PLEASE NOTE: This blog is a bigotry free zone open to all persons, regardless of age, race, religion, color, national origin, sex, political affiliations, marital status, physical or mental disability, age, or sexual orientation. Further, this blog is open to the broad variety of opinions out there and will not delete any comments based upon point of view. However, comments will be deleted if they are worded in an abusive manner and show disrespect for the intellectual process.

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

CT LAW TRIBUNE REPORT ON BILL #494!

The CT Law Tribune reports on the passage of Bill #494 as follows:  "After all the acrimony surrounding the debate over guardian ad litem reform, the final votes in the General Assembly were unanimous. And the results led some lawmakers and advocates to suggest that the legislation granting expanded rights to parents in divorce and custody proceedings may be only the first step in a larger overhaul of Connecticut's family courts.
 
On Friday, April 25, the Senate voted 35-0 and the House of Representatives voted 129-0 to send to Gov. Dannel Malloy a bill that gives parents a greater say as to who will represent their children in contententious custody cases. It also would give the parties to a family court case legal standing to seek the removal of guardians. Further, it would require the presiding judge to spell out in advance the scope of a guardian ad litem's work, deadlines for completion and fees."


For the complete article, please click on the link below: 


http://www.ctlawtribune.com/id=1202652965182/Guardian-Ad-Litem-Reform-Approved-By-Legislature#ixzz30J2qYVOS

Saturday, April 26, 2014

SENATE BILL # 494 HAS PASSED!

FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THE CONTENT OF THE FINAL BILL, PLEASE SEE THE LINK BELOW:

http://www.cga.ct.gov/2014/amd/S/2014SB-00494-R00SA-AMD.htm

I welcome your views on this new legislation.  Is this more of the same corruption, or are there new safeguards that we should feel excited about.  Please leave your comments below in the comment section!

Friday, April 25, 2014

DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH SITS ON COMPLAINTS AGAINST ABUSIVE MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS!

This report in from Ms. Susan Skipp:
 
My complaints against Horowitz and Krieger with the Department of Public Health "DPH" have been open for well over A YEAR, and are well stocked with criminal activity. This was after I found out the DPH was giving me false information (on paper) that they needed both parents' release to investigate. Lengthy discussions with the Secretary of State's office as well as Corporate Counsel for DPH revealed this is untrue as the DPH has full subpoena power.
 
When I inquired recently about the progress of this case, I was told by Maribeth Mendes and Katherine Boulware that the investigation is still open because no one has volunteered to decide it: I believe that is largely due to my insistence that no AFCC affiliated person be involved in the investigation. They usually cover for each other. For example, Dr. Elizabeth Thayer, who was on the Task Force to Study Legal Disputes Involving the Care and Custody of Minor Children which has now resulted in bill #494 and was co chaired by to AFCC GALs.  See the article below:
 

All but three members of the task force were AFCC members. Thayer, who also derives a sizable income via court appointments, finds no wrong doing as does Zazlow in DPH complaints against AFCC members. They are the two of the most often called upon volunteers. 


These kinds of conflicts of interest in connection to the AFCC's association with the CT Judicial Branch has led to numerous ethical violations.  For example, in my case, Judge Lynda Munro did not disclose her shared business interest with two witnesses against me.  Dr. Sidney Horowitz was a fact witness who perjured himself five times during trial. Although, at the time, Munro was purported to be a board member for the Connecticut AFCC, along with Sidney Horowitz, in the national AFCC newsletters; Still, the AFCC was not a registered entity with the state.  This is entirely improper.  Furthermore,  the AFCC ran unlicensed and unregistered for three years in my case, and illegally for almost 30 years prior.  For more information on AFCC ethical violations, see the article below:
 
 
AFCC policies and procedures in regard to court programming were and are unregulated because the principals of the now registered entity show two court support services division employees as principals. The third is an often court appointed and of the ilk of Horowitz, Elizabeth Smith. The CSSD workers, one in charge of family relations, implement and evaluate programming in family relations.  What is more, the AFCC does the GAL training which is required of all GALs employed in the State of Connecticut.  So this illegal operation was and continues to operate within the CT Judicial Branch in violation of all ethical principles.


The judiciary has been aware of these conflicts of interest, as has been the state's attorney and Secretary of State for over a year. Still, nothing has been done to stop this outrage, and, as a result, nothing has happened to the mental health providers who bypass state bidding procedures and find ways to avoid signing contracts with standard anti-discriminatory language.  Not only that, nothing has been done to punish the profiteering AFCC trained GALs who take college funds, retirement funds, 401k's, insurance policies", all in the name of the children involved who are left penniless with parents who are facing foreclosure and the loss of their jobs because of constant interference from the CT Judicial Branch.  The power behind this ripoff are the CT Family Court judges who act as collection agencies with the excuse that this forced contract shakedown for assets is justified because the have ruled without any statutory basis that GAL fees are also child support.
 
The courts receive federal funding that facilitates children being placed with violent, abusive and/or sexually abusive fathers. It's difficult to ascertain exact numbers as the judicial branch does not have a statistician to obtain accurate numbers, but it seems that since 2006, when AFCC programming was put into the Family Court System, and HHS fatherhood.gov money started pouring into the Family Courts, which spread through the State into Martinez grants, women started losing their children at alarming rates and "high conflict"/ high revenue cases emerged for family law attorneys and the myriad of other professionals. This has led to large number of custody conflicts, where protective mothers are losing children at more than triple the rate than before.
 
For a good example of how the process works, see the link below:
 
 
Many are forced to another unregulated institution of supervised visitation centers, many AFCC run, extending the ability of AFCC related businesses to continue their profiteering activities. These too have no oversight and are not recognized by the Consumer Trade Commission. 


Family court is a broken system that is harming many. The liability for the ADA violations for these AFCC practices can bankrupt the State of Connecticut in sanctions alone should the CT DOJ choose to pursue the many thousands of cases throughout the State. The CT Judicial Branch entered an agreement in 2003 for it's non-compliance with ADA. If the judicial branch wants to live up to the lie on their website "we are Ada compliant" first thing that needs to go is the AFCC which is not compliant with the ADA, and next the discriminatory federal funding that allows these policies to be implemented must go. 


When abusers and victims are placed in the adversarial position of a divorce court, the abuser will usually win.  This came to light by the DOJ commissioned Saunders report and Connecticut's skimpy data also shows that trend.  Attorney Stephen Dembo, a notorious wrongdoer in connection to incentivizing high conflict divorces on behalf of abusers, is ironically on the Family Commission.  FYI, Attorney Steve Dembo and Dr. Sidney Horowitz and been partners together in an extraordinary 68 high conflict cases conducted in Family Court.  Munro and Krieger started RFTD. These are just tiny cogs in a the dirty wheel of justice that spins in favor of the new carpetbagger class that has inundated the CT Judicial Branch in the last few decades.
 
 
The state's judicial practices have not just destroyed me and my children, but tens of thousands of others, ensuring future generations of dysfunction with which to reap ongoing revenue. This is a phenomena I imagine many people reading this article are experiencing. 


The fact that these crimes are well known--Attorney General George Jepson and Attorney John Hughes of the DOJ have been fully informed, and yet do nothing is indicative of the graft, corruption and greed driven practices by many which are subtly and not so subtly tolerated or even furthered by some of the most powerful politicians and government functionaries in this State. I have mentioned twelve crimes in this email and it's being sent to the entities responsible for investigating these crimes.  It is time that fit mothers, protective mothers, finally saw some action and that those individuals who are responsible for holding criminals accountable do something about the crimes that I have described in so much detail here in this email.
 
Family law in Connecticut, and that in so many states, has become an embarrassment to honest and moral citizens. It doesn't seem that many within the system are reaching into their personal wells of honesty and morality to fix the situation and that too many generally ignore the unlawful and criminal injustices occurring in family court as well as the many civil rights violations that have been documented.
 
This is a holocaust of our families and children in the State of Connecticut.  Something needs to be done now.  Citizens of the State of Connecticut cannot afford to remain silent.
 
In the words of the great Holocaust protestor, Pastor Martin Niemoller,
 
When the Nazis came for the communists,
I remained silent;
I was not a communist.

When they locked up the social democrats,
I remained silent;
I was not a social democrat.

When they came for the trade unionists,
I did not speak out;
I was not a trade unionist.

When they came for the Jews,
I remained silent;
I wasn't a Jew.

When they came for me,
there was no one left to speak out.
 
Sincerely,


Ms. Susan Skipp,
Family Court Activist,
Mother of Lost Children
 

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

EX-PRISONERS COMPENSATED TO THE TUNE OF MILLIONS WHILE EX-PATIENTS GET NOTHING. WHY?


By Elizabeth A. Richter

I recall that when I was living more closely within the psych patient community the story went around that when average citizens were asked who they would prefer living next to--a criminal or a former psych patient--70% or more would prefer to live next to a criminal. 

In other words, give me a murderer or a rapist any day, but for goodness sake, don't give me a neighbor with a mental health disability.  On the scale of worth, prisoners were on one level and then several stories down, well beneath the basement there was us, the nutcases.  We were the lowest of the low.

 
This impression of the low esteem in which we recovering individuals get held, in contrast to prisoners, is no better illustrated than in the recent article in the CT Law Tribune regarding the compensation for individuals who have been wrongly imprisoned for crimes they did not commit.   
 
At the same time the State is considering compensation for persons wrongly imprisoned, a long lasting (eight year) Olmstead case is finally coming to a close.  This is a case where persons with mental health disabilities were improperly warehoused in nursing homes, often in locked units, in violation of Title II of federal ADA law for years.
 
Here we have two similar stories of folks wrongly held in institutions against their will, but with one group receiving a very financially remunerative outcome--former prisoners, while the other--persons with mental illness who are in recovery--gets absolutely nothing, unless you want to call the moral high ground something!
 
Among the prisoners, exonerated by definitive DNA evidence, is James Tillman who served 18 years for a rape that it turned out he did not commit.  In 2007, he received $5 million in compensation for the injustice he endured.

Tillman's case set the tone.  After his case, the State Legislature voted through a statute establishing the basis for any compensation for other people who come forward with claims of wrongful conviction and imprisonment.  Part of the process involves going before the State Claims Commissioner, J. Paul Vance Jr.  who must OK any of the payments that the State makes in situations like this.

There are more cases coming up on the horizon at this point.  One, according to the CT Law Tribune, is that of Kenneth Ireland who spent 21 years in prison for a rape and murder that he didn't commit.  Apparently, Mr. Ireland is looking for between $5.5 to $8 million in compensation for false imprisonment.
 
Another case is that of Miguel Roman who was in prison for 20 years for a murder that we now understand was committed by somebody else.  Roman hopes to obtain $8.5 million in compensation. 
 
In these cases, the State of Connecticut is represented by the Attorney General's office.  In regard to Kenneth Ireland's case, the Attorney General has stated that "the state will not contest the compensation he seeks."
 
Title II of Federal ADA law also maintains provisions for compensation for individuals with disabilities whose rights are violated by government agencies.  They are entitled to compensation for the legal fees incurred in the prosecution of their cases and further they are allowed civil penalties which may not exceed $55,000 for a first violation or $110,000 for any subsequent violation.  Were these guidelines actually followed up on, this could add up to millions of dollars in compensation, but from what I see in the State of Connecticut, this isn't happening.
 
Why?  I am assuming it is because while the Attorney General takes a back seat and doesn't dispute compensation for prisoners denied their freedom, the very same Attorney General absolutely opposes compensation for persons with mental health disabilities who were also denied their freedom.  And we are not talking for some small timeframe.  Given that the Office of Protection and Advocacy took eight years to arrive at a conclusion to their lawsuit, this means that very likely some of the people in this lawsuit were imprisoned in nursing homes in violation of their civil and constitutional rights for the entirety of those eight years. 
 
Yet the Attorney General clearly fought tooth and nail to make sure than none of these mental health clients would receive so much as a single penny from the case.  As the exhausted attorneys who fought so long and hard for the rights of their clients stated when putting together a settlement which gave their clients nothing, we recommend this settlement "in order to avoid the expenses, risks, delays, disruptions and uncertainties of further litigation."  I mean, what were they going to do?  Fight another eight years? 

But let me give you a little background regarding this case, to give you a fuller sense of how ridiculous this situation is.  In 2006, the Office of Protection and Advocacy launched a lawsuit against the CT Department of Social Services, the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, the Department of Public Heath and three nursing homes charging that in violation of the Olmstead decision they were warehousing 3000 psychiatric patients in nursing homes against their will instead of allowing them to live in their communities. 

Who were these patients?  Early in the case, the Office of Protection and Advocacy provided some quick examples.  Some of the people may have changed over time, but the list from the OPA gives you a good sense of the kind of CT citizens we are talking about.

There is "Jerry" who had been at Bidwell nursing home more than three years.  He was in the facility because he had developed depression and schizophrenia.  Jerry had finished high school and had experience working in auto repair, and could cook, clean, shop and take his medications on his own.

There is "Donald" who had lived at Bidwell for more than six years.  Before living at Bidwell, he'd worked as a store clerk and engineer before he developed the symptoms of schizophrenia.  Speaking of living in the nursing home he said, "We can't even order food from the restaurants around here or go for a walk when we want to.  This is no way to live."

Then there is "Sarah" who also has schizophrenia.   She had been at Bidwell for a year and a half when the case began.  She explains that at Bidwell she can go out accompanied for four hours at a time, but the staff will take that privilege away if she doesn't do what she is told.  Sarah says that she would like to live in the community so she can have more freedom.

And there is "Susan" who is in her 20s and had been at Bidwell for a year with schizo-affective and multiple personality disorder as well as a history of substance abuse.  She has attended college and worked in a grocery store.  She finds it hard to speak on the phone because of the lack of privacy at Bidwell.  I am assuming that she is restricted to the use of a hall phone which is what happens in nursing homes most of the time.

And also "Kathy" who is in her early 50s who has lived in her own apartment as well as a group home.  She has schizo-affective disorder and a history of substance abuse.  She was on the locked unit of Chelsea Place for two years, but is now on the unlocked 4th floor.  She would like to live in the community and does not need any help taking her medication, cooking, cleaning or doing laundry.  But she was told she would have to wait.

Finally, "Marjorie" who is over 65 and had been in West Rock (now closed) for more than nine years when the case began.  She has depression and a history of alcoholism, but she has been sober now for more than 10 years.  Other than AA, Marjorie would not need any support to live in the community, but at the time this brief bio was written, she had not been allowed to do so.

These are people, just like you and I, who no more committed a crime than these exonerated prisoners, but nonetheless the State denied them their freedoms and liberties solely on the basis of disability. 
 
Before we move on, please consider this.  Theoretically, if "Marjorie" had already been warehoused in West Rock for nine years when this lawsuit began, if you add an additional eight years, you have her locked up for 17 years by now against her will and in violation of her civil and constitutional rights.  And yet the State is not obligated to compensate her for this grossly abusive treatment?  I guess not.  I guess the life of an exonerated prisoner is worth millions of dollars more than the life of a person in recovery who simply wishes to live independently in his or her community along with friends and family.  I mean God forbid a mental patient think that his or her life has value!
 
In the well-known case Raymond v. Rowland conducted from 2003-2007 against the CT Department of Social Services in regard to their lack of compliance with Title II of the ADA, in advance of the fairness hearing, persons with disabilities were cautioned that "The case was brought to get changes in how DSS operates, not to get money damages for class members."  Oh, really, and is that because the class members are persons with disabilities, and how dare persons with disabilities imagine that they might have the right to financial compensation?
 
Can you imagine the exonerated prisoners who have lost years of their lives being told that it is all about improving the criminal justice system and not about the money?  Give.  Me.  A.  Break.  None of you would even think of saying such a thing.  But when it comes to people with disabilities...what?  They are supposed to be grateful and shut up?
 
Certainly, in Raymond v. Rowland attorneys fees were forthcoming to the amount of $35,000.  But when you consider that it was a three or four years case--are you kidding me?  That kind of compensation is a joke.  In the more recently resolved Office of Protection and Advocacy v. The State of CT, the suggested compensation for attorneys fees is $1,300,000 which seems like a lot until you break it up into the eight years it took to pursue the litigation.  Then the amount is ridiculously low.
 
What does this all mean?  It means that to the State of Connecticut and to its Citizens people with disabilities and, in particular, people with mental health disabilities are the garbage of the earth. 
 
Before you start arguing with me regarding this point, please keep in mind that the State of Connecticut knew very well that they were wrongly warehousing folks in nursing homes well before the Office of Protection and Advocacy filed their lawsuit in 2006.  Our Supreme Court ruled that this was the case in Olmstead v. L.C. way back in 1999.  In its ruling the Supreme Court reasoned that, "institutional placement of persons who can handle and benefit from community settings perpetuates unwarranted assumptions that persons so isolated are incapable or unworthy of participating in community life." and also, "confinement in an institution severely diminishes the everyday life activities of individuals, including family relations, social contacts, work options, economic independence, educational advancement, and cultural enrichment."
 
Since this was understood to be so in 1999, I'm not sure what the hold up was.  Further, in 2010, the U.S. Department of Justice filed an Amicus Brief in support of the Office of Protection and Advocacy in this case.  What is more, an identical case being adjudicated in Illinois at around the same time came down heavily in favor of the plaintiffs and their right to be allowed to leave nursing homes and return to their communities.  Further, in 2010, Federal District Court in Connecticut supported the plaintiff's right to be considered a class, supported the right of the Office of Protection and Advocacy to bring the complaint, and also refused to dismiss the case. 
 
So, why was the case dragged out for another four years?  Why was there what the Office of Protection and Advocacy referred to as another four years of arms length negotiations?  You would think that the Attorney General and the State of Connecticut would have pangs of conscience about continuing to abuse its citizens with disabilities and stop right away, particularly when it was fully aware that this was what they were doing.  But no, they did not. 
 
What is most important to keep in mind when you think about eight years of litigation is how many thousands and thousands, oh, millions of dollars it cost for one agency of the State of Connecticut with its phalanx of attorneys to fight against another agency of the State of Connecticut with its phalanx of attorneys.  This was an unbelievable waste of our taxpayer dollars, and now, having wasted all that money, after having spent eight years fighting tooth and nail to blockade citizens with disabilities from gaining access to their rights, now, the State does not wish to compensate these citizens.  How outrageous is that?
 
There are other curiosities associated with the case conducted by the Office of Protection and Advocacy--for example, why in the eight years that it was taking place, did it never came to trial?  I'd also like to know how come the Judge in this case allowed the State of Connecticut to play around during negotiations.  But why, again, am I surprised.  The State of Connecticut cannot stand to give CT citizens with disabilities the rights they are entitled to under Federal ADA Law.  For example, the CT Department of Justice announced in January that it will be investigating the CT Judicial Branch for non-compliance with Title II of the ADA.  I have been a person with a disability for the majority of my life, and yet on March 28, 2014, I actually received a ruling from CT District Court stating that I do not have "an ADA-covered disability".  I am sure that the insurance companies--Connecticut General and Blue Cross/Blue Shield--who have paid for my treatment over the last three decades will find that quite interesting.  I mean, who is delusional here?
 
What can you say about The State of Connecticut that will throw away millions of dollars in resources and fight to the last breath before it is the least bit willing to give a single person with a disability any kind of break.
 
Soon there will be a Fairness hearing in the case Office of Protection and Advocacy v. the State of CT during which time the members of the class who are the plaintiff's (person's with mental health disabilities who were illegally incarcerated in nursing homes) will have the opportunity to express their approval or disapproval of the unfolding agreement in this case.  I am aware that some members of this class braved harassment and potential retaliation when they stepped forward to participate in this litigation.  Personally, I think they deserve a little more than just a pat on the back.

RELATED ARTICLES:

http://divorceinconnecticut.blogspot.com/2014/04/on-february-14-2006-attorney-michael.html

http://www.ctlawtribune.com/id=1202650904376?kw=Exonerated%20Ex-Inmates%20Want%20Millions&cn=20140416&pt=Connecticut%20Law%20Tribune%20Daily%20Briefing&src=EMC-Email&et=editorial&bu=Connecticut%20Law%20Tribune&slreturn=20140323131704

JOURNALIST ANNE STEVENSON SPEAKS OUT ON DCF ABUSE OF CT CITIZEN JUSTINA PELLETIER!

According to Investigative Journalist Anne Stevenson, "Justina Pelletier's case in Massachusetts sends the resounding message that DCF should have their feet held to the fire for all the money they have spent keeping this child away from her fit and feisty parents. The State should not be allowed to take children from fit parents because they dislike the parents' disposition, and hospitals should not be making decisions for the State and the parents. This child needs to be home with the parents who love her."
 
For more information on Justina, please read Anne Stevenson's article at the link below:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/anne-stevenson/justina-department-children-families_b_5139708.html