Find out what happened to CPS caseworker Gary Sanderson and CPS Director Jill McVey after Daddy Justice Films interviewed them. According to the baby's mother, Sanderson stole her baby, rudely throwing his paperwork into her face, on the basis of a false allegation that she was using drugs. She offered to take a drug test, but a negative result on that wasn't enough. Her baby was held in a foster home for nearly two months though there was no evidence against her.
I recommend this eight-minute video to whoever wants to know a little about what it is like to be involved in a CPS case, but bear in mind this family was lucky - they eventually, after much heartache and trauma, got their child back - while many others do not.
Because I run a website for parents facing false accusations of child abuse or neglect, I occasionally receive angry comments from people who don't understand how I can help accused parents. They seem to have missed the keyword: FALSE accusations. Someone has to help these parents and too often their county-paid lawyers won't take the time to do an effective job. What's wrong with giving the parents a bit of legal knowledge that could help them get their kids back? Where would the child in this video be now if the mother and grandmother didn't have someone to help them?
This video demonstrates how a false accusation can destroy a family and traumatize a child.
The link: YouTube - Stolen Baby!
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If you'd like to read more articles on this topic, you're welcome to join the Family Rights group here on Gather. I also have a website for families facing false accusations of child abuse or neglect: FightCPS.Com


Comments: 9
I usually have no idea when I'm talking to someone whether or not an accusation is false, however I know many false accusations have been made. I expect if there's been any real abuse that there will be enough evidence to press charges in criminal court. If, however, the entire case is built on a caseworker's subjective judgement with no supporting evidence, maybe the case has no merit. And most of these child abuse/neglect cases don't have enough real evidence to ever make it to criminal court. Most are processed through juvenile court where the standard of proof is much lower.
I used to try to help parents one-on-one but it was way too depressing and time consuming for me. Seven years ago I decided to put all my information on the web and let people who need it sift through it to use what they think will work and discard the rest. I tell people I don't have all the answers, because I don't. What works in one case might not work in another. And my website gets over 500 visitors daily. There's no way I can help all those people individually.
I expect and hope that those who are innocent will get some help from the information on my site, and that those who are guilty will be found guilty in court because of the weight of evidence against them. It usually doesn't matter how many declarations of innocence a guilty person makes if there's evidence of guilt presented by the other side in court.
September 14th 1995-October 25th 2008
plz answer me also what are the most common beatings done?
-tomboy5262 ^-^