Two year old Miguel spent several months in the Haney home,
while his mother Odelia was allowed visitations. She questioned
several bruises on Miguel on one of those visits and was told
that the marks were from a permanent marker that Miguel had
been playing with and simply hadn't faded away yet. Odelia
reported the incident plus several others to Social Services,
but they were never checked out and both children were left
in the abusive foster home.
It's widely known that when biological parents report suspected
incidents of their children being abused in foster care, the
complaints fall on deaf ears, as did Odelia's reports of suspected
abuse on Miguel.
"They said I was a bad parent," Odelia said,"and
look what they put him through."
Miguel was taken to the hospital on February 1st, 1999 by
his foster parents who claimed that he had fallen off the
toilet during a potty training session. Hospital officials
noted that Miguel was covered with bruises and determined
that he had been severely beaten when his foster family drove
him to St .Anthony North Hospital. He died the next day.
Meanwhile, Odelia walked into the court house hoping to persuade
the judge that she was fit mother. She was working, drug free,
and had moved in with her parents who provided her with emotional
support. The boys would come to a loving, drug free home with
their mother, the way it should have been. However, this was
not to be. Instead of facing a judge and explaining how her
life had changed, she was met by police and officials with
the Department of Social Services and asked to accompany them
to an office where she was told that her son was dead.
"We've got some bad news for you." someone told
her.
Odelia had read the newspaper reports on the little boys
death throughout the previous two weeks and was concerned
at first that it could have been one of her boys. But the
police reported that the dead child suffered from fetal alcohol
syndrome, which Miguel did not have, so she dismissed the
thought.
Then she was told that the little boy she'd read about in
the newspapers had indeed been her own son. "Right when
they told me, I started crying and crying - not my son, not
my baby, not my Miguel." Odelia said. The family almost
immediately began asking questions which they would get no
answers to.
How come the suspicious bruises on Miguel were never investigated?
Why was Miguel not taken to the hospital for several hours
after the incident happened? Why was Social Services not aware
of what was going on in the home? How could the system fail
so miserably? How come the child was removed from his own
home for his own protection and then suffer such a violent
death? And how could Social Services place her children with
a couple who both had arrest records?
It would come out after Miguel's death that both of the Haney's
had arrest records and both of their drivers licenses had
been suspended.
Evon Haney was arrested and released pending the filing of
formal charges after more than $3000.00 was found missing
from an after school program at the Skyview Elementary School
which Evon was in charge of.
Rick Haney was arrested in February of 1997 and charged with
DUI, careless driving, and driving with a suspended license.
He was sent from jail to a detox center and then released.
The Haney's were licensed foster parents through All About
Kids LLC., the agency is licensed through the state. Agency
directors, not state officials, are responsible for inspecting
and monitoring individual foster care homes under their licensing
agreement.
Odelia was determined that the same thing would not happen
to her last remaining son Oswaldo. He was removed from the
Haney foster home and placed with yet another foster family.
But Odelia's fight would be in vain. She went up against Social
Services yet again when she sought temporary custody of Oswaldo
and was denied. Social Services told her that she had to wait
until May when her scheduled custody hearing was.
"The system is not right," Dorothy Valasquez, the
great aunt of Miguel and Oswaldo said, "They said Miguel
was safe, and look what happened. How do we know that Oswaldo
is safe?" The answer is simple.....you don't.