Chicago Sun-Times

Judge unhappy with pace of DCFS investigat­ion 11 days after boy, 3, dies in fire

- BY JANE RECKER, STAFF REPORTER jrecker@ suntimes. com | @ janerecker

A Cook County judge and a Department of Child and Family Services lawyer continued to spar in court Thursday over questions that remain unanswered in the death of a 3- year- old boy in a Grand Crossing apartment fire earlier this month.

Maqkwone Jones was pronounced dead at Comer Children’s Hospital after the fire in the 1400 block of East 67th Place. He allegedly had been left alone by his foster mother with one of her relatives who didn’t know he was there.

At a July 13 hearing, Judge Patrick Murphy said the DCFS investigat­ion into the boy’s death had been insufficie­nt, and asked all relevant informatio­n be submitted to the lawyers by Tuesday.

Murphy was pleased overall with the new report DCFS presented Thursday, but said informatio­n regarding the whereabout­s of Maqkwone’s siblings at the time of the fire and why Maqkwone was left alone remained unclear and “raised more questions than answers.”

DCFS supervisor­y regional counsel Colleen Flaherty explained the department had received conflictin­g accounts and couldn’t release any informatio­n to the court until it was verified.

When Murphy said he thought DCFS knew more than they were telling him, Flaherty retorted: “You’re welcome to become part of the investigat­ion.”

Murphy also grilled Flaherty on: why the other siblings were with a different relative at the time of the fire; the veracity of new accounts that the foster mother actually had told the relative Maqkwone was there; and why a 3- year- old boy would uncharacte­ristically be asleep at 10: 30 a. m., the time of the fire.

Flaherty answered every question by rephrasing the same basic idea: it was only 11 days into the investigat­ion and the department kept getting conflictin­g accounts.

Murphy asked why the department would ponder different accounts if all his questions could easily be answered by the foster mother.

“All I want to know is where and why,” he said. “These are simple questions. This is not investigat­ing Russian involvemen­t in our elections.”

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