|
Beacon
Hill Hears from Girl Rapes by DSS
Others Relate
Terrifying Stories
to Public Safety Committee
By
Ed Oliver
March 22, 2001
A
Beacon Hill committee heard testimony on Tuesday from a girl who
was raped while in DSS custody. Her story was told in Massachusetts
News last year and she was shortly thereafter released from custody
after being five years in DSS control.
“They
had guys holding me down,” Tarri Peterson told the Public Safety
Committee. “When you have a fourteen-year-old girl who had been
raped by men, you cannot hold her down and not expect her to flip
out. They are telling us teenagers that our parents abused us,
then they’re putting us in a situation ten times worse than a
kid would be abused in their home. You guys are supporting that
and I don’t see how you guys can live with it.”
The
hearing was held concerning a bill written by Nev Moore of Justice
for Families which would establish a “hot line” for children in
the custody of DSS.
Moore
testified that children in foster care often have no contact with
the outside world and no access to a telephone if they are in
danger. Even if they did have contact, the police are required
to refer all incidents of abuse back to DSS. “They are a self-investigating
agency. We know for a fact that they ignore 51A abuse reports
against their own foster homes. The analogy is if I was raped
by a police officer, and you told me I would have to file a report
with that officer and he would investigate it.”
Moore’s
husband Tom testified that “Justice for Families” has turned into
a hotline about abuses in foster homes and facilities. “We get
letters, we get telephone calls seven days a week that people
are being beaten, hurt, and there’s no one to help.”
The
chairman of the committee Senator James Jajuga sided with the
witnesses when he said at one point, “We have a Disabled Person’s
Protection Bureau which is staffed by the State Police, which
we created here several years ago. I’m wondering out loud if maybe
we need a bureau of state police officers independent of DSS,
a similar type of bureau.”
The
Senator cautioned, however, that the problem obviously goes way
beyond installing a hotline. “We will convey what we hear today
to others that have jurisdiction and find out what the heck is
going on here,” he said.
Terrible
Abuses Are Told
Many other witnesses told of terrible abuses suffered at the
hands of DSS.
Dana
Raymond told how his daughter was locked in a room with a mattress
on the floor with no sheet at Germaine Lawrence acute residential
treatment center in Framingham. He had a list of incidents reported
to the police at the Germaine Lawrence facilities in Arlington
and Framingham while his daughters were there.
Heidi
Palanza testified about physical abuse of her daughter Tara in
DSS care, which was also reported by Massachusetts News and which
resulted in the release of Tara. The mother said that even though
there is documented evidence, the police, EMS and Children’s Hospital
could only turn it over to DSS to investigate. “If my daughter
had a hotline that she could have called and asked the state police
to investigate, just like if somebody attacked you on the street.
Senator, then I believe that things could change. The police have
told us they would like to do things differently, but their hands
are handcuffed.
“The
power of investigation in these matters needs to be turned over
to law enforcement. They are trained to investigate crimes. Social
workers are not. Social workers need to protect their office,
their supervisor, themselves, their jobs and the reputation of
the department. Police officers are there to find out whether
a crime has been committed or not, and they do that without any
axes to grind.”
Irene
Just testified about bruises and cuts on her two daughters who
were put in a foster home by DSS. Her daughters are back with
her now. She testified about the girls being sat on, cut and bruised.
She filed a 51A against the foster parent. She said the social
worker said on the stand under oath, “We do not have to investigate
51As filed against our foster homes, because we approve those
foster homes.”
The
mother asked the Committee, “And they say this is in the best
interest of the child? With a hotline, my daughter would have
been able to call somebody and get help. The biological parents
can’t help them. They are told to sit there and shut your mouth
and deal with it.”
Marie
Higgins testified that she called DSS to ask for help with counseling
after her husband’s untimely death. Her children were promptly
taken. Her son put up a fight, so DSS hospitalized him at Pembroke.
She visited him and found choke marks on his neck.
Had
her son had a hotline, she said, he could have called for help.
She said she called a DSS hotline, it was dismissed. DSS paid
her a visit and threatened if she did that again, her children
would be put up for adoption.
Melanie
Martinez said her daughter was locked in a basement for three
days with no food in a foster home. Her two sons were bruised
in a foster home. “If they had a hotline, my kids could have called
and asked for help. My children are scarred.”
Stacy
Hevener works as a part-time secretary for Justice for Families.
She said she gets calls every single day from kids and parents
who need help. “I don’t know what to tell them, I don’t know where
to send them. This hotline is very important. I’m certainly not
going to tell them to call the very people who are abusing them.”
A
young man named Alexander who spent time in a psychiatric hospital
briefly testified, but was difficult to hear.
A
woman named Tania said her two sons were abused in foster care.
Her three year-old had needles stuck in his feet for punishment,
and her older son had facial bruises. The police referred her
complaints to DSS who told her it was a good foster home.
Azizza
Nails, Dorchester, who said she runs a specialized foster home,
testified that while there are excellent foster homes, a lot of
foster homes are in it for the money. She said nobody is watching
DSS. Her daughter testified that everybody is accountable except DSS and a hotline could help make them accountable.
A
woman from Fall River said she is a survivor of repeated rapes
in foster care. She reported it to DSS, but it continued. She
said a hotline to the police could have stopped it.
Her
twins were taken from their father and her son’s face was burned
with an iron. There wasn’t any investigation. Her daughter was
put in a body cast, and nobody did anything.
Judith
Sweeney testified that her daughter was running away from a group
home. She said kids are running away from those homes for a reason,
they need a hotline.
Earl
Sholley from the Fatherhood Coalition suggested to the committee
that the money for the hotline should come from DSS, which he
said spends a good deal of money trying to improve its tarnished
public image. “This agency needs accountability. I think a good
step in the right direction would be a hotline so that these children
would have some place to call, because right now the only organization
out there really helping them is ‘Justice for Families.’”
Nobody
testified in opposition to the bill. Nev Moore told Mass news
she gave affidavits to the committee from other people who were
too afraid to testify publicly. Many who did testify and still
have family in the system expressed their nervousness.
Sidebar:
Tarri
Peterson tells the terrors of DSS
|