Weekend Herald

How social workers failed to act

The dad of a baby left to die in a hot car while his mumand grandma used drugs is seeking answers,

- reports Jared Savage

At just eight months old, Isaiah Neil was probably New Zealand’s youngest victim of synthetic drug ad- diction.

Heat stroke was the official cause of his death, but it was synthetic drugs that turned his carers into “zombies”, which killed him. His mother and grandmothe­r were so keen to smoke a $ 40 bag of black market “synnies” they left Isaiah to sleep in the car.

It was around 12.30pm on a sunny November day in Ruatoki, in the eastern Bay of Plenty. They got stoned, then slept. Isaiah was strapped in his car seat, doors and windows closed. The average temperatur­e outside was 20C, but according to experts, would have climbed to 45C inside the car within an hour.

Three hours passed before Isaiah’s father found him “limp, unresponsi­ve and hot” but no one called 111.

He was put into a cot, his parents went back to sleep.

At 6.36pm — three hours later — an ambulance was finally called, but the paramedics arrived to find him dead.

His parents, Shane Neil and Lacey Te Whetu, as well as maternal grandmothe­r Donna Parangi, were convicted of manslaught­er.

“Any death of a very young child is tragic,” said Justice Graham Lang in sentencing the trio. “It is even more tragic when the death is completely needless and is caused by repeated failures by parents and those entrusted with his care.”

THERE IS no doubt where the criminal culpabilit­y falls — in the home where Isaiah should have been safe. But there were also repeated failures by Child Youth & Family when concerns were raised about the dysfunctio­nal household.

Isaiah, or his older siblings, came to the attention of CYF 12 times in the three years before his death, according to interviews, court transcript­s, police documents and social worker case notes obtained by the Weekend Herald.

There were 10 official “Reports of Concern” dating back to November 2012, three specifical­ly concerning synthetic drugs, in the months before Isaiah was left in the car with fatal consequenc­es.

Four complaints were laid by Shane Neil, Isaiah’s father.

Currently serving 10 months’ home detention after admitting the manslaught­er charge, Neil i sn’t seeking sympathy, or to shift the blame for his son’s death.

“I have to accept the responsibi­lity of failing Isaiah,” he told the Weekend Herald. “If I was going to have any sort of peace, even just a little bit, I had to plead guilty.”

But even so, the 31- year- old does feel his concerns about the Te Whetu household were brushed aside.

His relationsh­ip with Te Whetu was volatile, marred by fighting and domestic violence against each other.

Neil would move out whenever they split up and it was during these breaks he would call CYF. The “reports of concern” are consistent: concerns about the children being exposed to violence in the house, as well as Te Whetu’s escalating addiction to synthetic cannabis.

However, his behaviour did not bolster his credibilit­y with social workers. Evidence from court suggests Neil was not a supportive father, with Justice Lang saying he “played virtually no part in the upbringing of the children”.

After the first complaint, Neil called back a week later to retract the allegation­s made “maliciousl­y” because the couple had split up again.

He had been admitted to a psychiatri­c unit for care and was now feeling better, according to the case notes.

A year later, a second complaint was found to be unsubstant­iated, when it emerged Neil had slapped Te Whetu.

He pleaded guilty to assault, which allowed Lacey to later obtain temporary protection and parenting orders from the Family Court against him.

This meant Neil was unable to have unsupervis­ed access with the children, although the couple were still in an on- again, off- again relationsh­ip.

The children looked healthy, the house clean and tidy. Staff from kohanga reo and Plunket thought Te Whetu was a good mum. Case closed.

“I advised I have no concerns for the children in the care of the mother,” the social worker wrote on the file. This pattern repeats across hundreds of pages of case notes.

Whenever they split up, Neil would ring CYF to report his concerns about the household — especially Te Whetu’s drug habit. Each time, Te Whetu — and her mother — would deny the allegation­s and turn the tables by telling the social workers about Neil’s previous violence and mental health problems.

Neil was unable to shake the perception that he was the problem; that he was only calling CYF out of spite each time they broke up.

“The social worker wouldn’t accept any of the informatio­n I passed on,” Neil says. “She said without evidence, it was just my word against Lacey’s . . . but they weren’t made up stories. They were true.”

So he tried to get proof. In May 2015, a few months after Isaiah was born, Neil used a cellphone to film the “bucket bong” Te Whetu used to smoke the synthetic drugs.

“I have notified CYF previously about the cannabis but they have done nothing about it,” Neil said, according to the case file.

Te Whetu was spending hundreds of dollars on synthetic drugs, says Neil, instead of on food and rent.

When Te Whetu discovered the video, she went into a rage.

She punched, kicked and scratched Neil, as well as threatenin­g him with a large knife, before damaging the windscreen wipers and side mirrors on his car. When Neil reported the attack to the police, Te Whetu slashed his t yres in the car park in front of the station.

This time, the incident was referred to CYF by the police, as well as Neil.

Te Whetu said she was not coping with looking after the children, says Neil, and was frequently threatenin­g to hurt herself. “She makes me worry about the kids when she says these sorts of things,” Neil told CYF.

It was the second time CYF had been told about Te Whetu’s deteriorat­ing state of mind. The previous year, social workers had visited the home after a phone call from Neil. Te Whetu had locked herself in the bathroom and threatened to kill herself.

AT THE sentencing hearing Justice Lang said fragile mental health had affected Te Whetu for some time, and she had smoked synthetic cannabis daily to “escape from the pressures of your everyday world”.

“It is clear that the consumptio­n of drugs has had a huge effect on your life. Your family had in fact become concerned about your ability to care for the children,” said Justice Lang, referring to the final report of concern.

In August 2015, just three months before Isaiah died, Kylie Te Whetu visited her family in Ruatoki.

She found her sister Lacey and mother Donna Parangi “stoned” unconsciou­s and described them as “zombies”, according to court documents released to the Weekend Herald.

“Mum was lying in the room and she was just lying there and she couldn’t get up,” Kylie Te Whetu told the court. “Lacey was in the other room, she couldn’t get up either.”

She took the two older children back home to Auckland, but Isaiah was left in the care of his mother.

About a month later, Te Whetu wanted her children back but Kylie Te Whetu didn’t want to return them.

CYFS documents show the police called Kylie, who told the officer about Te Whetu’s addiction to synthetic cannabis. Police reported the matter to social workers.

But she had no legal right to keep the children with her, so they went back to Ruatoki. Three months later, Isaiah was dead.

IN THE days after his death, CYF — now called the Ministry for Vulnerable Children, Oranga Tamariki — reviewed its involvemen­t with the family. “Better practice on Child, Youth & Family’s part may not have prevented Isaiah’s death,” said a spokeswoma­n, “but the social work practice could have been better”.

The response has angered Neil’s family, who also made two reports of concern.

“Our stance on that is ‘ What’s the point of your organisati­on’?” says one relative, who asked for anonymity.

“Your job is to save kids, particular­ly those in imminent danger. And you didn’t do your job. Sorry, that’s not good enough.”

The family is also frustrated that Oranga Tamariki has not released the full review into Isaiah’s death to them.

“If they don’t feel they’re at fault, they could just tell us what we didn’t do right. I’d love to know what more we could have done.”

In one lengthy email to CYF in September 2013, a notificati­on from the relative compared the unsafe home environmen­t to one of New Zealand’s worst cases of child abuse.

“The ineffectiv­e parenting or caregiving, the immaturity of the caregivers, drugs, alcohol and violence, turning a blind eye and creating a culture of silence . . . I am afraid these children will become another victim of our inability to act,” she wrote. “If they are not the next Nia Glassie, then they will be.”

Neil was “no saint”, say his family But they believe CYF focused on his faults and did not recognise Te Whetu’s. “Every time he called CYF, Lacey and Donna would turn it back around on him,” a family member says. “And CYF took it at face value, they didn’t dig into what Shane was actually saying. He became a convenient scapegoat.

“The social worker looked at each incident in isolation. Deal with it, next one, deal with it, next one. She didn’t step back, string it all together and think: ‘ There’s something seriously wrong with this situation’.”

It’s a criticism acknowledg­ed in a bullet point summary of the CYF review of Isaiah’s death, released to the Weekend Herald under the Official Informatio­n Act.

The social work practice could have been improved in the following areas:

More robust informatio­n gathering to form an accurate picture of family dynamics and functionin­g in response to reports of concern.

Better understand­ing of cumulative harm and assessing new informatio­n in the context of previous family history.

Improved assessment of the parenting capacity in light of the issues raised.

As a result, the Oranga Tamariki office in Whakatane now has more comprehens­ive assessment­s, record keeping and supervisio­n to make better decisions more quickly.

“We are focusing on managing cases better through, for example, improved quality assessment­s and managing caseloads more effectivel­y with children at the centre of all our decision making,” a senior executive, Matt McLay, wrote in a letter attached to the summary.

“The Ministry is committed to fundamenta­lly changing the way we care for vulnerable children and young people.”

However, the internal review by CYF might not be the final say on Isaiah’s death.

The wider circumstan­ces could be examined in detail at an inquest in front of Dr Wallace Bain, the Coroner for the Bay of Plenty.

Bain has previously held inquests for Nia Glassie and more recently Moko Rangitoher­iri, a toddler beaten to death, to examine how the vulnerable children fell between the cracks.

A decision about a Coronial hearing for Isaiah will made after the criminal case i s finished, said a spokesman for Bain. This will be after the Court of Appeal has made a decision on Parangi’s bid to have her conviction overturned.

STOPPING ANOTHER needless death i s why Shane Neil agreed to speak publicly about his son’s death for the first time. It took him a long time to accept his guilt; now he feels guilty about serving home detention while Te Whetu and Parangi were sentenced to three years in prison.

As they knew Isaiah was in the car while they smoked synthetic drugs, Justice Lang ruled the mother and daughter were more culpable.

While Neil “failed miserably” by not calling 111 when he found Isaiah, Justice Lang said there was a “real issue” as to whether the baby could be saved at that time. For that reason, the judge granted home detention.

“I feel lucky to not be in prison, I feel like it was a light sentence,” says Neil.

“I do blame myself . . . I failed. The last two years have been like waking up from a bad dream every day. Except it’s not a bad dream, it’s reality.”

Your job is to save kids, particular­ly those in imminent danger. And you didn’t do your job. Sorry, that’s not good enough. Shane Neil’s family

 ?? Pictures / Alan Gibson, Stephen Parker ?? Watch the video at nzherald. co. nz Isaiah Neil, right. Father Shane Neil, mother Lacey Te Whetu ( below, right) and grandmothe­r Donna Parangi.
Pictures / Alan Gibson, Stephen Parker Watch the video at nzherald. co. nz Isaiah Neil, right. Father Shane Neil, mother Lacey Te Whetu ( below, right) and grandmothe­r Donna Parangi.
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