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Dad sentenced to life after 3-year-old daughter found begging for food (Tulsa, Oklahoma)

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Is RAYMOND WOFFORD a custodial dad? Notice there is no mention of a mother in the home or anywhere else.

http://www.krmg.com/news/news/local/father-sentenced-life-after-child-found-begging-fo/nY99b/

Father sentenced to life after child found begging for food

By Michael Purdy

Tulsa, Okla. — A father was sentenced to life in prison on Wednesday.

Tulsa court records show Raymond Wofford plead guilty to two counts of child neglect back in February.

Everything started when his three-year-old daughter was found wandering around the neighborhood begging for food last year. Police say neighbors found her and immediately called for help.

The child weighed just nine pounds and was extremely malnourished when she was taken into protective custody. Police say the child was also suffering from scoliosis.

Wofford is currently in the Tulsa County Jail and will eventually be taken to an unknown prison.

Dad pleads not guilty in 1-year-old daughter's murder (Indianapolis, Indiana)

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For the last couple of decades, mothers have been increasingly guilt-tripped/brainwashed into father "involvment" by the fathers rights crowd and their allies. We're told that Children Must Have a Daddy No Matter What!, with no attention paid to whether the father in question is a decent human being who has made a commitment to the mother and the family. The end result is that casual boyfriends/sperm donors/one-night stands have been granted way too much importance.

The end result is too often like this. A short-tempered evil little sh** is either prodded into and/or demands "involvement"--only to kill the child.

Dad is identified as WAYNE BRADSHAW.

http://www.theindychannel.com/news/local-news/impd-man-faces-murder-charges-in-18-month-old-daughters-death

Father pleads not guilty in 1-year-old daughter's death
Bradshaw told police she fell

Posted: 07/31/2013 Last Updated: 16 hours ago
Derrik Thomas

INDIANAPOLIS - An Indianapolis father charged in the death of his 1-year-old daughter pleaded not guilty in court on Wednesday.

Wayne Bradshaw's daughter was found not breathing last week on the city’s east side, officials said.

Officers with the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department were called to the 2300 block of North Rural Street around noon last Friday on the report of a child not breathing.

Bradshaw, 25, reportedly launched an attack on his daughter because she had soiled her diaper, officials said.

Police said he reportedly placed the child in a tub of hot bath water.

"She had bruising on her thighs, she had bruising on her chest area. She had bruising to her internal organs. Just marks all over her body. That Friday morning was a very tragic morning for her," Deputy Prosecutor Kristina Korobov said.

Bradshaw was in the home at the time and told police that his daughter had fallen and was not breathing.

The 1-year-old girl was taken to Methodist Hospital where she was pronounced dead soon after arriving to the hospital.

Court documents revealed that the girl died of homicidal violence due to blunt force trauma.

The child's mother, Earlynn Jelks, was overwhelmed with grief outside of court. She allowed her daughter to visit with her father because she wanted him to be a part of her life.

Bradshaw was charged with murder, battery and neglect of a dependent, officials said.

His case is set for a jury trial on Oct. 7.

10-year-old boy calls police over dad's drunk driving (Stonington, Connecticut)

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Dad is identified as OWEN GILMAN.

http://www.philly.com/philly/wires/ap/news/20130801_ap_8182dbcb03ff4e458e42e434366738e7.html

Police: Child calls as dad drives under influence

The Associated Press Posted: Thursday, August 1, 2013, 4:48 PM

STONINGTON, Conn. (AP) - Connecticut police say a frightened 10-year-old boy called to say he was considering jumping from a car his father was driving while under the influence.

Police said 49-year-old Owen Gilman, of Warwick, R.I., hit another vehicle Wednesday night on Interstate 95 in Stonington. The unidentified motorist in the other vehicle was hospitalized. His condition wasn't known Thursday.

Gilman was charged with reckless driving, driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs and other offenses. It wasn't clear if Gilman has a lawyer. A telephone listing for Gilman couldn't be found.

Rhode Island state police first got the call from the boy, who said he was with his 12-year-old sister.

The children were treated for lacerations.

Police said Gilman was uninjured and arrested when he failed a field sobriety test. He's being held on $35,000 bond.

Dad questioned in severe beating of 5-month-old daughter; baby in critical condition (East St. Louis, Illinois)

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Once again, we see the danger of enlisting unmarried, uncommitted fathers as infant caretakers and babysitters. Unfortunately, mothers, family courts, and social services have been brainwashed into thinking that "father involvment" apart from family commitment is to be glorified beyond reason. Too often the results are tragic like this.

The hard facts are these. Casual sperm donor/boyfriend types who are not bonded with the mother are very seldom bonded to the infant. If they were bonded, they would be married or at least co-habiting as a family.

UNNAMED DAD

http://www.bnd.com/2013/08/01/2723201/police-dad-questioned-in-connection.html

'Heartbreaking': ESL police question dad in severe beating of infant girl

Published: August 1, 2013
Updated 7 hours ago

By CAROLYN P. SMITH — News-Democrat

EAST ST. LOUIS — A 24-year-old East St. Louis man was being questioned Thursday in connection with a severe beating inflicted on his 5-month-old daughter.

Police did not immediately release the name of the father or the baby, who remained in critical condition on Thursday at Cardinal Glennon Children's Medical Center in St. Louis.

Police Chief Michael Floore said the child's condition was "touch-and-go." He said the child-death investigation team from the St. Clair County state's attorney's office has been activated, in case the baby doesn't survive.

Police were summoned to the hospital about 6:20 p.m. Wednesday. Floore said the baby's mother took the child to a hospital because something seemed to be wrong with the baby.

"Once officers arrived at the hospital, they met with a social worker there who told them the 5-month-old had been severely beaten," Floore said. "She suffered critical injuries to her skull, left eye, brain and ribs."

A doctor said some of the injuries were fresh, Floore said.

The child's mother told police the baby had been staying with the father at the John DeShields Homes on McCasland Avenue. Police brought the father in for questioning, but no charges had been filed against him as of Thursday afternoon.

Floore said the investigation was continuing.

"There are people out there who want to have a baby, and can't. Then you have a child, and you do something like this. It's very heartbreaking," Floore said.

Dad with joint custody to go to trial in murder of 15-month-old son (Glens Falls, New York)

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I started reading this article and I wondered: Is GARY L. WAITE a custodial dad? There is no mention of a mother in the home or anywhere else. After Daddy "allegedly" assaulted the little boy, he called "a relative" --which presumably demonstrates that he is not completely depraved and indifferent. But it also suggests that Mom had somehow been removed from the scene. What happened to her? Why was this poor baby in Dad's "care"? 

When ever an apparently single abusive father with "custody rights" goes on to kill a child, there is nearly always a back story that is not told. Just how did he gain and maintain control over access? Did a battered mom lose custody in a family court decision? If so, who was the judge and the other folks involved? Has Mom "disappeared" from the scene? Is she deceased? Maybe we should find out if she was a victim of fatal domestic violence herself. These are the questions that should ALWAYS be asked in these cases. 

I looked up this case in the Dastardly archive and found out the following:

Waite, who has a criminal history for alleged assault and sex abuse, shared custody arrangement with Jesse's mother. 

http://dastardlydads.blogspot.com/2012/02/dad-with-shared-custody-charged-with.html

Why the hell did this POS even have joint custody? And notice the Dastardly axiom at work here: The killer daddy's custodial status will be neatly be forgotten by the time the case goes to trial. 

http://poststar.com/news/local/toddler-death-case-heading-toward-trial-as-accused-father-from/article_a9367e82-fae5-11e2-ae55-0019bb2963f4.html

Toddler-death case heading toward trial as accused father from Glens Falls rejects plea deal

19 hours ago • DON LEHMAN 

QUEENSBURY -- The Glens Falls man accused of killing his 15-month-old son has refused a plea offer that would require him to plead guilty to murder, and a trial has been scheduled for October.

Gary L. Waite will not plead guilty in the case, because he is “adamant that he is innocent,” his lawyer, Marc Zuckerman, said Wednesday.

A pretrial hearing in the case was held Tuesday, and Zuckerman said he was advised by the Warren County District Attorney’s Office that prosecutors would require a plea to second-degree murder and would not consent to a plea to a reduced count of manslaughter.

Warren County Judge John Hall scheduled a trial to begin Oct. 21, with a pretrial hearing scheduled for Oct. 17. That hearing will focus on the admissibility of the written statement Waite gave to police in the hours after Jesse Smith was hospitalized with a severe head injury on Feb. 13, 2012. The child died two days later.

In the statement, Waite is quoted as telling Glens Falls Police the boy fell and hit his head on a chair leg in Waite’s Orville Street apartment, and that Waite threw him on a couch when he became frustrated that the boy wouldn’t stop crying.

Waite told police the toddler bounced off and hit his head on a wood floor, according to court records. Waite is charged with second-degree murder under a theory of law that alleges he showed “depraved indifference to human life” in causing the death of another person. He also faces a felony count of second-degree manslaughter and misdemeanor count of endangering the welfare of a child.

The depraved indifference statute has been complicated by court rulings in recent years that have toughened the standard for the charge, so that prosecutors have to show the defendant had no concern for the victim. 

Zuckerman argued Waite’s calls to a relative for help showed he had concern for the child, and Warren County Judge John Hall dismissed the murder count last fall.

But the Warren County District Attorney’s Office appealed that ruling and the Appellate Division of state Supreme Court overturned it and reinstated the murder count last week, finding there was sufficient evidence to support the indictment.

Warren County District Attorney Kate Hogan said her office is prepared for trial in the case and believes it can prove the murder charge. Her office has pointed to medical evidence that prosecutors believe contradicts Waite’s version of events and indicates more force was used to cause the boy’s injuries than would have occurred through the falls Waite described.

Zuckerman, though, said he does not believe there is sufficient evidence to prove the murder count. And if Waite is convicted, the depraved indifference finding will be an issue on appeal.

“With the facts as they are, even if you believe the prosecution’s theory of what happened, which my client disputes, it doesn’t rise to the level of depraved indifference,” Zuckerman said.

He said the state Legislature needs to rewrite and clarify the depraved indifference statute. Hogan and the state District Attorney’s Association have been pushing the state Legislature for changes to the law.

“Right now, every judge has a different opinion on what the law is,” Zuckerman said.

Waite is being held in Warren County Jail, pending further court action.

Dad arrested on "suspicion of murder" in deaths of two sons (County Mayo, Ireland)

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Looks like either a simulated or failed murder-suicide attempt. Personally, this strikes me as totally--if badly--staged. How are you going to hang yourself by a rope in a car?

Dad is identified as SANJEEV CHADA.

http://www.advertiser.ie/mayo/article/62868/father-continues-to-be-questioned-following-death-of-two-sons

Father continues to be questioned following death of two sons

MAYO ADVERTISER, AUGUST 02, 2013.
By Geraldine Carr

A bleak atmosphere hung over Westport this week after the bodies of two missing children from Carlow were found in the boot of a car which was driven by their father Sanjeev Chada who has been arrested on suspicion of murder.

The bodies of Eoghan (10) and Ruairi (five) Chada were discovered in the car after it crashed into a wall on the Old Coast Road at Rosbeg on Monday afternoon around 3.30pm. The Ford Focus, which was driven by their father Sanjeev, collided head on into a wall after the car drove out off a side road onto the main road. Those who came across the crash found the 43-year-old driver with a noose wrapped around his neck and the bodies of his sons in the car boot.

The boys were reported missing on Sunday night after Sanjeev left the family home at Ballinkillen, Co Carlow, with the children to go bowling in Carlow and never returned. The Child Rescue Ireland alert system was used for the first time by gardaí on Monday to try and locate the boys, however the grim discovery in Westport was the sad conclusion to the search for the children.

The scene at Rosbeg was immediately preserved for a technical examination and the car was removed from the scene of the collision for further technical and forensic examination. A post mortem of the two children was carried out by the deputy State pathologist Dr Jabbar with the results of the post mortem not being released, however it has been reported that the boys died from asphyxiation, and were killed hours before the crash. 

Sanjeev Chada, who was treated in Mayo General Hospital for injuries sustained in the crash was released from hospital on Wednesday afternoon and was arrested after his release at 12.30pm. He was brought to Westport Garda Station for questioning and was detained under Section 4 of the Criminal Justice Act, 1984 where he could be detained for 24 hours. Questioning was suspended on Wednesday evening to allow him to sleep and resumed on Thursday morning which meant that the period of detention was due to expire on Thursday evening. At the time of going to print Mr Chada had not been charged.

Yesterday a technical examination was carried out on an area near Ballintubber Abbey.

The bodies of the two boys were released on Wednesday night and made the journey home to their mother Kathleen in a single white coffin.

The brothers are to be buried today (Friday) in St Lazerian's Church, Ballinkillen at 1pm, with burial afterwards in the adjoining cemetery.

Cathaoirleach of Mayo County Council, Westport area councillor John O’Malley said that people in Westport are “shocked and stunned” about the events which occurred. “It’s the most horrible news that I have ever heard in the area,” Cllr O’Malley told the Mayo Advertiser. He expressed his sympathy to the family of the deceased and said that he hoped that God would give their mother strength during this difficult time.

Cathaoirleach of Westport Town Council Michael McLaughlin also conveyed his sympathy to the family of the deceased for this “terrible tragedy.”

How rich, drug-addicted dad got custody and tortured the kids till he died of a meth overdose (South Carolina)

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Notice that the authorities knew what was going on, but looked the other way. This is typical with custodial dads, especially rich custodial dads. 

Dad  is identified as WALKER "SKIPPER" INMAN JR. 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2383194/Doris-Duke-descendants-Treated-worse-dogs-Twins-set-inherit-fortune-tell-child-abuse.html

Locked in feces-smeared basement, eating scraps and given scalding baths: Twins set to inherit billion-dollar Doris Duke fortune tell of their horrific childhood abuse 

Georgina and Walker Inman set to inherit part of $1BN tobacco fortune
Twins, 15, locked in faeces-strewn basement by heroin-addict father 
Pair only eat scraps of food thrown to them and had to go to the toilet in the corner of a room, according to court document 
Georgina tells of harrowing childhood in shocking interview 
Children had a pet lion and took diamonds to school show and tell, but hardly had enough food to survive 
Walker and Georgia Inman are the great-niece and nephew of 'richest girl in the world' Doris Duke whose father founded American Tobacco 
Twins' mother now in court battle to get hold of their inheritance 

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER
PUBLISHED: 05:18 EST, 2 August 2013 | UPDATED: 10:13 EST, 2 August 2013

They may be the child heirs to a billion dollar fortune, but that was no protection against years of harrowing cruelty at the hands of their father.

Forced to live in faeces-strewn basement, existing like slaves and enduring scalding baths in boiling water, some of the horrifying details of life for twins Georgina and Walker Inman III, 15, are just emerging.

They are set to inherit part of the $1billion fortune of heiress Doris Duke - dubbed the 'richest girl in the world' thanks to trust funds set up by her father who founded American Tobacco - when they turn 21.

But Georgina has revealed that growing up at their heroin-addicted father’s mansion was anything but a life of pampered privilege in a shocking interview for Rolling Stone magazine, out today.

'I never asked to be born into any of this. Sometimes I wish I was never born.'

Georgia recalled one of the regular horrors she and her brother Walker faced at the hands of their father Walker 'Skipper' Inman Jr and, allegedly, his fifth wife at the Duke family estate in South Carolina.

Speaking with a faltering voice, she described being dunked in a scalding bath.

She told Rolling Stone magazine: 'They. Stuck my brother and I. In hot boiling water in our bath. It felt like our skin was melting away.'

She called her fortune ‘blood money’ and told of one time when she put a gun to her father’s head in an attempt to end the torture.

More details of their harrowing upbringing emerged in an affidavit related to a onetime lawsuit over damage at a rented, 10,000-square-foot mansion, dubbed Outlaw Acres, in Wyoming, provided by plantation caretaker Vick 'Butch' Deer.

In it she recalled that 'Walker 'Skipper' Inman Jr made them stay down in the basement all the time’.

'The basement was covered in faeces, and it was smeared all over, and it smelled terrible. It was so bad that I wouldn’t leave a dog in that condition.’

Several others said the kids were locked in their room each night, and, according to a former nanny, 'There was food strewn across the floor and a foul smell from where the kids had been relieving themselves in a corner.'

The cruel father — who received an estimated $90,000 monthly inheritance — got custody of the kids in 2000 when they were two years old. He had custody until he died from a meth overdose in 2010.

The twins now live with their mother Daisha Inman, Walker’s third wife, in a $20,000-a month Utah rental.

Inman is currently locked in a vicious legal battle with executives from Citibank and JPMorgan — who administer the twins’ trust funds thought to be worth $60million — in Manhattan Surrogate’s Court over her handling of their inheritance.

Titled 'Poorest Rich Kids in the World', the article includes horrified recollections from employees who worked at Walker’s estates and saw first-hand how the children were treated.

One incident described within the article, details how Walker’s fifth wife, Daralee, crashed into a tree while drink-driving the children to school at 7.30am.

But amidst the savage cruelty, Georgina reveals glimpses of extraordinary privilege.

The children had a pet lion cub and brought diamonds to school for show-and-tell, but they looked malnourished with dark circles under their eyes to the stream of nannies who cared for them.

The staggering wealth and extreme neglect and abuse created a warped environment for the youngsters to grow up in.

And they are still living a cloistered life, having never played the childhood game Musical Chairs, and still believing in Father Christmas.

'Dear Santa, I know I haven’t been good, but if you do come all I want is to say hi to you in person,' Patterson recently wrote to the mythical character, according to Rolling Stone, in the shaky handwriting of a first-grader.

Georgia claims she once spotted the bearded man in the flesh, but it’s more likely the vision was an apparition of her late father, who’s haunted her since his untimely passing.

'I think he’s here,' she whispered during the magazine interview, gesturing to an empty chair in her new Utah home.

Walker’s fondest memory of their father was when he intentionally set off a tear-gas grenade in the house as part of a whacked-out safety lesson.

Despite the detailed incidents of cruelty, authorities did not act to remove the children from their abusers, according to a report in the New York Post.

Wyoming law-enforcement never filed charges against the Inmans, who lavished local staff with exorbitant salaries and benefits.

When Walker brought his family to the South Carolina plantation, the Department of Social Services logged three reports about the crazy clan. 

In one incident, police were called to a restaurant after Georgia’s dad slapped her so hard, fellow diners feared for her life. 

The troubled duo were sent to a mental hospital for three months of recovery from a childhood of trauma.

And they’ve yet to fully heal. Both teens have recently contemplated suicide and suffered from anorexia.

Daisha’s plans for her kids’ future? Pairing them up with fellow fatherless children with a similar amount of baggage.

'She’s working on getting the twins together with Michael Jackson’s kids, with whom she thinks they’d have tons in common,' the article concludes.

Doris Duke inherited untold millions from her father James 'Buck' Duke - the founder of American Tobacco, maker of Lucky Strike cigarettes.

His massive gift to a small, private college in North Carolina led leaders there to change its name to Duke University. The huge sum resulted in Duke becoming one of the most elite universities in the country

Doris Duke, who died in 1993, left a large philanthropic legacy, as well. She was know during her time as 'the richest girl in the world' and was a superstar celebrity and socialite for most of her life.

On her death, she left nearly all of her $1billon estate to the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, which remains a major force in the philanthropic world.

However, Doris Duke had no surviving biological children and part of the Duke fortune went into trust funds for the Inman twins.

Dad gets 6 years for scalding 2-year-old son (Trenton, New Jersey)

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Dad is identified as BEAU HOLDER. 

http://www.nj.com/mercer/index.ssf/2013/08/trenton_man_gets_six_years_for_causing_his_son_to_receive_third-degree_burns.html

Trenton man gets six years for burning toddler son in scalding bath
By Brendan McGrath/The Times of Trenton on August 02, 2013 at 2:43 PM, updated August 02, 2013 at 2:44 PM

 TRENTON — A Trenton man who put his 2-year-old son in a scolding hot tub of bathwater was sentenced to six years in prison today.

Beau Holder, 29, was watching his son Selah Brown on Father’s Day 2011 when he placed the boy in the bath, causing second- and third-degree burns over 65 percent of his body.

Holder’s attorney Antonio Martinez called the injuries that Brown received “utterly horrible,” but said his client did not mean to hurt his son.

“This was not an intentional act by any means,” Martinez said in court today.

Martinez said that since the incident Holder has wanted to reach out to his son’s mother Dedra Brown and her family, but Martinez has cautioned him not to approach them.

Dedra Brown wants Holder to have nothing to do with their son’s life going forward, Martinez said.

Before Superior Court Judge Thomas Sumners issued the sentence, he gave Holder an opportunity to speak.

“To Miss Brown, to the Brown family, to my son: I am sorry,” Holder said.

Sumners followed the terms of a plea deal and sentenced Holder to six years for charges of endangering the welfare of a child.

Drunk dad neglects 2-year-old daughter during visitation; girl found wandering (Spartanburg, South Carolina)

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The fathers rights folks have created this fairy tale that Mean Mommies keep their kids away from Poor Daddies. Pure BS.

More often than not, mothers bend over backwards to accommodate all kinds of useless sperm donors and facilitate visitation.

All dad SHINADORE LEANTHONY HARRIS had to do was ask, and Mom dropped of their 2-year-old daughter that very day. Then Daddy proceeded to get drunk and "lose" her. 

http://www.goupstate.com/article/20130801/ARTICLES/130809966/1083/ARTICLES?Title=Man-arrested-after-2-year-old-searches-door-to-door-for-father

Man arrested after 2-year-old searches door-to-door for father

From Staff Reports
Published: Thursday, August 1, 2013 at 9:36 p.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, August 1, 2013 at 9:36 p.m.

Police say a 2-year-old child spent about an hour and a half going door-to-door at Crescent Hills Apartments in the rain Wednesday night looking for her father, who was at the complex drinking with friends.

Shinadore Leanthony Harris, 30, of 119 Seminole Drive, Una, was charged with neglect of a child/helpless person, according to online jail records.

An incident report states that several witnesses told police that the child had knocked on their doors looking for her daddy, and that they tried to find her father in the apartment complex. The child's mother arrived after police, saying she had received a call from Harris earlier in the day saying he wanted to see the girl, so she dropped the child off at Harris' aunt's house on Farley Street. She did not know how Harris and the child got to the apartment complex, the report states.

Harris was angry and intoxicated when he was arrested, saying that the people he was drinking with were supposed to be watching the child, the report states.

Harris was also charged in an unrelated case with financial transaction card fraud more than $500. His bond amount was unavailable.

 The child was released to her mother.

Drunk dad abandons 9-year-old son at skate park (Moline, Illinois)

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Once again, we have an apparently alcoholic dad who neglected a child. But this time, there is absolutely no mention of a mother in the home or anywhere else. We have mention of an aunt, a grandma....what happened to Mom? And why does this boozing freak apparently have custody?

Dad is identified as RAUL LOUIS LIENDO. 

http://qctimes.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/police-boy-missing-for-hours-while-dad-drinks/article_d23b8a3b-412f-54b9-9242-075c38bd4f12.html

Police: Boy missing for hours while dad drinks

July 31, 2013 12:55 pm • Brian Wellner

A boy who had been missing for several hours Sunday after his father left him alone so he could go drinking is in the safety of a relative, police said Wednesday.

Raul Louis Liendo, 45, of Moline is accused of leaving his 9-year-old son alone at the Davenport skate park on West River Drive around midnight, when it was closed, and going to a local tavern to drink.

When he returned an hour later, the child was gone, his arrest affidavit states.

Liendo, who didn't know where his son went, waited until 2:52 a.m. to call police, or about an hour and 50 minutes after he returned to the skate park and discovered his son wasn't there, the affidavit states.

By 6 a.m. Sunday, police still hadn't located the child, the affidavit states.

It wasn't until later Sunday that police learned the defendant's sister had arranged for someone to pick the child up in the area around the skate park, Davenport Police Capt. Dale Sievert said.

"The child is OK and was found at home with (the defendant's) sister," Sievert said.

Police aren't sure how long the child was missing. Sievert said that when officers went to sister's house, they did not answer because they were asleep. It wasn't until the grandmother later checked the house that police knew the boy was at the home, he said.

Although the child was unharmed, police say Liendo put his son in great risk. The area around the skate park in the 900 block of West River Drive is described by police as a place where "high crime activity occurs," including prostitution, fights and narcotics sales, according to Liendo's affidavit.

He left his son without adult supervision and without a cellphone, the affidavit states. When police talked to Liendo, he appeared intoxicated, the affidavit states.

Liendo is charged with child endangerment, which is an aggravated misdemeanor punishable by up to two years in prison. He's also charged with a misdemeanor count of public intoxication.

Court upholds life term for rapist dad (New Delhi, India)

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The rapist dad is identified as SANT RAM. 

http://www.hindustantimes.com/India-news/NewDelhi/Delhi-High-court-upholds-life-term-of-rapist-father/Article1-1101518.aspx

Delhi: High court upholds life term of rapist father
Harish V Nair, Hindustan Times New Delhi, August 01, 2013
First Published: 00:25 IST(1/8/2013) | Last Updated: 00:26 IST(1/8/2013)

The Delhi high court on Wednesday upheld the life sentence awarded to a man three years ago by a trial court for raping his own minor daughter. Delivering the order, the court said the ‘ghastly act’ had “shaken the faith of children in their own parents”.

The 16-year-old girl became pregnant after the incident and delivered a child.

“The convict’s lawyer has failed in establishing his innocence. On the other hand, it is established that the appellant, who is father of the victim and the protector of his daughter himself, betrayed her trust. The act committed by the appellant has shaken the faith of children in their own parents,” said a bench of justices GP Mittal and GS Sistani, dismissing the appeal filed by Sant Ram.

The accused in his defence said that the act was “consensual” and “it could be proved from the fact that the girl had not complained.

He argued that the “incident came to light only when her mother noticed after she became pregnant and filed a rape complaint”.

However, the court rejected the argument, saying :”Keeping in view the evidence produced coupled with the victim’s age, her mere submission to the barbaric lust of her father cannot be said to be voluntary participation in the act and consensual in nature”.

While sentencing Ram to life imprisonment on April 22, 2010, the trial court had also imposed a fine of Rs. 2 lakh on him with a direction that Rs. 1 lakh each would be given to the victim, who is already married, as well as the child.

The court said the existing laws in India are highly inadequate in dealing with cases related to incest by close relatives, particularly where the father is the perpetrator of this brutality.

“Instances are not rare in India of people taking the law into their own hands. Incest offences in many cases often end up in honour killings in our society. It is time to wake up to this situation and acknowledge the existence of incest in our Indian society before it is too late,” the court said.

Dad charged with forcing 12-year-old son to wear shock collar (Knoxville, Iowa)

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Is DANIEL HARDWICK a custodial father? Notice that there is no mention of a mother anywhere in this account, just an unidentified "woman" (girlfriend?). What happened to Mom and how did daddy get access?

This sounds like one sick pup of a daddy....

http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20130731/NEWS/307310047/Knoxville-dad-says-he-didn-t-shock-his-son

Knoxville dad says he didn't shock his son
Jul. 31, 2013

Written by Jason Noble

KNOXVILLE, IA. — The Knoxville man accused of forcing his 12-year-old son to wear a shock collar denied ever actually shocking the boy, according to an arrest report obtained by The Des Moines Register. 

Daniel Hardwick, 35, told police he put the collar on his son to “motivate” him to do chores and admitted to allegations that he had restrained the boy in a high chair on the curb outside the house as punishment for refusing to eat. But he disputed allegations that he had shocked the boy, beaten him with a leather leash or locked him in a kennel.

The child, however, told an Iowa Department of Human Services caseworker that his father had once used the dog collar’s vibration and shock settings on him and that Hardwick “only hits him with the leather dog leash when he is bad.”

Hardwick’s arrest happened Thursday, after police responded to a request from DHS to accompany the caseworker to Hardwick’s home just two blocks from the police department in downtown Knoxville.

Police arrested Hardwick at that time, and he’s since been charged with neglect or abandonment of a dependent person, a felony. He was released from jail after posting bond Monday. The Marion County attorney said Tuesday that Hardwick has a court appearance scheduled for Friday.

Knoxville Police Chief Daniel Losada said Tuesday that DHS “made arrangements to make sure the child was safe,” although he did not elaborate. Other children, he said, remained at the home. A spokesman for DHS said the agency could not comment on specific cases.

On Tuesday, Knoxville police appeared to remove evidence from Hardwick’s home, including a high chair that had been sitting in the yard outside the house.

About 1:30 p.m., three police officers parked vehicles in front of the home, and two went inside while the other remained on the porch, talking to a small child through a screen door. After about 10 minutes, the officers emerged carrying an object in a gray plastic bag and then loaded the high chair into a police truck. 

The chair was later seen being carried into the police station.

Losada acknowledged his officers were continuing to work on the case but declined to comment on the items collected Tuesday afternoon. “There is an investigation going on as we speak,” he said shortly after the police left the residence.

Hardwick and a woman were home when the police arrived Tuesday afternoon. The woman said they had been advised by an attorney not to speak with the media. A neighbor, Scott Collins, who lives two doors down, said he knew little about Hardwick or others living at the house.

He said he hadn’t even been aware there were children living there, although he had noticed a perpetual garage sale display that included many children’s items.

Dad with history of DV threatens mom after child custody hearing (Franklin County, Pennsylvania)

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Because that's what batterers do. They want to further abuse and control the mother by securing custody.

Dad is identified as DWAYNE E. THOMAS. 

http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2013/07/angry_father_threatens_mother.html

Angry father threatens mother of his child after court custody hearing in Franklin County, police say

By Jeffrey A. Johnson July 31, 2013 at 8:29 AM, updated July 31, 2013 at 8:40 AM

A Franklin County man who has a history of beating the mother of his son is accused of threatening the mother after the two participated in a court custody hearing Tuesday, according to Shippensburg police. 

Dwayne E. Thomas, 21, of the 100 block of Mount Pleasant Road, Fayetteville, is facing charges of making terroristic threats and harassment.

Thomas allegedly sent threatening text messages to the mother of his child in which he said he was going to hurt her and damage her property, according to police. The texts were sent after a court custody hearing that

Thomas participated in by phone, police said. Thomas on a previous occasion punched the mother of his child in the head at her place of employment, police said.

Mom tries to keep son safe after dad's sexual abuse (South Bend, Indiana)

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So sad, and yet to typical of the coddling that abuser dad get from the system. Mom was relatively lucky in that UNNAMED DAD seemed to tire of fighting for custody/visitation, and finally wandered off--at least for now. Too many moms are not so lucky.

http://www.southbendtribune.com/news/crime/article_a072468e-fbba-11e2-83c7-0019bb30f31a.html

Mother tries to keep son safe after father’s abuse

Posted: Sunday, August 4, 2013 7:00 am | Updated: 7:41 am, Sun Aug 4, 2013.
VIRGINIA BLACK South Bend Tribune
Posted on August 4, 2013

From the time Amy's son could speak, the worried boy would tell her, "Mom, the bogeyman's gonna get me!"

No, the Plymouth mother would reassure him, there's no bogeyman.

But the boy held on to his fears, which seemed to grow as he did.

When anyone pulled the toddler's pants down to change a diaper, he would quickly pull them back up. Bedtime featured terrible nightmares and, too often, a wet bed.

Other signs of trouble later emerged, Amy says now.

The boy’s father called Amy several times because his son had hit him in the gut, in the nose, in the genitals. The angry man would put the boy on the phone.

'I'd say, ‘Don't hit your dad,' and he'd be mad, but he'd say, ‘OK, Mom,’ " Amy says. "They fought like kids."

The boy began to refuse to spend time with his father, which Amy and her attorney attributed to his father's frequent bouts with drinking, which the boy openly discussed. That was despite the fact the father routinely bought his son expensive toys and treated him to Chuck E Cheese every weekend.

Court records describe how the boy would punch his Winnie the Pooh and say, "I'm killing my dad!"

Everything changed when the child turned 5. Amy re-members that moment in the kitchen, her son’s head slowly swiveling as he studied every corner.

'"Mom, there's no cameras in here. My dad can't see me,"' he told his mother. "It was like everything was becoming clear to him. You could just see it happening. The longer I kept him away, the more he was figuring stuff out,” his mother said.

They were standing near the sink when the dam that had been restraining the boy's emotions finally broke.

"He goes, 'Remember when you said that nobody could touch my privates?' I said, ‘Yeah.’

“And he goes, 'Well, my dad does it all the time. And when I punch him like you told me, you yell at me.' And then I knew," Amy says, describing how the two hugged each other, crying, as they sunk to the floor.

"I just apologized to him over and over again, 'I'm so sorry, I'm just so sorry.'. ... And he said, 'Mom, you didn't know. My dad lies a lot."

His father boasted that he could see his son at all times, the boy said, and he threatened to hurt him and the rest of the family if he ever told what happened when the two were alone.

Amy sobs at the memory, even now. "I just didn't know. I knew something was bad, but I didn't know."

‘He wanted me to be scared’

Amy and her son's father had not married, but he had immediately offered to support the boy and be a part of his life since he was born 11 years ago.

He was a hard worker, read the Bible, "was like an old Southern guy," Amy says of her son’s father. He would often come for dinner and spend time with her two other children from her earlier marriage.

Amy developed a condition much like Parkinson's, related to her job as a welder, and eventually went on dis-ability. When she was first having bouts of ill health, he was generous in providing for his son.

But after Amy reported the boy's revelations and a counselor confirmed the abuse, the Department of Child Services opened a case.

Because the abuse allegedly happened at the father's apartment in St. Joseph County, that was where the case was handled. A detective interviewed the father and reported to Amy the man “loves his son."

A letter from a deputy prosecutor on Jan. 9, 2009, broke the news that no charges would be filed. 

"My decision not to charge does not necessarily mean that I do not believe the events described ... did not happen," she wrote. "Rather, I am concerned with initiating a lengthy, at times, distressing process that is unlikely to result in a conviction."

Meanwhile, the boy was opening up more to his DCS-assigned therapist.

The boy "disclosed that his father 'pulls my private parts' (while pointing to his penis) while they are 'in bed,' " she wrote in a July 24, 2007, letter to DCS.

In October 2008, the therapist reported the boy described his father tying him to a chair and forcing him to repeatedly watch scary movies, especially the "Chuckie" and "Friday the 13th" movies. Jason, the hockey mask-wearing villain of the "Friday the 13th" films, was the "bogeyman" the boy was most afraid of.

"Daddy made me watch it," the therapist quoted the boy. "He wanted me to be scared."

Who was lying?

A judge approved the DCS plan to continue treatment for the boy and his mother and to deny visitation with his father until he admitted what he'd done, apologized to his son and underwent parenting classes and treatment.

In a six-month review on June 20, 2008, a DCS case manager wrote, the man "does very little participation and he is still in denial about his drinking and that he inappropriately touched his son."

Amy says her son was beginning to work through his fear and anger when suddenly the boy's father hired another attorney who took a more aggressive approach. Then DCS, whose employees seemed as if they were in the boy's corner, did an about-face. 

All of a sudden, possibly because of a state-mandated time frame for open cases, authorities wanted to close the case and reunite the boy and his father, first with supervised visits. 

The DCS-contracted therapist, who the boy had learned to trust, objected to the move, saying the boy wasn't ready. She was pulled from the case, documents show.

The boy “reacted with extreme emotionality upon hearing he would have to visit his father," the new therapist wrote in a December 2009 report. He "has made disclosures to this therapist and his previous therapist as well. ... He qualifies for a (diagnosis) of PTSD."

Meanwhile, the court battle intensified. Both parents were ordered to take polygraphs. Despite the shaking of her hands because of her disability, a report confirms Amy passed hers. Her child’s father never turned one in, she says.

A CASA — Court Appointed Special Advocate — was ultimately appointed to try to sort out whether Amy was putting her son up to the allegations against his father.

The CASA described his impressions about the boy and his family in a subsequent 2009 report to the judge.

"This CASA was left with the impression that (the boy) was truthful and very intimidated by his father," he wrote.

He wrote of also meeting with the boy's father, who seemed to love his son but was full of anger and denial.

"This CASA understands the reason ... (for) visitation," he wrote, adding his opinion was "visitation should not begin at this time."

‘They had a job to do’

Yet Amy says she was told by a DCS case manager and her attorney that if she did not agree to the supervised visitation, her son would be taken from her and placed in foster care.

She says they told her son, "You just need to get over it. You need to see your dad. You're just going to make your dad feel bad."

During visitations supervised by a third party, according to a therapist's report, the man gave the boy money and toys, asked him to change into new pants he had brought for him, and winked at him.

But abruptly, after one visitation, the boy's father left town, Amy says.

The man sends letters and checks occasionally, and Amy and her son both worry about what will happen if he shows up again to claim his parenting rights.

"All I can figure is he was trying to get the heck out of there," Amy says. "Something else must have been going on."

But she and her children have picked up the pieces. The now-11-year-old boy, tan with summertime and the sports he loves, is charming and calm when talking about the ordeal.

"We were one wounded family," Amy says. "My kids learned subject matter they should not have even known existed yet."

The boy’s sister, nearly 15, recalls that her brother often took his anger out on her, and as recently as a year ago still refused to so much as spend the night at a friend’s house.

“You can see he’s a happy boy again,” she says, “and he’s not as scared. I know he’ll be OK.”

Amy had been fighting her disease, sometimes in a wheelchair, during the years of fighting for her son. She’s spent her life's savings on attorneys and other costs, she says.

She's disillusioned about a system that meant she couldn't speak out for her son for fear of being accused of filling him full of lies. “They have to listen to the children more,” she says.

And she's appalled that the costs involved with the lingering case might have spurred authorities to move so abruptly to close it. "They could have stood up for my son," Amy says.

"They had a job to do. That's all it boils down to.”

Dad with "verbal custody agreement" sentenced for beating death of 7-month-old daughter (Chandler, Arizona)

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Another short-tempered young father who never should have had caretaking responsibilities for an infant.

Infants need loving, consistent care. They do NOT need to be passed around like a hot potato in a custody arrangement. They do not violent dads who fracture their skulls because they are "frustrated" by normal infant crying.

Dad is identified as SERGIO THOMAS.

http://www.azcentral.com/community/chandler/articles/20130802chandler-father-sentenced-prison-child-abuse-abrk.html

Chandler father sentenced to prison for child abuse

Sergio Thomas, 21, was arrested at the hospital where his daughter died.

By Matthew Longdon
The Arizona Republic-12 News Breaking News Team
Fri Aug 2, 2013 5:22 PM

A judge sentenced a Chandler father to 36 years in prison and lifetime probation Friday for second-degree murder and child abuse after he beat his 7-month-old daughter to death when she wouldn’t stop crying in 2010.

Sergio Thomas, 23, was arrested in December 2010 after Rylee Thomas died from skull fractures and bleeding in her brain, Chandler police said. Police officers and firefighters found the girl unresponsive in the home, and she was flown to the hospital in critical condition, where she died, police said.

Thomas originally said he changed Rylee and gave her a bottle before going to bed, and he found her unresponsive in the morning, court records show. Thomas said he performed CPR and called 911.

Doctors said Rylee was killed by abusive head trauma, records show.

After his arrest, Thomas told police he yanked his daughter out of bed because she wouldn’t stop crying, and she fell asleep in his arms. A few hours later, Rylee woke up again and wouldn’t stop crying, so Thomas carried her back to her room by her arm and shook her to stop her crying, records show.

When Rylee continued crying, he hit her with “80 percent of his strength” on the back of the head with an open hand and slapped her several times, records show. He left her in the room, and he found her unresponsive in the morning.

He told police he has an anger problem and admitted to hurting Rylee because he was frustrated she had not been sleeping.

“I made a mistake that killed my daughter,” Thomas told police during questioning.

Thomas was separated from his wife, and the two had a verbal custody agreement to share Rylee and an older son on a weekly basis. Thomas said he was the only person taking care of his daughter when she died.

Dad who was "keeping" 5-month-old daughter charged with aggravated battery; baby has over 20 fractures (East St. Louis, Illinois)

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This is what happens when you simultaneously destroy the social safety net AND set up "father freindly" policies where fathers have no responsibilities for their children, just "rights."

It appears that this baby's mother was homeless. That this woman was homeless with a young infant would not happen in any decent society that provided shelter and assistance to our brothers and sisters in need.  But she copes as best she can, by handing the baby over to the father so the baby isn't living on the streets. A father who, mind you, apparently couldn't be bothered to offer the mother shelter or any financial assistance to care for the baby.

Then of course, the predictable happens. Like so many boyfriends/sperm donors, he is incapable of caring for an infant and nearly bashes her to death. For all of mom's problems, notice that is was SHE who noticed that the baby was not acting right and took her to the hospital. Happens a lot with these POS dads. That it is the mother who tries to rescue the infant, even though they typically have fewer resources.

Dad is identified as LATAJHIA MILLENDER.

Can't help wondering whether Daddy had a history of domestic violence against the mother as well....

http://www.bnd.com/2013/08/02/2725408/abused-girl-is-stable-while-police.html

East St. Louis father charged in abuse of daughter

Published: August 2, 2013
By CAROLYN P. SMITH — News-Democrat

EAST ST. LOUIS — The father of an infant girl who sustained more than 20 fractures and other injuries was charged Friday with aggravated battery to a child, St. Clair County State's Attorney Brendan Kelly said.

Latajhia Millender, 24, of East St. Louis, was charged after he was questioned by investigators. The 5-month-old girl was in stable condition Friday at Cardinal Glennon Children's Hospital in St. Louis.

Police Chief Michael Floore said during a news conference Thursday afternoon that doctors told the investigating officer, Sgt. Gilda Johnson, that the baby sustained injuries to her skull, left eye and brain. He said the infant had old and new injuries.

On Wednesday night, police investigators were called by hospital officials at Cardinal Glennon after doctors determined the baby had suffered physical abuse by someone.

Floore didn't say how the injuries occurred. He said he could not talk about details because the police were still investigating the matter. But, he said it was clear that the child had been "severely abused."

The child's mother, who police believe is homeless, went to the residence where the father was keeping the child in the John DeShields public housing complex at 1235 McCasland Ave. and noticed she was not acting right. She took the girl to the hospital.

The county's child-death investigation team had been activated in case the baby doesn't survive, Floore said.

Dad charged with assaulting 12-week-old daughter; returned to jail (Dukes County, Massachusetts)

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Dad is identified as SHAUN SICSICO.

http://www.mvtimes.com/2013/08/01/shaun-sicsico-returned-jail-following-hearing-16728/

Shaun Sicsico returned to jail following hearing

By Christy Aumer
August 1, 2013

Shaun Sicsico, charged with seriously injuring his infant daughter, was returned to the Dukes County Jail where he is being held on $50,000 cash bail, after a brief court appearance before Judge Thomas Barrett in Edgartown District Court Thursday.

Mr. Sicsico's lawyer, Robert Manning of Barnstable, told Judge Barrett that his knowledge of the case extended to Mr. Sicsico's $50,000 cash bail. The judge continued the case for a further pretrial hearing, set for August 9.

The baby's injuries were discovered when the child's parents, Andrea Metell of Oak Bluffs and Mr. Sicsico, brought her to the Martha's Vineyard Hospital. The child was later transferred by MedFlight to Boston Children's Hospital.

The attending physicians, as well as Dr. Alice Newton, medical director of the Child Protection Team at Boston Children's Hospital, came to the conclusion that the child's injuries were consistent with abuse, according to a copy of the statement of facts presented to the court and obtained by The Times.

The baby had "bruising on all limbs, as well as bruising of eyelids, and a torn frenulum [a connecting fold of membrane serving to support or restrain a part (as the tongue)]."

The hospital contacted the Department of Children and Families (DCF) and told the social welfare agency that Jaelynn had been brought to the hospital with severe brain injuries. DCF social workers took emergency custody of the child and called the Oak Bluffs Police Department.

Oak Bluffs and State Police arrested Mr. Sicsico Sunday on a charge of assault and battery on a child, causing substantial injuries that left his 12-week-old daughter, born prematurely, on life support.

Mr. Sicsico told the police officers that "he spun the victim and may have spun her too hard," according to court records.

Jaelynn Elizabeth Metell was born on May 2, at Massachusetts General Hospital. She weighed 2 pounds, 8 ounces at birth, according to her birth announcement.

In a telephone conversation Monday, Cape and Island's District Attorney Michael O'Keefe said the child had only been home for three to four weeks and was at Children's Hospital "on life support."

Boston Children's Hospital media representative Erin Tornatore said Thursday she could not provide any information on the condition of the baby.

Primary "caretaker" dad gets 32 years for murder of 14-month-old daughter (Virginia Beach, Virginia)

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I have no doubts that women can do an outstanding job serving in the military. I do have doubts as to whether young thugish fathers can do the job on the home front.

The killer daddy is identified as MARCUS DEWAYNE BRANTLEY.

http://hamptonroads.com/2013/08/virginia-beach-father-gets-32-years-babys-death

Virginia Beach father gets 32 years for baby's death
By Elisabeth Hulette
The Virginian-Pilot
August 5, 2013

VIRGINIA BEACH

Marcus Dewayne Brantley will serve 32 years in prison for the death of his 14-month-old daughter, a Circuit Court judge decided today.

Brantley pleaded guilty in April to second-degree murder and child endangerment. The defense asked for 15 years, but Judge Glenn R. Croshaw issued the maximum number — 45 years — and suspended 13.

Melanie Brantley died nearly a year ago. At the time, Brantley said she had fallen and injured herself, but child abuse experts determined she had been beaten.

Her mother was deployed with the Navy when it happened.

Dad accused of choking teen son, forcing him to stay in shed (Mobile, Alabama)

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Dad is identified as DAVID DIAMOND. No mention here of a mother in the home or anywhere else.

http://www.fox10tv.com/dpp/news/local_news/mobile_county/ada-wants-no-contact-order-for-father

ADA wants no contact order for fatherFather accused of choking son

Updated: Sunday, 04 Aug 2013, 9:58 PM CDT
Published : Sunday, 04 Aug 2013, 3:16 PM CDT
Renee Dials

MOBILE, Ala. (WALA) - Mobile County prosecutors are hoping to hear from a circuit court judge who has been asked to set a hearing on two motions in a domestic violence case we've been following. It involves a man accused of choking his son , and forcing the teen to stay in a shed during the day.

David Diamond may be back in court before his September 2 preliminary hearing. Diamond pleaded not guilty .

Assistant District Attorney Nicki Patterson is asking the judge set a hearing on two motions she recently filed.

One of the motions involves Diamond's lawyer, Steve Giardini . Patterson believes Giardini has a conflict of interest, because he was in charge of two investigations involving Diamond in 2002 and 2008 when he worked as an Assistant D.A.

"The cases were not prosecuted. They were reviewed. DHR is the one who brought them forward. Some actions were taken by DHR, and there was no law enforcement involvement as far as our records show, but Mr. Giardini was the person in charge of those investigations, and ultimately the one who made the decision to close," Patterson said.

Reporters questioned Giardini on July 29 about a possible conflict of interest.

Reporter: "Would that present a conflict to represent him?"

Giardini: "Potentially."

Renee: "So you're not saying you didn't, you're just saying you don't recall?"

Giardini: "I have no recollection of it."

Giardini told reporters he couldn't remember any cases involving Diamond while he was with the D.A.'s Office.

Patterson wants the judge to decide if Giardini should step aside as Diamond's defense lawyer. She also wants to keep Diamond away from the teenager he's accused of choking. In her request for a no contact order she sites the father's treatment of the boy, which includes forcing him to remain in a shed for hours during the day.

She also said he forced the teen to do bare knuckle push-ups on the concrete, eat cold foods, and take cold showers.

Patterson said if the motion is granted, Diamond would face two options.

"The father could leave the home and leave the child in the home with another responsible adult, or if he chose not to do that, then DHR could be ordered to place the child in appropriate environment," she said.

Patterson said it would be difficult to proceed with the domestic violence case if the child remains in Diamond's care.

Dad charged with human traffcking his 14-year-old daughter (Lexington, Kentucky)

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The would-be trafficker dad is identified  as ZEFERINO PONCE-NAVA.

Seems Daddy also had an outstanding warrant for domestic violence assault involving a different victim, who is not named. Wonder if this is the girl's mother, who is not mentioned in this story at all. What happened to the mother?

http://www.14news.com/story/23036466/man-charged-with-human-trafficking-of-his-daughter?utm_content=buffere53fd&utm_source=buffer&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Buffer

Man charged with human trafficking of his daughter

Posted: Aug 03, 2013 8:21 AM EDT
Updated: Aug 03, 2013 8:21 AM EDT
Posted by Laurel Mallory

LEXINGTON, KY (WLEX) - A man is in jail accused of human trafficking after court documents allege he tried to sell his 14-year-old daughter to a friend.

Zeferino Ponce-Nava, 36, is being held in the Woodford County Detention Center charged with Human Trafficking as well as being a fugitive.

According to federal court documents, Versailles Police got information about Ponce-Nava, a foreign born national who attempted to sell his 14-year-old daughter to a male friend. Versailles Police then contacted federal authorities earlier this week.

Ponce-Nava could not provide any ID or documentation that he was a legal citizen.

According to court documents, on July 27 Ponce-Nava contacted Rufino Vazquez to negotiate the sale of his teenage daughter for $2,900.

Vazquez said the initial price he wanted was $7,000. Vazquez was left alone with the girl in her family's apartment, which police believe was time for him to engage her sexually before deciding whether or not to 'buy' her.

The girl was seen crying and fleeing from the apartment while being forcibly grabbed from behind by Vazquez who groped her. He is now charged with sexual abuse.

Nancy Riddle, a neighbor, noticed the girl as she fled and talked to her. "She says my daddy's trying to sell me to these guys as a sex slave," Riddle recalled. "I said no hunny nothing like that's going to go on here." Riddle said she believes God put her in the right place at the right time

Vazquez was also arrested on an outstanding warrant for domestic violence assault involving a different victim. He told investigators money did not change hands and the deal was not closed.
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