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Heidi and
Neil Howard were overjoyed yesterday to have
their baby, Jessica, at home once again.
Baby Returned to Mother Who
Was Shackled in Lowell Court
Judge
Orders the Return; Radical Feminists at DSS
Continue Enormous Pressure

Howard
Children Are Being Reunited With Parents

How Did Howards Become Involved with DSS?
Parents
Can’t Afford to Fight DSS
By Ed Oliver
August 2001
The two-month-old baby who was seized from
her mother in February by DSS was returned to the custody of her
beaming parents last month by order of Judge Robert Belmonte at
Framingham Juvenile Court.
The parents, Neil and Heidi Howard of
Tyngsboro, are overjoyed at baby Jessica’s return. She is
now seven-months-old.
The DSS has not given up however.
They’re still putting the family through a nightmare of
threats and harassment. They are obviously very angry that a
judge has thwarted their plans. The newborn infant was
snatched by the social workers after their threats were
ignored by the mother. She refused to follow demands to leave
her husband and file false complaints of abuse against him.
With the help of pro-family lawyers
Chester Darling and Gregory Hession and publicity from
Massachusetts News, the Howards are battling to get their
other two children back. But at a tremendous emotional price.
Over $100 Million/Year at Stake for DSS
DSS receives over $100 million/year from
the federal government in bonuses for children they seize from
parents and adopt out to others. None of that money goes to
the general state treasury. It all goes directly to DSS.
Jessica was born last December and seized
by DSS in February this year. DSS had taken the nursing baby
solely because it had already abducted the Howard’s two boys
in November 1999 – even though a court hearing had never
been held on the abduction. A ruling by any court on the two
boys has still not been made.
Based upon the unlawful treatment of the
family by DSS and the courts, the parents refused to
relinquish Jessica when she was born. When the parents refused
to tell DSS where the newborn baby was, they had the mother
seized, shackled and forced to climb flights of stairs with
shackles on her ankles and wrists in the Lowell Courthouse –
even though what DSS had done to the family violated the laws
and Constitution of the state.
Judge Belmonte Makes Progress
Some progress has been made with the help
of Judge Belmonte since February. In May, with the help of
glowing reports about the parents by the baby’s court
appointed guardian as well as bizarre testimony by DSS social
workers under cross-examination by Chester Darling, the judge
suspended the trial and began an effort to reunite the parents
with their baby.
DSS continued to strongly oppose letting
the parents have their baby. It subjected the parents to many
court hearings, in addition to hearings at the DSS plus
counseling sessions, etc. But on orders of the judge, the
Howards finally began seeing the baby on frequent visits,
culminating in overnight stays at home for several days at a
time.
Apparently seeing the handwriting on the
wall, DSS decided not to fight and recommended that the
agency’s temporary custody of baby Jessica be dismissed. The
Howards had received word from a social worker that they could
keep their baby, but the judge made it official.
DSS is keeping the case open however.
They told the Howards that this was routine and it would be
closed in a few months if all goes well at home. But the
family has heard stories like that from the social workers
before.
Good News About Boys
There is even some good news regarding
the boys, Christopher 10, and Ethan 5, who have been living in
separate foster homes since late 1999 even though their
abductions have never been approved by a judge. Last month,
Ethan moved to Vermont to join his brother who moved there in
late June. They both are now living together with an aunt and
uncle.
But the boys have gone through tremendous
trauma, having been unlawfully separated from their parents
and each other for almost two years.
The parents are still allowed only one
hourly visit per month. They will have to drive four hours to
see them at a Vermont visitation center and they have to pay a
fee. The lawyers are trying to get increased visitation.
The lawyers are hoping that when the
judge sees how well Jessica is doing and how well the visits
go with the boys, that the boys will be reunited later this
year with their parents like baby Jessica was.
But DSS remains intransigent that the two
boys must be adopted. It appears to be willing to let the aunt
and uncle adopt them. DSS will still receive its federal bonus
in that event. It told the judge that its efforts to terminate
parental rights to the boys should resume “as it appears to
be the only way to resolve the issues as they relate to the
boys.”
The judge will review the situation again
on September 24.
Howard
Children Are Being Reunited With Parents
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