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DCF looks into girl's abduction
It wants to know why it took four months for a toddler's caseworker to report her missing.
By MELANIE AVE
Published June 19, 2007
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Portage police officers remove tape from a crime scene in Portage, Wis. Officers investigating a child abduction case went to a Portage residence, found an 11-year-old boy who had been severely tortured and then found his mother buried in the yard.
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[AP photo]
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Something clearly went wrong in the case of Courtney Alisa Clark, the 2-year-old Pinellas County girl abducted from foster care by her mother last fall.
Less clear is why it took the girl's caseworker four months to report her missing to law enforcement, or what happened in the nine months before Wisconsin authorities finally found her on Thursday.
Courtney was safe but living amid a grisly scene in a two-story rental home where authorities discovered a scalded and starving 11-year-old boy and the buried body of a 37-year-old woman.
On Monday, the Florida Department of Children and Families launched an internal review of the case and asked the inspector general to investigate.
To many, the case echoed that of Miami foster child Rilya Wilson, whose body was never found, but who police believe was dead more than 15 months before DCF realized in April 2002 that she was missing.
DCF spokesman Al Zimmerman said Courtney should have been reported missing within 24 hours.
"Obviously something went wrong somewhere along the way on this, " he said. "We want to know what went wrong, why it went wrong, so it won't go wrong again."
The Safe Children Coalition, the private foster care agency responsible for Courtney's care, had little explanation about the delay in reporting the disappearance.
Lee Johnson, executive vice president of the Sarasota Family YMCA that oversees the coalition, originally said the agency reported the girl missing to DCF on Oct. 2.
But when told DCF actually received notification from the coalition more than two months later, on Dec. 28, he admitted the error.
It took almost another month for someone to alert any Florida law enforcement agencies that the girl was missing.
Despite the delay, Johnson said he did not think "there was any ball dropped."
"As far as we know, nobody did anything wrong, " he said.
The case began July 21, when Courtney was placed in the Lake County home of a family friend. Her mother, Candice Farris, 23, also known as Candace Clark, had been arrested on identity theft and fraud charges in Seminole County.
The Safe Children Coalition asked a Pinellas County judge to keep the girl at the Sorrento home belonging to Cynthia Martell, 42, even though she was not a state-licensed foster parent.
On Sept. 23, Farris convinced Martell that it was okay to return the girl to her, said Lake County Detective James Vachon.
"The foster parents didn't think they had any authority to keep them from their mom, " Vachon said. "I don't think there was any evil intent on their part."
On Oct. 5, the coalition issued a juvenile pickup order, similar to a warrant, and sent it to authorities in Colorado where Farris was scheduled to appear in court the next day.
Farris did not show up, Vachon said.
Little more happened with the case until Dec. 28, when the Safe Children caseworker, submitted the girl to the state's computer child tracking system, HomeSafeNet.
On Jan. 25, Vachon was on call when the case worker finally notified the Lake County Sheriff's Office.
"It's real curious why she went missing in late September, and we were just hearing about it in late January, " he said. "I never got a clear answer on that."
Vachon, a 33-year-old rape and child abuse investigator, said he immediately registered the girl with the National Crime Information Center, available to law enforcement agencies nationwide.
He checked on the case regularly. Finally last Thursday, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement notified him that a Portage, Wis., address showed up on a credit report for Farris' boyfriend, Michael Sisk, 25.
Vachon contacted the Portage police, who arrived at the home that day and found Farris, another woman and four children - Courtney, a 15-year-old girl, a 1-year-old girl and a 3-month-old baby.
The next day they found the 11-year-old boy, covered with blisters on his face, hands and feet from boiling water, hiding in a closet. They also discovered the woman, who they think is the boy's mother, buried in the back yard.
"The child looks very similar to the pictures ... that you see of people that are coming out of concentration camps, " said Columbia County District Attorney Jane Kohlwey to the Daily Register in Portage.
Columbia County, Wis., Medical Examiner Marc Playman said an autopsy showed the dead woman had been strangled and physically abused. Police said the woman, who was not identified, disappeared around Memorial Day.
Farris and the other woman, Michaela Clerc, 20, who are in the Columbia County Jail, face charges of obstruction of justice and criminal abuse of a child, according to the Daily Register.
Authorities arrested Sisk on Friday at a Greyhound bus station in Milwaukee. He had not been formally charged Monday.
The 15-year-old girl, believed to be the daughter of the dead woman, was taken into custody by juvenile authorities. The other four children were placed in protective custody with Columbia County Health and Human Services. Courtney is expected to return to foster care in Florida.
Vachon said the case will be a career highlight for him.
"This little girl was in a bad situation, " he said. "With a lot of help I was able to track her down and get her safe and if I hadn't, that little boy probably would have ended up dead.
"In this case, you get to see an outcome. I just wish things would have been reported a lot sooner."
Times researcher John Martin contributed to this report. Melanie Ave can be reached at mave@sptimes.com or 727 893-8813.
Time line of missing Florida girl
July 21, 2006: Courtney Clark's mother, Candice Farris, 23, is arrested on identity-theft and fraud charges by the Sanford Police Department in Seminole County. The girl is placed with family acquaintance, Cynthia Martell, in Sorrento in Lake County. At the recommendation of the foster agency overseeing her case, the Safe Children Coalition, a Pinellas County judge okays her continued placement with Martell. The family lived in St. Petersburg in 2006.
Aug. 30: The Lake County Sheriff's Office makes a safety visit at the Sorrento home where the girl is staying.
Sept. 23: Farris persuades Martell to hand over the child.
Oct. 3: Martell reports the girl missing to the coalition.
Oct. 5: The coalition issues a juvenile pickup order, or warrant, and sends it to Grand Junction, Colo., authorities, where Farris has a court date the next day in which she does not appear.
Dec. 28: The coalition places the girl on the Florida Department of Children and Families missing children list.
Jan. 25: The caseworker notifies the Lake County Sheriff's Office the girl is missing, and she is placed in a national crime information system.
June 14: FDLE alerts the Lake County Sheriff's Office of a Portage, Wis., rental address where Farris' boyfriend is living. The girl and her mother are found along with another woman and three other children. The next day they discovered a scalded 11-year-old boy. His mother's body is found buried in the back yard.
Sources: Florida Department of Children and Families, Lake County Sheriff's Office, Safe Children Coalition and the Associated Press
[Last modified June 19, 2007, 00:58:24]
Share your thoughts on this story
Comments on this article
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by Frustrated
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06/30/07 08:40 AM
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Why are so many good, safe and healthy foster homes sitting emty while kids are put into homes where people have abuse allegations and criminal records? Why, because the good foster parents speak up. Then they go on the YMCA's Black List.
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by bmm
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06/22/07 03:11 PM
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A quick look at the YMCA Foundation of Sarasota's 990 tax form indicates that their president, Karin Gustafson, earned over $180,000 last year. How about some accountabilty.
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by Susan
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06/20/07 09:24 AM
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I feel that you are just getting to a tiny piece of the problem with the system and how bad child svcs are for foster-adoptive families. The guilty are protected and the ones trying to do the right thing are penalized, the children suffer and loose.
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by mother
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06/19/07 08:45 PM
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I was sick & unable to care for my son. SCC placed him with my exhusband & then the worker took 9 mos to do the return paperwork. After 6 mos they don't have to return him home. Dad abused b4 and now he's had 3 head injuries & second deg burns since.
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by Fmr Foster Parent
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06/19/07 08:23 PM
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Gee, imagine if I didn't report a missing child to the YMCA- think MY name would be in the paper? Bet I'd be investigated as if I did something to the child, but the CBC??? -They didn't drop the ball?? YMCA=money making machine 4 YMCA not 4 children.
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by FORMER SCC CARING CM
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06/19/07 07:36 PM
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YMCA prohibits the agencies employing the CMs in giving them decent raises/bonuses preferring to reserve the extra DCF budgeted money for more top level management. Low pay = good, experienced CMs leaving = high caseloads for newer inexperienced CMs.
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by foster
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06/19/07 07:08 PM
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The SCC worker who made the prior statement knows the true problem with the system, CBC is a money making business for YMCA and not about foster children. Foster parents dont get funds nor do CMs. Maybe they should hire CMs that care about kids
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by former cm
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06/19/07 06:18 PM
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managment needs to be held accountable why is it always the case manager. How many errors by managment have to be made Lee Johnson? What about the abuse report on Vicky Kissick? Google her and Safe children Coalition
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by SCC worker
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06/19/07 05:01 PM
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119 days from when anyone laid eyes on this child & when DCF was notified and no one realized a missing child alert was not done? Maybe a ball was not dropped, Lee, but you should have seen the huge RED FLAG waving in your's, Ed's, and Joy's face!
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by marie
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06/19/07 04:44 PM
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Shame on you Mr. Johnson for saying nothing was done wrong.
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by Appalled
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06/19/07 04:08 PM
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I sat through more court hearings than I even care to think about involving children and family services and they scared me half to death. More than once the court and the SCC had no clue where the children were located. Shut them down.
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by anonynous
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06/19/07 03:55 PM
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Of course Mr.Johnson is going to say "the ball wasn't dropped" but he didn't say "policy was not followed." It wasn't! SCC is a dangerous place w/ dangerous people running it.
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by Cheryl
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06/19/07 02:53 PM
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Where do these caseworkers and DCF get their licenses from, a CrackerJack box? No common sense or intelligence needed.
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by parent
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06/19/07 02:17 PM
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the judges are the ones at fault they keep giving these kids back to dysfunctional familes. the kids never had a chance. i have had a family 3 times and they keep giving them back just because the parents are able to stay clean for 6 months pray
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by Non Relative Caregiver
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06/19/07 12:20 PM
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I've dealt with SCC as a non-relative caregiver. Over a 7 month period there were 5 different case workers; each one even more lazy than the one before. Something has got to change somewhere or there will be more lost, misplaced or dead children.
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by Barbara
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06/19/07 12:08 PM
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This will continue to happen as long as social services are grossly underfunded. It will happen more often now because of the tax rollback. It takes $$$ to run these agencies, state-run or privately-run.
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by a foster parent
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06/19/07 11:39 AM
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GALs are limited by what they can do. I agree get that Case worker and others like her name out there and make them either ship up or deal with the public scruntney. The system fails because its about money to YMCA the overinflated sucess rate .
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by Relative Care Giver
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06/19/07 11:13 AM
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I am caring for my grandson, and I have to report to law enforcement, the courts if my grandson is out of my custody,in court documents, which my case worker never sent to me, I had to go to clerks office to get a copy. The system is broken. Help
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by Guardian ad Litem
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06/19/07 10:10 AM
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Privatized Foster Care is often as abusive, or more so, than the homes from which this children are removed. It simply doesn't work b/c there is ZERO accountability from the Court down. It has to end become a Guardian ad LItem, help these kids.
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by Person
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06/19/07 10:05 AM
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The case of Miami foster child Rilya Wilson happened before the state privatized the foster care system. Sadly, these cases are going to happen no matter who is in charge of running the foster care system.
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by YMCA
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06/19/07 10:04 AM
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Safe Children Coalition IS NOT incorporated - IT IS the YMCA of Sarasota who gave this outfit the name "safe children coalition"-to confuse people. It is actually the YMCA who is at fault as they ARE the ones who oversee foster care in Pinellas Cty.
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by Anonymous
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06/19/07 09:25 AM
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Why are the caseworkers not named in the story? The caregivers (including trained foster parents) rely heavily on their case workers managers. Find out who dropped the ball and PUBLISH THEIR NAMES so that others know who they can't trust. PLEASE.
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by Foster Parent
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06/19/07 08:35 AM
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With the fact that SCC hires, young inexperienced workers and usually dont hold them accountable for their actions, Im surprised there isnt more cases such as this. Community based Foster care works, and most foster parents are great.
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by Brenda
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06/19/07 08:23 AM
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Vachon states, "The Foster parentst didn't think".....The people were not foster parents.....just someone DCF allowed to keep the child....the State of Florida should be sued for child neglect.....I will always remember Rilya.....
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by Steve
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06/19/07 07:37 AM
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A signal that the privately run foster care system in Florida continues to fail our children. Reaction: the private agency staff did not think "there was any ball dropped." "As far as we know, nobody did anything wrong":a singal nothing will change
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by Carl
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06/19/07 07:34 AM
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It is rathr sad when these things happen, but if the article is true, there is some incompatency in the way people in charge handled evrything. In this day and age of communications, there is no excuse.
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