"CPS turned on my family when a disgruntled coach reported me for spanking my children, regardless of state laws explicitly allowing corporal punishment. They violated all 10 amendments in the Bill of Rights.
My children were home schooled and 99 and 98 percentile math achievers, who had already received 8 congressional recognition awards under my mentorship of their robotics team for statewide competitions, and they were already studying calculus in college with regular college kids though they were only in early high school years. I have more info if you want to expose CPS.
ABSOLUTELY NO FAMILY IS SAFE. We were excellent in every way but they still grabbed my daughter at the first chance and built up an assault based on a single individual's testimony. We know who it is but officially we don't.
We were never tried for any wrongdoing, but instead, we were told that if we cooperated we could probably keep our son.
No clear charges were made, but after we gave up our trial, they revealed that they were going to claim that she had suffered mental abuse, since there was no harm done to her body when we had spanked her.
But if you neglect to spank your children to train them, they can just as easily take them for neglect. You lose either way. America is no longer free as long as travesties such as this prevail.
Thanks,
- Dr. Ted Shaneyfelt"
http://www.pdf-archive.com/2012/04/27/ching4rp-large/preview/page/48/
Blog by Investigative Blogger Crystal L. Cox
Sunday, April 7, 2013
Friday, January 18, 2013
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
"Judge: DSHS owes $96 million to caregivers" Thurston County Washington DSHS
"As lawmakers work to close a $2 billion state budget shortfall, a cost-savings decision from eight years ago could ultimately prove expensive.
A Thurston County judge on Friday ruled the state Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) owes about 22,000 home-care workers almost $96 million in back pay and accrued interest.
Though DSHS plans to appeal the ruling, each day of delay could cost the state more than $30,000 in interest charges if the caregivers were to prevail, according to the plaintiffs' attorney.
Kirkland attorney Greg McBroom, who represents the caregivers in the class-action lawsuit, said the state illegally cut benefits without first assessing DSHS clients' individual needs. He said many of the Medicaid beneficiaries had medical conditions that required extensive care.
Friday's ruling by Superior Court Judge Thomas McPhee came down almost a year after a Thurston County jury found that DSHS shortchanged the workers, awarding the plaintiffs $57 million in back pay."
Full Article and Source
http://seattletimes.com/html/localnews/2016916336_dshs03m.html
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)