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By Karen Ocamb
A preliminary report from the Office of Independent Review
(OIR) investigating the conduct of Los Angeles Department
of Children and Family Services in the case of 2-year-old
Sarah Chavez concluded that six to eight DCFS personnel "are
potentially accountable as a result of action or non-action" leading
up to her death last October. The coroner ruled that Sarah
died from blunt force trauma to her stomach that completely
severed her small intestine. Sarah's great aunt and uncle
have been charged with her murder.
The 12-page report submitted to the L.A. County Board of
Supervisors on Dec. 15 was redacted and released to the media
on Jan. 27 at the behest of DCFS Director Dr. David Sanders.
The report details stunning ineptitude and systematic failures
on the part of those charged with protecting the toddler,
starting Dec. 7, 2002, two days after Sarah's birth. A social
worker at White Memorial Medical Center called the child
abuse hotline to report that newborn Sarah and her mother,
Sophia Chavez, had tested positive for Vicodin, a prescription
pain medication, the report says. The next day an emergency
response caseworker (ER CSW) interviewed Sophia who said
that her dentist had given her a prescription after a tooth
extraction, but she couldn't remember any information about
the dentist. She also told the caseworker that she was "unaware
that she was pregnant until she started feeling pain and
was taken to the hospital." The case was turned over
to another ER CSW for follow-up.
"Needless to say, it was important to verify that
the mother had a prescription because of the suspicious nature
of the mother's story," the report says which "indicated
that she may have knowingly abused an addictive controlled
substance while pregnant." However, either the follow-up
never occurred or it was not documented, which "raise
serious questions" about the caseworker's credibility
or his adherence to DCFS policy.
Court documents and testimony in the preliminary hearing
for the murder trial of Francis and Armando Abundis, Sarah's
relatives, indicate that Sarah lived with the Abundises "on
and off" until DCFS next became involved on Jan. 1,
2005, when Sophia gave birth to a stillborn in the toilet.
Court documents indicated the baby had Vicodin in its system.
A hospital nurse called the child abuse hotline to report
that Sarah could be a possible victim of abuse or neglect.
A Los Angeles police officer responded to the Abundis home
in Alhambra and took Sarah into protective custody. The investigating
ER CSW noted that Sarah had two black eyes and a half-inch
cut on the bridge of her nose, but only asked Sophia about
the injuries -- not Francis Abundis, with whom Sarah was
living. The ER CSW later said she regarded the injuries as "suspicious."
DCFS policy requires that the ER CSW immediately should
have created an "Allegation Notebook" to document
all allegations and investigations of child abuse, immediately
reported the allegation to the Child Protective Hotline,
and taken Sarah for a comprehensive forensic examination
known as a suspected child abuse and neglect exam (SCAN),
mandatory for suspected victims under age 5 within 72 hours
of the suspicion or evidence. The ER CSW failed in every
instance.
The case handling case worker who received Sarah's case
on Jan. 6 also failed to take Sarah for the SCAN exam, even
though, the OIR report says, the case worker should have "recognized
that Sarah's unusual behavior -- sexual, aggressive, and
self-injurious -- was also a sign of possible physical abuse,
and constituted subsequent impendent grounds to obtain a
SCAN exam."
The case worker's notes from Feb. 11 indicate that foster
parents Corri Planck and Diane Hardy-Garcia repeatedly requested
a SCAN exam, reporting concerns about the toddler's behavior,
which included nightmares, getting angry, trying to choke
them, yelling, "Fuck you," and putting a water
bottle in her vagina in the bathtub. The caseworker finally
scheduled a SCAN exam but it was for three days after Sarah
was abruptly and inexplicably removed in April from the foster
parents' home and returned to Francis Abundis, who never
took her to the exam.
The OIR report is replete with other DCFS-related failures
that "paint a continuing picture of a child who was
possibly being subjected to ongoing abuse in the Abundis
home." The OIR also raises questions about how personnel
at Garfield Medical Center and those in the Juvenile Courts
handled Sarah's case.
"It was incredibly painful to read about the level
of abuse she endured, and that there were so many opportunities
for a different outcome," Planck told IN Los Angeles
magazine. "Sarah's case was bungled from the time of
her birth and continued until her death. It's just more confirmation
of our worst fears. The whole situation continues to break
our hearts."
Planck and Hardy-Garcia have formally requested that the
district attorney convene a grand jury. "While the OIR
report documents the failures of the Department of Children
and Family Services, it doesn't address the entire systemic
breakdown that ultimately led to Sarah's death, including
the legal and health care systems," Planck says. "The
criminal trial will take its course, but we believe there
are also systemic failures that must be investigated, made
public and addressed."
DCFS' Sanders, who has thoroughly cooperated with the on-going
OIR investigation, told IN that there are several concerns
that can be addressed within the department "to make
sure they don't happen again." One is to ensure that
if a child appears to have injuries, they immediately receive
an exam and assessment from medical experts. "We can't
wait," he said. "That's so contrary to what we're
about as an organization." Sanders said he is also looking
at ways for the medical experts and the caseworkers to directly
enter information into the system "from the field" so
it is immediately available. He also wants any child that
goes out of home placement to be immediately seen by trained
county hospital staff for an initial assessment.
"I want to wait for the final report, but when I look
at the [OIR], it does not appear that an effort was made
to make sure [a SCAN] happened," Sanders said. "That's
contrary to policy and a huge problem. We can't assure children's
safety if we can't assure they're getting appropriate medical
care." Another point is the need to play a strong advocacy
role in court. "There are reasonable questions about
whether we did that or not," he said.
Sanders said the Board of Supervisors has consistently
been clear that they expect the persons responsible for the
errors to be held accountable. He is also working on a recommendation
to forge a "permanent agreement" with the OIR and,
to the extent possible within the law, have information shared
publicly.
Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky told IN that he is "very
supportive of a recommendation that involved OIR or some
mechanism that provides oversight and transparency that an
issue like this deserved and deserves."
Michael Gennaco, OIR Chief Attorney, told IN he also supports
such a recommendation. Additionally, he said that investigators "will
do our best" to gather the facts and "look at how
the ultimate decision was made to take Sarah from her foster
parents and return her to a family member."
Gennaco expects the final OIR report to be completed in
late February.
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