I've written about this
many times before and no doubt I will again, but I make no apology
because it's a disgusting abuse of power and abnegation of
responsibility by people who are paid to do better, and if the only way
we can fight it is by banging on and on, then on and on we will bang ...
A loving mother had her children taken away from her in a dawn raid on
her home after being wrongly accused of cruelty. The three terrified
youngsters watched as she was handcuffed before they were each put into
separate cars and taken into foster care.
It took 19 months for the devastated family to be reunited – when a
judge exonerated the parents and strongly criticised the social workers
and police responsible for the appalling error.
Judge Nicholas Marston said social services, who had accused the parents
of deliberately causing symptoms of illness in their disabled son,
acted on claims ‘based on misunderstandings’ or which were ‘just plain
wrong’.
The couple were wrongly alleged to have given 12-year-old Kane medicine
to induce symptoms of digestive, nervous system and growth problems, as
well as the fact he is on the autistic spectrum. Social workers accused
them of Fabricated or Induced Illness by carers (FII), also known as
Munchausen’s syndrome by proxy.
The 6am police swoop, which involved 14 officers descending on a quiet
Hampshire cul-de-sac, was described by the judge as ‘utterly
disproportionate’ and ‘itself abusive of the children involved’. The
children’s father, who had left for work as an engineer at the time of
the raid, was also later arrested on suspicion of neglect. Parents
Kealey and Andy, who wish to keep the family surname secret, were never
charged but say they have been ‘destroyed’ by the ordeal.
Kealey, 39, who had a nervous breakdown brought on by the arrest and has
since suffered post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, said: ‘I
didn’t see my children for over a year. I wasn’t allowed to speak to
them. It was torture. There aren’t words to describe going a year
without seeing your babies. We are broken. The old me is gone. It is
very hard for the children because they see a very different mum.’
Although his parents have now regained full custody, Kane is voluntarily
staying in foster and respite care because Kealey is currently too ill
to care for him. Andy, 47, lost his job on his arrest and has since had
to take up a new position abroad, meaning he gets to see the children
only every three or four months.
He said: ‘Social services were more interested in proving we were wrong
than giving Kane care. They thought we had managed to convince 30
doctors over Kane’s lifetime. They said we had given him medicine to
induce the problems, but he had the problems before he had the medicine
so I don’t know how they worked that out.’
The arrests, in July 2010, were triggered after staff at Bursledon House
specialist children’s centre in Southampton, where Kane was undergoing
treatment, told social services that he was not showing all the symptoms
his parents described and they concluded it was a case of FII.
Once in care, the children were unable to see or speak to their mother
for a year and were allowed to see their father only on weekly
three-hour supervised visits. Kane was kept separately from his sisters
Carris and Marly, then 14 and eight, for four months, before they were
all sent to a foster family 60 miles from the family home in
Farnborough, with a daily two-hour round trip to school.
Carris, who is now 16, had been predicted 14 A*s at GCSE, but left
school with only two passes. She took herself out of care as soon as she
turned 16 last summer and returned to her family.
At a four-week hearing at Portsmouth County Court in February, Judge
Marston praised Kealey and Andy for being ‘caring, loving’ parents and
criticised Hampshire County Council for failing to prove any of its
claims. In his judgment, he said: ‘What happened here is that a picture
was painted before the facts were properly analysed, indeed before many
of the facts were actually known, and then the facts were made to fit
the picture.’
John Coughlan, Hampshire County Council’s director of children’s
services, said that the council had acted with the ‘best motives’,
adding: ‘It is our duty as a local authority to secure the well-being of
children.’
Detective Superintendent Nigel Lecointe, head of the public protection
department of Hampshire Constabulary, said he accepted his officers’
actions had been ‘perceived to be heavy-handed’ and ‘had a significant
long-term effect on the family’.
Predictably, many people have posted on the internet to say that they
hope the family will sue. Usually this isn't a realistic option – you
have to be rich to afford to take legal action. But if only it were
possible, this might be the best thing to do – for all our sakes. Only
when these bullies find themselves being bullied and pursued will they
start to think twice about the consequences of their actions.
For example, a man in Walsall called for an ambulancce because he had
chest pains. When the ambulance got him to hospital, he was left
festering in A&E and nobody came to look at him. After a while he
collapsed and died.
The police have arrested several members of hospital staff, and the
ambulance crew, on suspicion of causing death by negligence. We think
this is excellent. It may be that this is the only way to get NHS
managers to take seriously the fact that they are consistently and
obstinately failing to deliver the standards of care for which they are
paid.
The mealy-mouthed words of Hampshire County Council’s director of
children’s services, about 'our duty as a local authority to secure the
well-being of children’ are just that: a glib, self-serving cop-out. Do
we accept from David Cameron that he is acting from the best possible
motives and doing the best he can? Of course not. Would it do any good
for a train driver to say 'I ran past that red light but I was doing the
best I could'? When the captain of that Italian cruise ship said he was
just doing his job, keeping the passengers happy, did it cut any ice?
We pay people to do their jobs properly, effectively and intelligently.
If they can't or won't do that, they should lose their jobs at the very
least. We don't pay them to act from the best possible motives, we pay them to get it right, not just sometimes, but every time.
You often hear public servants prating about “responsibility”. 'I am
responsible,' they say, 'for the rubbish collections or the schools
budget or protecting the council's data'. And then the next sentence
goes '... so I can decide how often your bins are emptied or whether the
teachers get paid this month or whether it's appropriate to leave my
laptop on the bus'. They think that because they are responsible that gives them power over the rest of us.
But it doesn't, and someone needs to make it clear to them that their
sole duty is to do their jobs correctly and make no mistakes. Not just
when it suits them, not just when it's easy, not just when their motives
are pure, but every hour of every day of every year. That's the real meaning of responsibility.
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