Wow. That's just like Corrupticut's DCF:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CRIMES_OF_CORRUPTICUT.htm
That video of the children discussing how they
were sexually assaulted in DCF custody and that
the DCF then falsely blamed these sexual injuries on the
children's actually parents, has been viewed about 3000
times just this year alone.
More listened to the audiofile:
http://www.actionlyme.org/CALLING_DCF_SEXUAL_VIOLENCE.htm
These are the most popular pages on ActionLytme
followed by what the DCF and Yale criminal whore Patricia Leebens did:
http://www.actionlyme.org/DANGEROUSLY_IGNORANT.htm
Fourth is the Dictionary of Connecticutisms.
http://www.actionlyme.org/dictionary_of_connecticutisms.htm
Very popular, even though it wasn't even listed for a while.
People emailed it to each other anyway.
Those 4 files are the most popular, despite
ActionLyme being a LYME DISEASE website.
[Those children were extremely traumatized, by DCF.
The older boy would not let his mother out of his
sight, no matter what. DCF told those kids that if
they complained about their abuse in foster care,
they would be separateed from their siblings and
never see their parents again, which is exactly what
the DCF told *my* children. If they complained about
being abused by Donald Dickson (who was violent to
all of us) my children were told by the DCF that they
would be separated from their siblings and never see
their parents again.
The foster carer also left the 3 year old alone all
day while she took the other kids to Quassapaug Park.
Alex said Andrew, "She left him wif no food and no drink
all day long." Andrew was 3 at the time.]
The New York Times
Printer Friendly Format Sponsored By
March 1, 2007
Citing Abuses, Texas Governor Ousts Leader of Youth Agency
By RALPH BLUMENTHAL
AUSTIN, Tex., Feb. 28 - Gov. Rick Perry removed the chairman of the
Texas Youth Commission on Wednesday over charges that the agency
covered up the sexual abuse of incarcerated juveniles.
Mr. Perry also called for the ouster of the acting executive director,
the appointment of an independent inspector general and a shake-up
throughout the commission, which runs 13 schools housing 3,000 felons
under age 21.
"Leadership starts at the top," a spokesman for Mr. Perry, Ted Royer,
said. "And the governor believes the very top leadership has failed."
Late Wednesday, the State Senate voted unanimously to demand that the
governor appoint a conservator to take over the commission
temporarily.
On Tuesday, the Senate Criminal Justice Committee disclosed details of
long-secret investigations by the commission and the Texas Rangers
showing that two supervisors at the West Texas State School in remote
Pyote routinely roused boys from their beds for sexual encounters that
were reported but went unpunished by the school superintendent, who
now has a top leadership position at the commission. The supervisors
were allowed to resign without facing criminal charges, but are now
under investigation.
The dismissed chairman, Pete C. Alfaro, is a former mayor of Baytown
who was first named to the commission in 1995 by Gov. George W. Bush
and was appointed chairman by Mr. Perry in 2004. Mr. Alfaro did not
respond to messages seeking comment. His latest five-year term expires
in August.
Hours after the governor's spokesman said that Mr. Alfaro had been
told by phone that he was being replaced by his vice chairman, Donald
R. Bethel, a spokesman for the Texas Youth Commission, Tim Savoy, said
the agency had received no notice of the action. The board has a
meeting scheduled for Tuesday.
Mr. Perry, a Republican, also called on the board to replace the
acting executive director, Neil Nichols, who is the general counsel
and a 33-year veteran of the agency. Mr. Nichols took over last Friday
upon the sudden retirement of the executive director, Dwight Harris,
who started as a caseworker in 1981.
The governor said Ed Owens, deputy executive director of the Texas
Department of Criminal Justice, had agreed to serve as the
commission's acting executive director.
Though the governor makes appointments to the seven-member board, he
has the power by himself only to remove the chairman, legal experts
said. He can fire members upon a finding of gross fiscal mismanagement
by a legislative audit committee made up of the lieutenant governor,
who is the president of the Senate; the House speaker; and two other
members from each chamber.
Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst on Wednesday demanded sweeping changes in the
commission.
Senator John Whitmire, a Houston Democrat and chairman of the Criminal
Justice Committee, said Wednesday that he had "no confidence in the
board" but that Mr. Perry was not yet ready to seek its ouster.
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