Current News | Introduction | Colloidal Silver | Chemtrails | Sylphs | Emerging Diseases | Forbidden Cures | Ozone | Immunity Boosting | Nutrition | Tone Gen McGuckin children left in limbo Mother's legal status keeps kids' fate on hold [Editor's Note: This is an example of what the New World Order is
all about. The State becomes the ultimate authority over our lives; right
down to 'ownership' and control of our childen. This stinks like Ruby Ridge
and Waco. The Jack Boots are back. The Nazis never lost the war, they only
lost Germany. The Nazis, the Bavarian Illuminati, are alive and well. They're
here, running America, along with their 'Illuminated' friends, who unfortunately
are in charge of our governments. We posted a similar
story last year of a women with 5 kids in Riverside, California. The
police arrested her and took the kids into foster care custody because
her house was "messy". Yes, that's right; not clean enough or orderly enough
for the local Gestapo Chief. In that case, as in this one, the woman's
husband had just died a few days earlier. I love the politically correct
jargon utilzed by these Constitutional Highwaymen: E.g. ' the children
are now "stabilized"'; 'they need tutoring, counceling and "closure"'.
I have one question: Will anyone come to this poor woman's aid? Ken
Adachi ].
SANDPOINT _ The McGuckin children will move to another temporary foster
home this weekend while awaiting a court decision on their future.
"There's a lot of detriment that can be caused by another continuation," Featherston said. "We don't get any answers, and the children don't have any sense of direction or any sense of stability." Michelle Britton, regional director for the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, said the state should focus its attention on the children's well-being. ``I do think there is a lot of public pressure because of this case and the media attention it's had,'' she said. ``There are too many interests, too many public interests now... ``We have to work very hard to make sure the focus doesn't get away from the children by trying to satisfy the public, for instance, or trying to reduce the attention by anti-government entities in this case.'' The county prosecutor and sheriff have come under fire from government
critics who have portrayed the case as an assault on an innocent family.
The reports of starving children and deplorable living conditions are lies
to help justify the county's actions --
But witnesses say the family's circumstances say the official reports are accurate -- and the children need outside help. Prosecuting Attorney Phil Robinson said his primary concern is protecting the kids, not pleasing JoAnn McGuckin. She remains in jail because she refuses to meet court conditions for her release. ``As long as the kids' long-term care and safety is adequately addressed, that's what we've sought from the beginning,'' Robinson said. ``Does that mean it could go away as a criminal case? Sure, it's on the table.'' The children were taken into state custody June 2 after withdrawing into their home and refusing to leave for five days. Last month, their father died from multiple sclerosis and their mother was arrested on child neglect charges. After their mother's arrest, a deputy returned to take the children into protective custody. But the eldest son, 15-year-old Ben, called to his siblings to ``get the guns,'' and ran off into the woods. The other children then loosed the family's vicious dogs on deputies. While hiding in their home, the five other children feared the gunshots they heard hit their brother -- not the dogs the deputies were trying ward off, according to a family friend close to the children, who asked not to be identified. Ben actually had run off into the woods and stayed there. Every time a dog barked, the children hid in an interior bathroom of
the house, fearing an attack from authorities, according to the friend.
Now, after two weeks with a foster family and reunited with their brother,
the children are learning that the outside
``The arrangement we have is practically where they were before. It's almost no move at all,'' Britton said. ``They're pretty much stabilized.'' The family friend described the McGuckin children, ages 8 through 16,
as ``just kids'' who have some problems to work out. He described them
as very intelligent -- just not educated to the level of their peers. They
need tutoring, counseling and closure, he said. ``The (child protective)
hearing is really critical,'' he said. ``They're being shuffled around
and their protection is
The hearing would allow the state to start planning for permanent placement
of the children. But with or without a shelter hearing, Britton said the
children's immediate needs are being met. The church has acted as an extended
family to the children
The children have visited their mother only once since she was taken into custody.During the visit at the jail, she learned they were going on a vacation with the foster family to the Oregon coast. The children have never seen the ocean. McGuckin called her attorney and the trip was canceled, said the Rev. Dennis Day of St. Joseph's. Such influence by the mother, who has no custody at the moment, has raised concerns among the parishioners that the children's interests could be overlooked in the long-term, too. Bryce Powell, McGuckin's court-appointed attorney, said he couldn't
talk about the vacation because of a court gag order on the child protection
case. However, ``that's a concern carried too far out of a little incident
with a lot of circumstances,'' he said.
That will help determine whether the mother is able to care for her children, Robinson said. The results could also dictate what kind of conditions the court could place on reuniting McGuckin with her family. ``The court, being aware of the circumstances, could set conditions where again, say, the children could not be returned to the physical, unsupervised contact with her, without court approval,'' Robinson said. Friends and neighbors have described McGuckin as extremely paranoid, and officers' reports following welfare checks at the home back up those descriptions. ``She was a good mother. That was a good family,'' said the family friend. ``Somewhere, it just went sour.'' The eldest daughter, 19-year-old Erina, brought the case to the attention of authorities most recently, following her father's death. She left home about a year ago, and returned last month after being discharged from the Navy for medical reasons related to previous malnutrition. She told the prosecutor, the sheriff's office and Child Protective Services about the conditions of the home, lack of food and her own health problems attributed to those living conditions. ``From that, we made the decision we were going to have to do something,'' Robinson said. ``That's how things got started.'' The children's allegiances lie with their mother, and they've not seen Erina, according to the friend. While Erina is estranged from the family, who consider her something of a traitor, others see her as a her oine. ``It would be a real shame if the courage she showed wasfor nothing,'' the friend said. Originating url: http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495&article=3288
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