Child Welfare Systems Are Trapping Innocent Families
Georgia parents were accused of child abuse after they took their daughter to the doctor. Does the state's story add up?

It wasn't long before Jennifer Williams noticed there was something unusual about the two young girls she was fostering. Three-year-old Arya Hernandez was bright, outgoing, and without any of the behavioral issues Williams had become accustomed to over more than a decade as a foster parent in Georgia. But 4-month-old Emma seemed sickly. The baby's soft spot was too big for her age and in the wrong part of her head, and the whites of her eyes were discolored. She was also bowlegged and held her limbs in an unusual, awkward way.
Williams was only taking care of the girls for the weekend while their usual foster parent was out of town. She decided to call the girls' foster mom to ask why she wasn't told about Emma's medical problems.
"She texted me back pretty quickly and says, 'Well, did no one tell you Emma and Arya are in foster care because of abuse?'" Williams says. "'Emma was abused physically by her parents.'"
The response surprised Williams. If baby Emma was abused by her parents—resulting in fractures, as the foster parent told her—why did no one warn her?
When the girls left to go back to their usual foster home, Williams contacted the girls' caseworker about her concerns. The caseworker thanked her for her insight and told her that the child protection agency was looking into medical evaluations for Emma. Still unsettled, Williams decided to search for the girls' family on social media. What she found left her even more perturbed.
"My family is facing an emergency and are in dire need of your help," a July 10 Facebook post from Wilairat "Tuckey" Hernandez, the girls' mother, began. "On June 6, 2023, my husband and I had our two daughters Arya and Emma taken from us at the Children's Hospital by the Division of Family and Children Services (DFCS). We took Emma to The Hospital after noticing she had unexplained swelling on one of her legs….Images were taken of Emma's leg and rib cage and it was determined she had a fractured leg and cracked left ribs."
Tuckey's post went on to describe how DFCS had accused her of abuse within hours of arriving at the hospital, despite no other signs of abuse or dysfunction in the family. While Tuckey suspected an underlying medical condition could have caused her daughter's fractures, getting her tested would be difficult with the girls in DFCS custody, and possibly financially prohibitive. Making matters even worse, Tuckey—a Thai immigrant who had worked as an au pair when she first came to the United States—had now been charged with child abuse.
"This situation is tearing me and Matthew apart, and causing extreme stress for both of our children," she wrote. "Especially my baby Emma who was 100% breastfeeding prior to all this."
As she read Tuckey's post, Williams began to sense that something terribly wrong had happened to the Hernandez family.
"There was nothing in their post except asking for help, for concern, for their baby," she says. "That's what really got to me."
As Williams looked more into the family's situation, a terrible story emerged. The Hernandezes were trapped in a system from which escape is almost impossible. It wasn't unreasonable for DFCS to look into whether Emma's injuries could have been caused by abuse. Hundreds of children die from abuse or neglect each year, many of them infants like Emma. But once alternative explanations for Emma's injuries emerged, it became hard to interpret the state's insistence that she was abused as anything but self-protective, bureaucratic—and cruel.
The Hernandez family's story is one of an overly aggressive child welfare system and that system's reliance on a group of controversial physicians. But most of all, it's the story of a vicious cycle, one that makes it incredibly difficult for parents to prove their innocence after an accusation of abuse has been lodged.Unfortunately, the Hernandezes are far from alone.
"Our girls are our lives and we love them more than anything," Tuckey wrote. "I miss my daughters so much and pray every night for God to protect them, keep them safe and bring them back home to us soon."
'The State Never Let Up'
When Matt and Tuckey Hernandez took their baby to the doctor, they had no idea their lives were about to be upended.
In June 2023, the Hernandezes lived in Forsyth County, Georgia, with their two daughters. Matt worked at a nearby instrument store, and Tuckey was taking a break from her usual work in Thai restaurants after giving birth to Emma in March.
When Emma was born, it was immediately clear she was different from her older sister.In a transcript of a family court hearing obtained by Reason, Tuckey relayed how Emma had frequent colds and seemed to bruise easily, especially from where she had been buckled into her car seat. Emma's soft spot was also much larger than Arya's had been.
In late May, the Hernandezes saw an unusual bruise behind Emma's ear. Even though she didn't seem to be in any pain or discomfort, Matt took a photo of it.

On June 5, about two weeks later, Tuckey texted Matt a picture of some swelling on Emma's leg. Again, she didn't seem to be in any pain, but the swelling still concerned them both. Arya had a regular pediatrician appointment scheduled for the next day, so Matt and Tuckey decided to take Emma along to express their concerns about her unusual symptoms.
At the appointment, the family's pediatrician told the couple that Emma needed to be immediately taken to Children's Healthcare of Atlanta (CHOA), a nearby children's hospital. Unbeknownst to Matt and Tuckey as they rushed their infant to the hospital, their pediatrician was calling ahead and telling CHOA doctors that she suspected abuse.
Once they got to CHOA, Matt wasn't allowed inside the hospital. Emma and Tuckey went in alone.
"I was kind of stuck outside with Arya because they were only letting one parent in," he says. For more than an hour, he stood outside with his daughter, unaware of what was going on inside.
According to legal documents obtained by Reason, hospital employees took X-rays of Emma's entire body, as well as a C.T. scan of her skull. Radiologists found healing fractures on multiple ribs and fractures on her right leg. Later, Arya was also subjected to X-rays, but no injuries were found. Stephen Messner, a child abuse pediatrician, performed a physical exam on Emma and reviewed her many scans. In a family court hearing transcript, another doctor testified that Messner then concluded that the baby's injuries could not have been accidental.
Immediately after Messner's diagnosis, everything started to move at lightning speed.
"We were just very bluntly told by a nurse that [abuse] is what they thought was happening and that they had already contacted DFCS and law enforcement," Matt says. He stayed in the hospital with Tuckey for hours, unsure of what was going to happen. Eventually, he fell asleep. When he woke up around 11:00 p.m., his wife was gone.
"She was, I later found out, being interrogated by a DFCS investigator and two police officers," Matt says. "And then it was very quickly after that that a [DFCS worker] came into the room and told us that both the kids were being placed in state custody."
"We didn't really understand how they decided to do that, considering neither of us have any criminal history and we brought our child to them on our own." he adds. "From the very get-go, I thought that this was a little harsh and aggressive, but the state never let up."

A Family Separated
The girls were initially placed with their aunt and uncle, Tony and Tuk Schulz. It seemed like a natural and humane choice. The Schulzes were already very close with their young nieces; the two families spent a lot of time together, and Arya was already regularly sleeping over at her aunt and uncle's house.
But it wasn't long before the Schulzes also faced accusations of abuse. Just a few weeks after getting custody of the girls, Tony and Tuk took Emma to the doctor after they noticed an unusual, rashlike bruise on her leg and feet. The Schulzes then called DFCS, which told them to take Emma back to CHOA.
At CHOA, Emma was subjected to more X-rays, but no additional fractures were uncovered. Nonetheless, DFCS moved to remove the girls from their aunt and uncle. In a later hearing, DFCS administrator Ashley Smith theorized that the bruise must have appeared after Tony and Tuk either abused Emma themselves or had allowed Tuckey to do so.
Emma remained hospitalized for six days, separated from her alleged abusers, yet her condition rapidly worsened. She was placed on a feeding tube.
Making the situation worse, Tuckey had already been arrested on child abuse–related charges and jailed. While in jail, she pumped breast milk in the hope that it would be given to baby Emma.
As a condition of her bond, Tuckey was barred from visiting the girls, even while supervised. She was also banned from seeing or talking to her husband, her sister, and her brother-in-law—her entire family in the United States.
Still, Tuckey continued pumping breast milk for her daughter and delivering it to the DFCS building. It's unclear if any of it made it to Emma. When Williams had the girls for the weekend, she says she was only given formula.
Within the span of a few weeks, Matt's entire family had been taken from him. His once-full house sat quiet. He was allowed supervised visits with his daughters, but it wasn't the same.
"We've missed so much, it's hard to even keep track." he told Reason in February, listing a litany of events and holidays—Thanksgiving, Christmas, his wedding anniversary, Arya's birthday—that he was forced to spend alone. "We've missed so many milestones. Emma is now basically walking."
"They've taken so much away from us," he added. "And my poor wife just has to stay at a friend's house. I can't even imagine."
A Shaky Diagnosis
In 2022, child protective services (CPS) agencies received more than 4 million allegations of child abuse and neglect in the United States. Of these cases, more than 500,000 children were determined to have been victims of abuse or neglect. Of those, 19.6 percent ended up in foster care.
The lifetime risk of being investigated by CPS is surprisingly large. A 2021 study of the largest American counties estimated that as many as one in three U.S. children will be the subject of a child welfare investigation by the time they turn 18.
While millions of families interact with CPS each year, the Hernandez family's case is relatively unusual. Of the kids determined to be victims in 2022, only 17 percent were victims of physical abuse and just 17.5 percent of these cases were reported by a medical professional.
The Hernandezes had the misfortune to encounter a very specific kind of medical professional. The allegations against them weren't lodged by just any nurse or doctor: They came from a child abuse pediatrician—a member of a young, increasingly powerful medical subspecialty that has already become mired in several major controversies.

Interest in child abuse as a medical diagnosis began in the early 1960s, most notably with the publication of a 1962 article in The Journal of the American Medical Association titled "The Battered-Child Syndrome."The paper argued that child abuse should be suspected for a wide range of injuries including bruising or bone fractures. The paper was incredibly influential, and it helped inspire Congress to pass the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act—the law that helped create the modern system of government-funded CPS agencies.
In 2009, the American Board of Pediatrics officially recognized child abuse pediatrics. By then, the field's greatest contribution—the "discovery" of shaken baby syndrome (SBS)—had come under fire.
SBS first appeared in the medical literature in 1971, in a paper that theorized that in cases where a child presents with subdural hematoma—a buildup of blood on the surface of the brain—yet does not have external head injuries, the baby could have been shaken violently by their caregiver.
The diagnosis took off, with many child abuse–focused pediatricians scrambling to label any child presenting with a "triad" of subdural hematoma, retinal hemorrhage, and brain swelling as having been shaken. As a result, scores of parents and caregivers faced aggravated battery, abuse, and even murder charges—and child abuse–focused doctors lined up to testify against them in court.
One such doctor was Messner, the child abuse pediatrician who first diagnosed Emma's fractures as having come from abuse. In 2014, he testified against Jamal Rashad Thomas, a young father who was charged with fatally shaking his 9-week-old son. Messner insisted that the baby's death was due to shaking—even though the premature infant didn't have a neck injury or retinal hemorrhaging, one of the "triad" symptoms of SBS. The charges against Thomas were dropped after prosecutors determined a jury would be unlikely to convict him.
As it turns out, the scientific basis behind many shaken baby diagnoses is incredibly weak. Experiments using test dummies have found no evidence that vigorous shaking causes the kind of brain damage observed in alleged SBS cases. There are also documented cases where children exhibited SBS symptoms after short falls from furniture. While many child abuse pediatricians still strenuously defend the diagnosis, in 2022 a New Jersey appeals court labeled the syndrome as "akin to junk science."
While the Hernandezes were not accused of violently shaking Emma, there is a common thread between her case and the discredited SBS cases of previous years. In case after case of alleged abuse, many child abuse pediatricians insist that violence was the only possible source of a child's injuries, even when there are medically plausible alternative explanations and the parents have every outward appearance of being loving caregivers. It doesn't help that many child abuse pediatricians are paid directly by child welfare agencies, creating incentives for them to make findings that support the government's case.
And when doctors make an accusation, it's difficult to dispute their findings. After all, they're experts.
"They're latching on to these parents who are coming in because we're cooperative," says Holly Simonton, board member* at Fractured Families, a group advocating for parents who say they were falsely accused of child abuse. "Innocent parents are going to say, 'Well, I don't know how this happened,' because they really don't….But they don't like it when you don't know the answer."
A Medical Explanation
After months in limbo, the Hernandezes' dependency hearing started on October 4. It would be a crucial opportunity for Matt to argue that his daughters should be returned to his custody. The hearing—of which Reason obtained a transcript—would also allow him to counter the narrative, pushed by DFCS, that Emma's injuries were a straightforward case of child abuse.
"To anybody with any common sense or any heart it went very strongly in our favor," Matt argues, adding that in addition to a bevy of character witnesses, he had two doctors—one the former chief medical examiner of Georgia—testifying on his behalf.
The state's theory—articulated by Emmanuel Pena, a CHOA child abuse pediatrician who performed Emma's follow-up examination—was that only physical abuse could have caused the injuries.
CHOA identified three fractures on Emma's ribs, three on her right leg, and suspicion of a fracture on her right foot. She also had swelling in her right leg, the symptom that originally prompted her parents to seek medical care. The Hernandezes also told investigators that Emma had a history of bruising, a symptom that would persist even after she was separated from her parents.
Ironically, when Emma's day care center later reported marks on her arm similar to those reported by her parents and aunt, Smith argued in a hearing that these weren't bruises, calling them blue "discoloration."
"So the chest injuries combined with the bruising immediately sets us on high alert for some mishandling of the child. But then when we get to the lower extremities…now we have a total of four highly specific injuries for abuse of handling," Pena testified, adding that Emma's rib fractures "would have to be generated by a very forceful, rapid, and compressive force to the chest," similar to CPR compressions.
Pena also noted that CHOA ran several medical tests to rule out several common medical conditions that could cause Emma's injuries, which came back negative. When asked by DFCS attorney Danielle Benefield whether the discovery of any other medical conditions in Emma could change his mind, he answered with a firm "no."
Two doctors testifying for the Hernandez family disagreed.
Kris Sperry, a forensic pathologist, argued that Pena's certainty about the source of Emma's injuries wasn't backed by evidence. Sperry said that there's no scientific proof that abusive handling is required for the kind of fractures that CHOA claimed Emma had.
Instead, Sperry theorized that Emma's fractures could have been caused by bone weakness resulting from low vitamin D. After arriving at CHOA, a blood test found that Emma had vitamin D levels of just 15.6. According to Pena himself, normal vitamin D is anything above 30, with deficiency starting below 15 or 20.
It isn't surprising that Emma had low vitamin D. At the hearing, Tuckey testified that she never gave Emma a vitamin D supplement, though supplementation is typically recommended for newborns. Further, since Emma was exclusively breastfed, that put her at greater risk for vitamin D deficiency.
Another expert witness, Anthony Perszyk, a geneticist with extensive experience reading X-rays, testified that Emma had neonatal rickets—again, a result of low vitamin D.
Pena dismissed this theory, arguing that Emma was too old to be diagnosed with neonatal rickets, which typically, though not exclusively, presents in premature infants.
Matt was frustrated by the way Pena seemed to be taken more seriously than the other two doctors.
Perszyk "showed all the X-rays circled and pointed out that clearly Emma has neonatal rickets. He pointed out the cupping in the ribs and the bones. He showed how her skull had continued to open up after she was taken out of our custody," Matt says, adding that Pena "got up there with no visual aid. He just gave a speech."
'I've Never Seen Them Behave This Way'
Sperry and Persyck weren't the only ones skeptical of DFCS' theories. At the dependency hearing, a series of witnesses volunteered on the Hernandezes' behalf, including Williams, a forensic interview specialist, Matt's visitation supervisor, and multiple friends and family members. Each either reported that the Hernandezes were loving and concerned parents or expressed surprise at how DFCS was treating them.
What's more, later that month, two more major figures would come out in support of reunification. According to legal documents obtained by Reason, both the court-appointed special advocate and the guardian ad litem—a court-appointed community member and a lawyer, respectively, each designated to advocate for the Hernandez children's best interests—would support reunifying the family rather than separation and adoption.
Matt "is a very, very gentle parent, very nurturing parent," Erin Wallace, the visitation supervisor, testified during the hearing. "Very docile man."
Another witness testified that DFCS had made a particularly galling attempt to create supporting evidence of mistreatment. The agency had ordered a forensic interview for 3-year-old Arya, which involved a specialist interviewing Arya about her sister's possible abuse. Experts typically stress the need for caution when conducting forensic interviews on very young children.
The report produced by DFCS made a dramatic revelation, claiming that Arya told the interviewers that "Mama hurt Emma." But Danielle Levy, a clinical psychologist with extensive experience conducting forensic interviews in Georgia, argued that DFCS was extremely misleading.
"When I saw the interview, I was shocked, because that wasn't what happened," she testified, describing how Arya simply didn't provide any useful information—having been distracted and extremely difficult to understand throughout. "This summary made it look like Arya walked in and made a really clear disclosure."
Both Matt and Tuckey testified at the hearing too, each insisting that Emma was not abused.
It soon became clear that DFCS perceived Matt's refusal to blame Tuckey as a sign he was unfit to care for his daughters.
"The father has taken the mother's defense and does not believe that the mother could have caused these [injuries]," DFCS administrator Smith testified, "which causes concern for his parental capacity to be protective."
"In my 13 years of being a foster parent, I've never seen [DFCS] behave this way," says Williams. During a break in court, Williams says she overheard Smith tell an intern that the case "is basically a done deal" and that the agency had "already started to draw up" paperwork to terminate the Hernandezes' parental rights.
Why was DFCS so intent on separating this family? Mark Freeman, a lawyer specializing in defending parents accused of abuse, argues that the agency is simply not structured to handle parents like the Hernandezes who maintain their innocence. If parents admit guilt, agencies will sometimes still facilitate reunification. But when a family claims it was wrongly accused, he theorized, the state tends to assume the parents are not just guilty but unrepentant.
That means "one of these parents is a perpetrator by commission, but the other one is a perpetrator by omission because they must have known about it and failed to protect the child," Freeman says. "We can't assure the safety of this child by sending it back to the parents."
Smith's testimony reflects this perspective. "We have no admission that anything wrong happened, which means we can't prevent something from happening again," she said, explaining why DFCS didn't want to return the children. "If there's no understanding of what went wrong, there's no way to correct that behavior going forward."
Judge Heather Dunn ultimately ruled that Matt should not get custody of his daughters. Despite a plausible medical explanation for her injuries and a battery of adults willing to testify to the Hernandezes' good parenting—and to DFCS meddling—it seemed like nothing could dislodge the idea that it was near-certain that Tuckey and Matt had abused their daughter. Matt felt trapped. It seemed like no matter what he did, he couldn't convince the state to give him back his children.
As the months wore on, Arya grew depressed and detached. Emma seemed as sick as ever, with no medical explanation in sight.
"Everybody there thought this is very clear, this baby was born with a medical condition, send them home with the parents and end this nightmare," Matt says. "You're just here to torture my family."
'I Just Don't Understand How That's The System'
Over the next few months, every victory seemed to be coupled with a setback.
In December, the terms of Tuckey's bond were adjusted, allowing her to visit her daughters for the first time in more than six months. Video from that first visit shows an emotional reunion, as a clearly ecstatic Arya embraces her mother, jumping up and down in excitement.
But then, just a few days later, Matt was indicted on child abuse charges. The family struggled to make sense of these new accusations. The state had always insisted that it was Tuckey—Emma's primary caregiver—who abused Emma, but now they were shifting to Matt.
Despite Matt's charges, a judge ruled in January that DFCS had to create a reunification plan for the Hernandez family, meaning that DFCS had to set the goal of eventually returning the girls to their parents rather than having them adopted.
"In the judge's ruling, comments were made showing that Emma's continued medical needs were not being handled nor being addressed," reads a January 19 post from You Are The Power, a nonprofit founded by libertarian entrepreneur Spike Cohen. "Now Emma can get the testing and treatment she needs to be happy and healthy again."
The ramifications of this ruling were swift. Emma and Arya were removed from their foster-to-adopt home and placed in the care of a family friend.
More importantly, this meant the family would also be able to get Emma more thorough genetic testing in order to try to confirm their suspicions about the real cause of Emma's bruising and fractures—at least in theory.
Unsure if DFCS would ever approve formal testing, the family took its own cheek swab from Emma earlier that month and sent it off to a private full-genome company for testing.
When the results came back, it showed multiple defects on one of her collagen genes, possibly causing Bethlem myopathy or Ullrich muscular dystrophy 2. These conditions often lead to joint issues or muscle weakness, though it's unclear whether they have a distinct connection to increased fracture risk. One 2023 review of studies looking at 244 patients (most of them infants) with a range of myopathies found that 37 percent had decreased bone quality and 26 percent had congenital fractures in the long bones of their legs or arms.
But DFCS won't accept the results. According to Tony, it wants a new, official test done so it can confirm that the swab was accurate.
It's been a difficult road. Matt suspects that DFCS is dragging its feet on reunification. While Matt hoped the girls could return to their aunt and uncle, DFCS has successfully blocked these efforts—even though a March report from the guardian ad litem strongly called for sending the girls back to Tony and Tuk. The report flatly dismissed the agency's insistence that Emma's unusual bruises were a sign of abuse, noting that they continued popping up with every new placement. The report also castigated DFCS for failing to look into Emma's medical issues thoroughly.
"Emma appears to have some medical issues that remain unanswered," the report stressed. "She has things going on with her that not even CHOA can answer. She has required hospitalization requiring a feeding tube. She has a history of constant regurgitation as well as constipation and chronic congestion. She continues to have these bouts of discoloration in her extremities that have persisted through each and every foster placement."
But even this hasn't been enough to get the girls placed with their aunt and uncle—much less their own parents.
"We've given them so much evidence to prove this little girl was born with so many problems," Matt says. "I just don't understand how that's the system."
An Unending Nightmare
Even if Matt and Tuckey get their daughters back, the damage to their family may be irreparable.
In child welfare, the stakes are incredibly high. No social worker or judge or doctor wants to be the person who sent a child back to parents who ended up horrifically abusing them. Neither does anyone want to shatter an innocent family. It's an equilibrium that's nearly impossible to maintain. But bad practices—and a lack of common sense—make it even harder to get right.
When a baby comes to the hospital with bruises and fractures, it's natural to ask questions. What isn't natural is to ignore a mountain of evidence indicating that the baby was sick, not abused.
It's been more than a year since Arya and Emma were taken from their parents. In most of that time, they have been deprived of even supervised visits with their mother. That's a huge portion of their young lives.
"I pray that Arya comes out of it just as happy as she was before, because she was such a little ray of sunshine," Matt said in February. "But for me, how do I go back to feeling comfortable living in the state of Georgia? How do I go back to trusting any government agency?"
"I'm sure my wife is definitely stronger than me, but I don't know," he added, his voice breaking. "I haven't talked to her in so long."
UPDATE: After this story went to press, DFCS dropped its case against the Hernandezes. Emma and Arya are now living with relatives while their parents' criminal case continues.
*CORRECTION: The original version of this story misstated Holly Simonton's role at Fractured Families.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "'I Just Don't Understand How That's The System'."
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https://www.jsonline.com/story/news/politics/elections/2024/07/05/wisconsin-supreme-court-reinstates-absentee-ballot-drop-boxes/74292359007/
Wisconsin Supreme Court reinstates absentee ballot drop boxes
Something, something, molotov in box, something.
Stock up on fireworks now and give these boxes the explosive introduction they deserve.
So, your response to imaginary election "interference" is to commit actual, provable election interference? Just out of curiosity, how do you breathe with your head that far up your ass?
"So, your response to imaginary election “interference” is to commit actual, provable election interference?..."
"[I]maginary" gave you away, TDS-addled pile of shit. FOAD.
Hey look. Just because theblaw says ballots must be returned to a clerk doesn't mean the law is clear. The dem justices get confused on what women are. How are they supposed to know a box isn't a clerk?
Wonder why the Wisconsin legislature didn't do this? As I recall from the first time around, the law was pretty clear and the ruling was a simple technical decision on the words in the law. If Wisconsin doesn't like that, the legislature can change the law.
Judges confounding simple decisions to rewrite a simple law is bad practice all around.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court did not "outlaw" ballot drop boxes.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court did rule that the Wisconsin Elections Commission (WEC) gave inappropriate advice in its guidance to local elections clerks that drop boxes are a valid way to return an absentee ballot. It also ruled that no one can return a ballot in person on behalf of another voter, according to state law, despite what the WEC may have told local officials about allowing ballot harvesting.
What they said basically, was that "If Wisconsin wants drop boxes and ballot harvesting, the legislature knows how to write laws to allow them..."
Specifically:
¶49Third, the legislature knows how to write a statute accomplishing the work DRW would have Wis. Stat. §5.06 perform. SeeState v. Yakich, 2022 WI8, ¶24, 400 Wis.2d549, 970 N.W.2d12 (explaining plain meaning may be derived by looking at differences between two statutes and noting "the legislature knew how to draft [different] language"
...
¶53Subchapter IV of chapter 6 of the Wisconsin statutes begins with a statement of legislative policy that cannot be reconciled with the statements of policy contained in WEC's memos:
LEGISLATIVE POLICY.The legislature finds that voting is a constitutional right, the vigorous exercise of which should be strongly encouraged. In contrast, voting by absentee ballot is a privilege exercised wholly outside the traditional safeguards of the polling place. The legislature finds that the privilege of voting by absentee ballot must be carefully regulated to prevent the potential for fraud or abuse; to prevent overzealous solicitation of absent electors who may prefer not to participate in an election; to prevent undue influence on an absent elector to vote for or against a candidate or to cast a particular vote in a referendum; or other similar abuses.
The statutory requirements governing absentee voting must be completely satisfied or ballots may not be counted:
INTERPRETATION. Notwithstanding s. 5.01 (1), with respect to matters relating to the absentee ballot process, ss. 6.86, 6.87 (3) to (7) and 9.01 (1) (b) 2. and 4. shall be construed as mandatory. Ballots cast in contravention of the procedures specified in those provisions may not be counted. Ballots counted in contravention of the procedures specified in those provisions may not be included in the certified result of any election.
§6.84(2). "[M]andatory" election requirements "must be strictly adhered to" and "strictly observed." State ex rel. Ahlgrimm v. State Elections Bd., 82 Wis.2d585,592–93, 263 N.W.2d152 (1978).
¶54Despite these provisions, no defendant can point to any statute authorizing ballot drop boxes; instead, the defendants argue no statute expressly prohibits them. The absence of an express prohibition, however, does not mean drop boxes comport with "the procedures specified" in the election laws. Wis. Stat. §6.84(2). Nothing in the statutory language detailing the procedures by which absentee ballots may be cast mentions drop boxes or anything like them.
B. The Merits
WEC's staff may have been trying to make voting as easy as possible during the pandemic, but whatever their motivations, WEC must follow Wisconsin statutes. Good intentions never override the law.[25]
[25]Justice Ann Walsh Bradley accuses the court of "erect[ing] yet another barrier for voters," dissent, ¶205, but to the extent any "barriers" to voting exist, they are of the legislature's making. Establishing rules governing the casting of ballots outside of election day rests solely within the power of the people's representatives because such regulations affect only the privilege of absentee voting and not the right to vote itself. Justice Ann Walsh Bradley says "[a] ballot drop box is a simple and perfectly legal solution to make voting easier[.]" Id., ¶207. While they might be a simple solution, the decision to devise solutions to make voting easier belongs to the legislature, not WEC and certainly not the judiciary. While the dissenters would permit ballot drop boxes, the court must respect the constitutional restraints on our power and refuse to act as a super-legislature. It poses a grave threat to democracy to mislead the people into believing we are one.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court did not “outlaw” ballot drop boxes.
Can we stop this bullshit of pretending laws need to ban government behaviors instead of authorize?
By default a government can not. Stop switching the burden.
This is the whole reason the democrats wanted to take control of the Wisconsin SC.
Judge rules Covenant shooter’s writings will not be released
https://www.wsmv.com/2024/07/05/judge-rules-covenant-writings-will-not-be-released/
Knew this was going to be the outcome. Maybe someone will finally leak the whole thing.
It is insane. The judge allows the lawyers to argue the diary was copyrighted and the ownership transferred to the parents.
That tells you everything you need to know about how damaging it would be to the narrative.
I thought it had already been leaked.
Just a few pages.
DCFS and other similar agencies need to be gotten rid of and their members fired en masse.
Horrific as this story is, that's a step too far. I have a colleague whose spouse (an employee of our area's equivalent of DCFS) did a home visit and was met at the door by a four-year-old who said "Mommy's sleeping." The stench of decomposition was overpowering. Natural causes from what I heard but still a trauma and that kid needed help.
The right fix is loser-pays and direct accountability. Leave DCFS in place but sue those particular social workers (and that quack doctor) into bankruptcy for their misdiagnoses and abuses of power. Let the good ones do their jobs but put some balance back into the system in a way that forces the bad ones out.
Loser pays would cure a lot of ills in our judicial system, but something else that needs to be fixed is the glacial pace. It is an utter travesty that these things take years. I put it down to leaving lawyers in charge. The last thing they want is for the public to understand the legal system, or to get help from anyone who hasn't had the expensive schooling and bar association certification.
Occupational licensing, a monopoly on courts and judges, it all adds up to a slow expensive process more concerned with ritual than justice.
Like most goverment 99% of them give the other 1% a bad name
I've seen way too many stories of the horrors of DCFS in Illinois. The department needs to go. It can be replaced with something that works, but currently, it's too far gone to be salvageable. Burn it to the ground and start over.
You think that's too much? Here, I thought this kind of abuse of parents and child called for an armed citizen response. Remember when those WWII vets deposed their crooked town government?
Clearly NOT a step too far. Destroy the current org, and build another one starting with the safeguards needed.
From time to time, the tree of Liberty must be watered with the blood of patriots and tyrants.
Any gov employee that falsified evidence should be executed
100%.
The judge is exactly what you would expect here in Davidson County. We're like the Triple AAA of Fulton County.
At least she got her hair did.
Lawyer who through molotov cocktails at cop car and recieved less time than abortion protestors is back at riots causing more violence.
https://legalinsurrection.com/2024/07/molotov-cocktail-lawyer-urooj-rahman-spotted-spewing-hate-at-anti-israel-anti-american-protest-on-july-4th/
It would be terrible if someone threw a molotov cocktail at those protestors.
And didn't get it on film.
Even more evidence comes out of FBI and DoJ purging conservatives from the agencies.
https://justthenews.com/accountability/whistleblowers/new-complaint-adds-mounting-evidence-fbi-political-bias-and
But just remember... imagine what Trump might do.
We don't need to imagine what Trump might do.
We can just remember what he did do.
You know, closed borders, economic growth for all races and classes, middle east peace, no new wars, lower taxes for all, massive elimination of regulations; all the usual horrors.
The Trump administration deliberately created chaos at the border to pander to racists and xenophobes. Trump inherited a growing economy he did nothing to create, only to trash it with his idiot trade wars. I don't see how bribing a few Arab countries into at least pretending to play nice with Israel constitutes "middle east peace". No new wars is nice, but he didn't do jack about ending any of the existing wars. Regulations continued to increase under Trump. The best he did was slow them down slightly. And because he relied on executive orders rather than pushing for legislative reform, what little he did achieve was out the window by the end of February 2021.
I believe it was the Bible that said knowing the truth would make you free. If you want to live up to your handle, stop peddling bullshit. Trump's first term was terrible for the country. Judging by his campaign he learned nothing and promises nothing but more of the same.
Dude, chaos is what's happening now. I get you hate Trump, but wake the F up.
"The Trump administration deliberately created chaos at the border to pander to racists and xenophobes..."
TDS-addled piles of shit like this will lie, repeat the lie, and do so ad Infinitum, in the hopes that repeating a lie will somehow change it to be fact.
FOAD, asshole.
Who needs to imagine? Just listen to what he promises to do. The only good news is that he's too lazy and incompetent to make an effective dictator.
TDS-addled piles of shit like this will lie, repeat the lie, and do so ad Infinitum, in the hopes that repeating a lie will somehow change it to be fact. It won't.
FOAD, asshole.
Democrats sue to allow foreign funding of local elections.
https://thefederalist.com/2024/07/03/russia-hoaxer-marc-elias-firm-sues-to-let-foreign-billionaires-buy-ohio-elections/
The real threat is Republicans.
The Republican Party desperately needs to go away. Providing a more appealing alternative to the Dems should be an absolute no-brainer, yet all the current GOP can offer is Dem-lite policies and culture war bullshit.
You are a lying pile of shit. FOAD.
They think their accusations are plausible because they are doing the same thing.
The idea that you can somehow "buy" elections is stupid. It doesn't matter how loud you shout, you can't sell many people something they don't actually want. If advertising really were that persuasive we'd all be washing down our Arch Deluxe with a New Coke.
Governments keep giving themselves raises, including teachers. Now make 50% more than private industry when including benefits.
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/how-much-are-state-and-local-government-workers-overpaid
Can’t decide anything without knowing the immigration status of everyone involved.
Why won’t the Trump Deranged Supporting Mean Asshole Girls Association (TDSMAGA) respond to this prescient argument about the what of this story? It is brilliant. Because we only care about laws that effect or benefit undocumented migrants who are here to do work.
I still see tens of millions of help wanted signs up here in Maine. Americans are too lazy to do these jobs unlike those hard working, never crime committing, undocumented migrants. In fact we should start calling them undocumented HEROES.
In fact I had my first Cuban sandwich this week. Why did nobody tell me about this sandwich??
So if the baby has rickets due to poor nutrition, how is that not child abuse?
You beat me to it.
Probably loving their child with too much sunscreen.
1:
2: The older daughter has none of the problems. Do you think the parents are actually intentionally starving the younger one?
3. Why do you assume the government narrative is correct and the parents and everyone else is lying?
If it's an unintentional vitamin D deficiency, it could be solved with a doctor saying "she needs vitamin D." No need to break the family apart.
Wow, that actually sounds reasonable. Who let you in here?
Wow, you managed a post without a lie. We don't care; FOAD, asshole.
If your kid has type 2 diabetus from a poor dite, how is that not child abuse.
If you can't read a comment from two hours earlier explaining what you also didn't read in the fine article, why do you expect anyone to read your comment?
I think Mindi’s point, at least the way I read it, was that it’s kinda stupid to consider one abuse but the other not. Irrespective of this particular case.
Unless they're knowingly and intentionally depriving their child of the proper nutrition that's not really even neglect, much less abuse. Instead of ripping the family apart, maybe just tell them the kid needs some vitamin supplements?
And when doctors make an accusation, it's difficult to dispute their findings. After all, they're experts.
They are, but like any profession there are bad actors or people who think they are the final authority on all matters. Amusingly, doctor's make the worst patients for this very reason. They self diagnose, and if their doctor happens to disagree with their diagnosis (which happens every day) they get pretty aggressive about it.
Also, there is a reason why people always say to get a second opinion on major or even minor health issues. Doctor's are wrong a shocking amount of the time on even basic diagnosis. You should always check twice for the same reason carpenters say to measure twice and cut once.
"But for me, how do I go back to feeling comfortable living in the state of Georgia? How do I go back to trusting any government agency?"
Absolutely tragic story, but the only answer one can glean from all this is 'you don't, and you shouldn't'. 'Trusting the experts' and 'trusting the system' is an absolute fools game unless you have a mountain of cash to fight said system.
As in so many other area's of modern American life, the process is the punishment.
Perhaps we should all be thankful that Progressives haven't seized full control of the government, or families like this would be forcibly sterilized once again. It's happened before here in the U.S. and Progressives are hell bent on bringing that type of nonsense back in full force.
And the argument is a simple one, despite it's nastiness. People who are labeled as abusing their own children will likely abuse future children, so it's best if the state step in the prevent those future children from existing in the first place. It's not as disgusting as 'three generations of imbeciles is enough' but it's not far off.
And when doctors make an accusation, it’s difficult to dispute their findings. After all, they’re experts.
Did we learn nothing from the corona flu hysteria and the "medical experts" actions?
The "experts" learned entirely too much - about power and tyrany and how much they loved exercising it.
God that was depressing. Good job Emma. I wasn't left wondering if details were missing.
Is Emma Camp a disaffected, anti-government crank who soft-pedals ample evidence of child abuse to side with parents who disregard rickets (or a similar condition) and multiple fractures, or is she just making money by pandering to a slack-jawed, antisocial audience at the expense of a helpless child?
Either way, this is shitty work even from the junior varsity.
Infantile rickets often goes undetected; it usually has to be detected radiologically because it’s not obvious. Multiple and repeated fractures are also not uncommon in children with rickets or other diseases that affect bone quality (which it seems likely this baby has), especially infants, who can’t communicate extensively and don’t always express pain in ways that are obvious to adults. (For this reason among others, it wasn’t accepted among doctors that newborns and young babies even felt pain until the end of the 1980s, somewhat incredibly). Often babies will not show much reaction to fractures, etc. at the time and they are not discovered until later. The fact that the parents sought help for the swollen leg and that the injuries, expansion of the soft spot, and general deterioration to the point of needing a feeding tube, etc. continued with numerous caregivers seems to weigh against child abuse. Child abuse pediatricians are a real problem IMO and they represent a serious issue of medical ethics; parents who seek help for their children are often unwittingly shunted over to child abuse pediatricians whose purpose is to gather evidence and later testify against them as agents of the state, and this often also results in the children not being tested or treated for the issue the parents were seeking treatment for in the first place (as in this case, seemingly, to an extent). Diane Redleaf’s book They Took the Kids Last Night examines these issues in greater detail if you’re interested.
Absolutely correct. Doctors who are convinced that any and all injuries must be the result of abuse or neglect will frequently find what they're looking for no matter how weak the evidence or how plausible the alternative explanation. This corrupts the medical profession and could have the perverse consequence of discouraging responsible parents from seeking care for the children.
Are you an asshole who would rather shit on Reason than be bothered with facts or logic, or just a shameless apologist for the state who feels a bizarre need to troll the comments section of a self-described libertarian site? These parents knew something was wrong with their kid and sought medical treatment, which sounds pretty responsible to me. Instead of properly diagnosing the child and advising the parents on how to deal with the problem, doctors immediately leaped to the conclusion that it must be abuse. Once the state got involved, they refused to back down despite the extreme weakness of their case and considerable evidence to the contrary.
This is shitty work, even by the abysmal standards of Reason commenters.
Eat shit and die, asshole.
I'm going with Betteridge's law of headlines on your post, and responding:
1. No, and
2. You're a piece of belligerent, Dunning-Kruger trash
What a distressing story of government abuse. Quite frankly, I'm surprised no one was shot. Maybe that's what it's going to take.