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Leaving
the Children Behind By Emmy Chang, NR
associate editor |
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The two-year-old streaker was outside only minutes before she was spotted and brought back inside by an older brother. But someone had already put an anonymous call through to Cleveland County's Department of Social Services (DSS), and a few hours later, caseworker Tasha Lowery arrived to investigate. Jonie's mother, Mary Ann, explained what had happened, thinking it would all end there. But DSS protocol requires that children always be questioned without their parents. The Stumbos considered this unreasonable. They went to court. Or rather, Social Services took them to court. And when a judge ordered them to allow the interview, the Stumbos, who belong to the Home School Legal Defense Association, took the case first before an appellate court and then on February 11 of this year to the state supreme court, whose decision is now pending. Privacy
and Protocol Is interviewing the children privately really necessary? Pam Bright, an Investigative Supervisor for Cleveland County, explains: "Families, particularly families that abuse their children, tend to be closed systems... If something were happening in the home to the detriment of the child, to ask the child to share that with me in the presence of the person who's doing it that's a lot to ask. And it would also increase their risk [of further abuse]." The Stumbos counter that more evidence should be required for a full investigation. The caseworker, Jim Stumbo points out, was able to observe all four children in their mother's presence. "They were obviously all very well cared for and fed. It's just silly to pursue that. "I can guarantee you," he adds, "there isn't a parent alive who hasn't had a child naked outside." Government?
Me? "The fact that
somebody called, I don't have a problem with," Stumbo says. "I
definitely don't have any problem with the fact that they follow up all
the calls they get. But I feel strongly they have to have probable cause
to conduct an investigation, beyond just finding out what happened." "This does not reach the threshold of a search or a seizure," DSS attorney Leslie Farfourt told me. "[The Stumbo children] weren't being detained at all. They were just being asked to answer questions."
And
I'm Here to Help So DSS clearly isn't private. A private citizen a Fuller brush salesman or Jehovah's Witness, say doesn't become legally entitled to talk to your kids just because you refused to let him. Besides the Fourth Amendment itself was a response to the writs of assistance, which were issued to enforce (civil) revenue laws. The Supreme Court has ruled accordingly: In New Jersey v. T.L.O. (1985), it held that the Fourth Amendment applies to all "governmental action" by "civil as well as criminal authorities: building inspectors, Occupational Safety and Health Act inspectors, and even firemen." In
the Penumbra The practice is landing more and more caseworkers in court. Michael Farris, the Stumbos' attorney (and chairman of the Home School Legal Defense Association), speculates that this is partly because many home-schoolers are simply leaving them on the doorstep. "People have learned," he adds, "that having a social worker in your house isn't necessarily a friendly thing." In a few extreme but well-publicized cases, caseworkers have been known to ask explicit or leading questions ("Did your father perform oral sex on you?") or to order a strip search over the family's objections. Even when social workers behave responsibly, some parents worry that interrogation by strangers could be frightening to children especially young children. Jim Stumbo notes that caseworkers were permitted to actually interview Jonie only once, on the front porch of the Stumbo home and with her family some distance away. "She did nothing but cry," he says. Search
and Seizure? Bright's job is far from easy. If the allegations made in a tip meet the state definitions for abuse or neglect, North Carolina law requires that caseworkers investigate within 72 hours. (Moreover, in some U.S. jurisdictions definitions can be ludicrously broad. In Fairfax County, Va., for instance, a child playing alone in the backyard is considered to be suffering "neglect.") Every year, 25 to 40 children die in North Carolina as a result of abuse; in 85 percent of neglect and abuse cases, the perpetrator is a biological parent. A
Double Standard Meanwhile, in cases like the Stumbos', it's hard not to ask: Why not simply conduct the interview before a third party? Legitimately concerned parents could be sure their children weren't being harassed, and social workers could do their job. This is already done in some cases in Cleveland County, with a familiar adult (such as a pastor) being allowed to accompany the children provided he doesn't interfere. Both sides in the Stumbo case claim they would have agreed to such an arrangement but somehow, it never happened. Until the system can be reformed, a regular policy of videotaping interviews or allowing an independent witness might lessen liability risks. It could even help save Social Services's funds for more important things than two-and-a-half-year-long court battles. Children, for instance. |