law firm with decades of combined experience representing people seeking justice and healing from the wounds of abuse.




The National Children’s Advocacy Center (NCAC)  http://www.nationalcac.org   Non-profit agency providing prevention, intervention, and treatment services to abused children and their families. Was the nation’s first Children’s Advocacy Center.


Prevent Child Abuse America logo

Prevent Child Abuse America (PCAA) http://www.preventchildabuse.org    National volunteer-based organization committed to preventing child abuse through research, education, and advocacy. Resource for comprehensive information and referrals in child abuse prevention. Offers catalog of publications.




Dreamcatchers For Abused Children

DREAMCATCHERS for Abused Children http://dreamcatchersforabusedchildren.com/  a 501(c) nonprofit dedicated to preventing child abuse through education and awareness campaigns.  DREAMCATCHERS  for Abused Children published Books: http://dreamcatchersforabusedchildren.com/child-abuse-books/dreamcatchers-books/ 



Stop Educator Sexual Abuse, Misconduct and Exploitation

http://sesamenet.org/index.html S.E.S.A.M.E. Stop Educator Sexual Abuse, Misconduct and Exploitation: is working to pass legislation that will increase safety for children in schools by preventing teachers accused of sexual abuse from moving to another school district without his or her new employer being alerted to the allegations of misconduct. Known as “passing the trash,” this happens far too often and it must be stopped.




http://www.Child-Safety-For-Parents.com This site is dedicated to helping parents protect their kids from child molesters and pedophiles, and understand the growing problem of missing kids. Find statistics, facts, tips and advice from experts and parents alike.




http://birdsandbeesandkids.com  At birds and bees and kids, parents and other adults will learn how to talk to the kids in their care about sexuality, love, and relationships. Amy Lang MA



Bullying Resources:

Positive Pocket http://www.PositivePocket.org This website was started by a student that went through KidSafe’s 8 week program and wanted to share with the world how KidSafe helped her find her voice.

www.nationalcenterforbullyingprevention – Unites and engages, and educates communities nationwide to address bullying

www.stopbullyingnow.org – FREE! Bullying information, resources and prevention tips for the US Department of Health and Human Services



Internet Safety Resources:

www.getnetwise.org– largest online repository of instructional how to video tutorials

www.mousemail.com – Cell phone program allows parents to program cell phone for specific hours or access.

www.safetyweb.com – Offers free e-mail check for social networking and other sites

www.webwisekids.org – Offers internet safety games and additional resources for parents and children

www.wiredsafety.org – Offers internet safety information, assistance and resources for parents and children

www.netsmartz.org – The Center for Missing and Exploited children, internet safety resources and workshops


 




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Saturday, October 20, 2012

Former FBI profiler weighs in on missing child Jessica Ridgeway case:


Former FBI profiler weighs in on missing child Jessica Ridgeway case:
1:14 PM, Oct 9, 2012   |   5  comments
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"When you look at the statistics on missing children, the longer it takes to find them - in all honesty - the lesser your chances of getting them back," Van Zandt said.

He thinks investigators are heavily-focused on Jessica's backpack, which was found Sunday morning about six miles from her home. Van Zandt says the backpack could offer hidden clues that go beyond DNA.

"Many times, we've seen abductors take a victim south and then drive north and dispose of an item ... trying to point investigators ... in the wrong direction," he said.

Van Zandt also says residents could play a key role in solving the case. He thinks a passersby who may have seen a commotion may have thought they were passing by kids playing, but now realize that it could be an incident involving Jessica.

Van Zandt also says that there are registered sex offenders in Jessica's neighborhood. He expects that investigators have been interviewing them.

He says that all hope is not lost, in terms of Jessica being returned home safely.

"If in fact she was taken by an unknown person, that person [may have] taken care of her and is trying to make a decision on when to return her to her family," Van Zandt said. He says police may urge the person to drop Jessica off at a fire station, police station or "anywhere where she could make a call ... and get back with her family again."

If you've seen Jessica Ridgeway or have a tip regarding her disappearance, call 303-658-4336 or emailPDamberalert@cityofwestminster.us.
(KUSA-TV © 2012 Multimedia Holdings Corporation)

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Friday, October 19, 2012

Missing Children’s Foundation on the move:



Missing Children’s Foundation on the move

Missing Children’s Foundation on the move
by By WILLIAM WRIGHT Lifestyles Editor

Read more: Cleveland Daily Banner - Missing Children’s Foundation on the move 


Missing Children's Foundation
JAMES AND BRENDA LAWSON, president and vice president, respectively, of the Missing Children’s Foundation, are raising awareness in Cleveland and surrounding areas about what can be done to address the epidemic of missing children in America.


The nightmare of having your child with you one minute      and gone the next is one most parents dread. The U.S. Department of Justice reported nearly 800,000 children younger than 18 were reported missing in a one-year period, averaging 2,185 children reported missing each day.

 The Missing Children’s Foundation, with an office in Cleveland, is providing a safe and supportive environment for families who are coping with the disappearance or loss of a loved one. The nonprofit, nondenominational organization emphasized that the first 24 hours after a child goes missing should be viewed as “the only 24 hours,” especially when the child is gone without a trace.

After the body of missing 10-year-old Colorado girl Jessica Ridgeway was recently identified, Brenda Lawson, vice president and regional director of the Missing Children’s Foundation, admits she lost sleep over reports the child was murdered and dismembered by a predator still on the loose.

“This has really bothered me,” she said. “As long as Jessica’s killer is at large, no child is safe. We want to see tougher laws on predators and raise awareness about reporting missing children. Parents wait an average of two hours before reporting that a child is gone. This go-slow approach, while understandable, can cost plenty and in the most serious cases, time is the enemy. We tell parents, don’t wait 24 hours. Tell the police you want to fill out a police report as soon as you know for sure your child is missing.”

According to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, “every year, more than 200,000 children are abducted by family members. An additional 58,000 are taken by nonrelatives with primarily sexual motives. However, only 115 reported abductions represent cases in which strangers abduct and kill children, hold them for ransom or take them with the intention to keep.”

Brenda and her husband, James, president of the Foundation, said the numbers are still too high and more needs to be done to protect children.

“We have neighborhood watches for our homes and we should have neighborhood watches for our children,” Brenda insist. “When someone can take a child, murder her and dismembered her body — that alone is reason to be out there every day working with parents, children and law enforcement on changing laws, [so] that these sexual predators, when caught, should never go free because they will do it again. That’s one of the things I want to work on when we get fully settled in Cleveland.” 

The Etowah couple can be seen at various locations throughout Bradley County raising awareness about child safety and offering free Child Safe Kits to the public. The kit allows parents to register their children with their most recent photo, a fingerprinting strip, DNA samples and other identification material.

“Last weekend we handed out 200 kits at the Keith Street Walmart, and provided child safe awareness information to the parents,” Brenda said. “Last month we gave away 500 kits. We will be at the Save-A-Lot in Tellico Plains this weekend. On Nov. 9-10 and Dec. 21-22 we will be at the Madisonville Walmart. Bi-Lo and Walmart are two of our sponsors in Cleveland, Athens, Etowah and in Madisonville.” 

Founded in January 2007, the agency has distributed nearly 40,000 free child safe kits in the area while promoting child safe awareness and helping in search and rescue missions.

“We thought there are too many children coming up missing and we wanted to do something to help,” James said. “Children are our future and we need to protect them. Society as a whole should provide a safety net for all children.”

“We’ve given out more kits this past year than we ever have,” Brenda said. “We’ve gone everywhere we can find people. We want the public to know if their child gets lost or abducted they have someone to call 24/7. They can call our toll-free number and get a child safety kit free by phone.”

The Lawsons said some news reports claim 1.8 million children disappear every year and 50,000 were snatched by strangers. Such statistics calls for earlier detection of missing children and the need to raise greater awareness of the constant danger to families. 

“The one thing we all have in common is the belief that ‘It will never happen to my family,’ ” Brenda said. “We want to work harder on changing laws and getting more people involved. Volunteers can contribute by joining our team of facilitators, providing office support, helping with fundraising and communications, or joining our board of directors, or advisory committees.” 

While abductions by strangers generate the most headlines, fear and attention, these kidnappings are the fourth largest category of missing children. Runaways are first, followed by family abductions, then children lost or otherwise missing, and finally nonfamily abductions. In those cases around 21 percent are found murdered.

In the cases of the 115 children who were victims of a “stereotypical” kidnapping, the U.S. Department of Justice reports, “These crimes involve someone the child does not know or a slight acquaintance who holds the child overnight, transports the child 50 miles or more, kills the child, demands ransom, or intends to keep the child permanently.”

According to an FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, although abductors can vary in age, race, or physicality, the FBI assesses with high confidence that the majority of child abductors involved in FBI child abduction cases and AMBER Alerts “have a relationship with the child victim.”

The Lawsons said they feel the Missing Children’s Foundation is their calling and are making plans to increase their efforts to raise awareness of a problem that unites people in a single desire — to find, rescue or prevent any more missing children. Recommendations for keeping children safe in the community include parents knowing where their children are at all times, having check-in times and a phone number where they will be or can be reached.

Practicing with children what their home and cellphone numbers are, as well as their address in case of emergencies, is highly recommended. Also, getting to know their friends, meeting their parents and setting limits on how far away they can go when outside the household may alleviate worries.

For further information on the Missing Children Foundation, visit www.missingchildrenfoundation.com or call 1-800-397-1787.

Read more: Cleveland Daily Banner - Missing Children’s Foundation on the move 




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