Chicago Sun-Times

DCFS MISSED WARNING SIGNS

- Email: marym@suntimes.com

How is it possible that investigat­ors with the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services saw “no obvious hazards or safety concerns” when they went to the Joliet Township home Tuesday where 16- month- old Semaj Crosby was found dead a day later?

After a frantic search for the toddler, who witnesses said wandered out of the yard, Semaj’s body was found in a couch Wednesday at her home that police officials now say is “uninhabita­ble.”

It is unclear what caused Semaj’s death since the toxicology report has not been completed. But a toddler has to be kept close. This tragedy, however it occurred, will weigh on the heart and mind of Sheri Gordon, the baby’s mother, for the rest of her life.

There were, however, red flags that could have helped DCFS help Gordon protect Semaj better.

For one thing, an attorney for Gordon, as well as neighbors, have described the house where Gordon was raising her daughter as a house of “squatters.”

Yet DCFS investigat­ors saw the barefoot baby playing in the yard with six or eight other children — with no adult supervisio­n — and deemed it to be a safe environmen­t?

I could see that happening if the agency hadn’t had contact with Semaj’s mother in the recent past.

But DCFS has been working with the family since September, when it determined that four allegation­s of neglect were “unfounded.” And two other investigat­ions for “neglect” involving the toddler and two siblings were opened last month and are still pending.

DCFS did not respond to my requests for comment, saying the agency does not comment on an ongoing investigat­ion.

Joliet officials have now slapped a red sticker on the doorway of the home and declared it “uninhabita­ble.”

Rick Ackerson, the deputy chief of investigat­ions for the Will County sheriff’s office, told reporters “five to 15 people” were “squatting” in the house and that the house was in “deplorable” condition.

But Will County deputies were just at the house on Easter Sunday — just two weeks ago — in response to a 911 call about “abandonmen­t.”

After determinin­g the children were OK, the officers returned with Easter baskets, CBS- 2 reported.

The deputies later posted a photograph of themselves on the department’s Facebook page with the five children, including the baretopped Semaj sucking a pacifier. Cute. But did the deputies just ignore the “deplorable” conditions?

And why were caseworker­s not alarmed when they went to the house on Tuesday? That doesn’t add up. The only way DCFS’ determinat­ion that there were no “obvious hazards or safety concerns” makes sense is if the caseworker­s didn’t actually go inside the house.

Last month, a similar scenario unfolded involving a 3- year- old who was accidental­ly shot in the head while playing cops and robbers with his mother’s handgun.

Five children ages, 3 to 11 had been left unsupervis­ed in a home that had no heat or hot water. The children were sleeping on soiled mattresses on the floor without sheets or blankets and were surrounded by garbage and clothes, according to an Assistant Cook County State’s Attorney.

After the shooting, a DCFS spokesman acknowledg­ed that social workers had been unable to get inside the home for an entire year.

“When we saw the children, we didn’t see evidence of abuse and neglect outside of the home. They were not thin. They were wearing clean clothes and things like that,” said Veronica Resa, deputy director of communicat­ions for DCFS.

Then, the agency’s director, George Sheldon, said the agency had “initiated a quality assurance analysis of the case to look at what we could have done differentl­y.”

It is incredibly sad that some children are born into such a hard life.

But child welfare agencies are supposed to make that hard life a lot easier for them to bear.

The circumstan­ces surroundin­g Semaj’s death again raises concerns that not enough is being done to keep these at- risk children from suffering while in the care of adults who are supposed to keep them from harm.

 ??  ?? Sixteen- month- old Semaj Crosby was found dead in this Joliet Township house on Wednesday.| STEFANO ESPOSITO/ SUN- TIMES
Sixteen- month- old Semaj Crosby was found dead in this Joliet Township house on Wednesday.| STEFANO ESPOSITO/ SUN- TIMES

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States