And, of course, I had to say "no" - because of the alleged (secret) suspension in federal court.
Yet, the reader did not stop at my "no" and sent to me the reader's own research on the subject of lawsuits against social services, together with the reader's own story.
I would like to make that research public - showing that (1) lay people can do their own legal research pretty well, and that (2) attorneys are afraid to take a case suing social services even with all this case law on the side of the victims.
Here are the results of my reader's legal research on the issue of whether CPS can be successfully sued for misconduct.
Thank you, my reader, and I will not publicize your name, e-mail address, or story, for obvious reasons.
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How about when a cp s supervisor likes comments on face book calling an individual " white trash and scum" on her friends Facebook in regards to an arrest then is the one to interview that individuals children... Goes on and makes claims about domestic violence, history of substance abuse etc etc etc ultimately leading to a family court hearing and ruling that I can not be unsupervised while with my own children whom I live with.She should have recused herself from the investigation. That's the short version of my current nightmare!
ReplyDeleteConflicts of interest in court proceedings involving social services are "the norm" rather than the exception, in my experience. And each time that conflict is raised, retaliation follows and judges (who usually themselves come from that environment) endorse whatever social services do. An independent attorney can, of course, at least try to do a lot for the parent in such situations - there is a great variety of things to be done, but the number of independent attorneys who have skills to defend parents in such proceedings is rapidly shrinking because of retaliation. And, they do not teach in law schools, by the way, how to defend parents against social services. It's by personal experience and self-teaching. Which begs a question - how does licensing of attorneys help parents in such situations? A government-approved attorney in a situation when the government is suing the parent and fabricating cases against the parent, an attorney who will most certainly sell the client out to preserve his/her livelihood - or no court representation at all?
ReplyDeleteI was contacted by an investigator for the county that wants to look into the matter but I am very skeptical. I'm absolutely positive she over stepped her boundries, IF the investigator does an unbiased job she should be fired/disciplined. Wouldn't that take away her qualified immunity? As I said I am very skeptical, After all, they work in the same building and at the end of the day all of there paychecks are signed by the same person. The government should have safe guards in place to prevent conflicts like this.
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