NEW
BEDFORD — Sen. Mark C.W. Montigny is calling for an
investigation of the state Department of Social Services
for failing to remove a 3-year-old girl from a New
Bedford home until nearly four months after the agency
was alerted to possible abuse.
Sen. Montigny, D-New Bedford, said the handling of the
alleged abuse by the girl's mother and her boyfriend
follows a history of slow responses by DSS, and there
needs to be an outside review.
"The DSS needs to be investigated as vigorously as this
couple," Sen. Montigny said Friday.
In
what is described as one of the worst child abuse cases
in memory at Boston Children's Hospital, the girl
suffered a mutilated ear and a lip that is permanently
scarred by human bites. Her mother, Jessica L. Silveira,
26, and the mother's boyfriend, Bryan M. James, 34, were
arrested Wednesday.
Rep. Antonio F.D. Cabral said Friday that he was not yet
ready to call for an independent investigation, but he
wants DSS commissioner Anthony "Angelo" McClain to give
a report to legislators.
"I
would like to give an opportunity to the new
commissioner to come back to us and tell us what he
thinks went wrong here, and depending on the assessment
of the new commissioner, proceed from there," said Rep.
Cabral, D-New Bedford.
Dr.
McClain said his agency's original investigation in
January did not suggest a serious case of abuse. If it
had, he said, they would have pursued the matter more
aggressively at the outset.
Mr.
James faces one charge of mayhem, one charge of assault
and battery on a child with injury resulting, and one
charge of assault and battery on a child with
substantial injury. The girl's bite injuries were
allegedly inflicted by Mr. James as punishment for
wetting her pants.
Ms.
Silveira is accused of permitting substantial injury to
a child and intimidating a witness. She allegedly gave
misleading information regarding the true identity of
her boyfriend.
Sen. Montigny said the agency should have moved faster
to take the girl and her 5-year-old brother into custody
as a precaution. He said the agency has in the past
failed to aggressively address suspected abuse.
"When you have a known situation — and this happens over
and over at DSS — it's deeply disturbing, and it needs
to stop," Sen. Montigny said.
Dr.
McClain said in a telephone interview that the girl and
her brother are in foster care, and DSS is working with
medical personnel to make sure she receives the
necessary care. He said it's too soon to tell whether
the children will end up in the care of extended family
or remain in the foster-care system.
The
agency first became involved with the family about a
week before an injury report was filed in January.
Social workers investigated reports the father, Eric
Offley, a registered Class 3 sex offender, was making
unsupervised visits with the children, Dr. McClain said.
Mr. Offley's sex offenses do not involve Ms. Silveira's
children, he said.
Officials were able to confirm that the father was not
making those visits.
The
girl was brought to a dentist in January with some
swelling in her mouth, police Sgt. Pamela Mello said.
The dentist called the police to the office, and police
recommended that she go to the hospital. She was
transported to St. Luke's, Sgt. Mello said.
Both police and DSS conducted an investigation at this
point.
DSS
found no evidence of child abuse, after both the child
and the mother blamed injuries on a fall, and a doctor
did not believe they were caused by an adult. The agency
continued with its investigation out of concern over a
possible lack of parental supervision, Dr. McClain said.
"At
that point, the concern was more supervision and
neglect," he said.
Sgt. Mello said police determined there was no evidence
to pursue criminal charges, also based on medical
evidence, but that did not rule out a future
investigation if new evidence emerged.
"The case was basically placed on hold until which time
additional evidence was made available to pursue charges
or additional evidence was made available to close the
case completely," Sgt. Mello said.
Police spokesman Capt. Richard Spirlet said police
became involved in the case again in May as a result of
DSS' subsequent investigation. Between January and then,
the case was entirely in the hands of DSS, Capt. Spirlet
said.
"We
did everything we were supposed to do by law," he said
of the initial investigation. "We made a report and
turned everything over to DSS."
From mid-January to the end of March, DSS made 10
attempts, including unannounced visits and letters, to
contact Ms. Silveira. When DSS finally located Ms.
Silveira during an unannounced visits, she told them the
child was staying with her grandmother, Dr. McClain
said. He could not immediately answer why social workers
were not sent to the grandmother's home.
At
that time, the agency scheduled another meeting in
April, but the mother was not at home for the follow-up
meeting, Dr. McClain said.
About the same time, DSS asked a judge to give the
agency temporary custody of the children. On May 3, the
children were placed in DSS care and have since remained
together in a foster home, according to a DSS statement.
Not
everyone is convinced the agency acted quickly enough.
Authorities should have pressed Ms. Silveira to show
them the child, because there were warning signs of a
serious problem, said Jetta Bernier, executive director
for Massachusetts Citizens for Children.
There was a report of abuse from a physician, the child
is particularly young and vulnerable, and the mother
told social workers the child was not home, Ms. Bernier
said.
"Everyone should have been running around trying to find
this child," Ms. Bernier said. "This child could have
easily been a fatality."
Asked if there will be any changes following this
incident, Dr. McClain said the agency will emphasize
that children's safety comes first. The agency will
provide social workers with more guidance for
identifying situations when they need to dig deeper for
information and where to look.
"We're going to work to make sure our focus is on our
core mission of keeping children safe," he said.
Contact Brian Boyd at
bboyd@s-t.com