Los Angeles Times

Supreme Court won’t hear girl’s custody case

Native American child will not return to her former home in Santa Clarita.

- Associated press

A Santa Clarita couple said Monday they were disappoint­ed that the U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear a case involving their former foster daughter, a girl with Native American ancestry who was ordered removed from their home and reunited with relatives in Utah.

Rusty and Summer Page said in a statement that the high court’s decision was a “crushing blow.”

The girl, who is part Choctaw, was 6 when she was taken from her foster home in a tearful parting in March. She was placed with extended family in Utah under a decades-old federal law designed to keep Native American families together.

A California appeals court in July affirmed a lower court’s decision to remove the girl.

The Pages said Monday they would keep fighting for changes to the law “and the rights of other children unnecessar­ily hurt by the Indian Child Welfare Act.”

The girl was 17 months old when she was removed from the custody of her mother, who had drugabuse problems, and placed in foster care. Her father has a criminal history, according to court records.

Although foster care is supposed to be temporary, the Pages wanted to adopt Lexi and for years fought efforts under the federal act to place the girl with relatives of her father, who is part Choctaw.

The girl is now living with relatives of her father who are not Native Americans.

The case was one of dozens brought by foster families since the Indian Child Welfare Act was passed in the late 1970s. Lawmakers found that Native American families were broken up at disproport­ionately high rates, and that cultural ignorance and biases within the child welfare system were largely to blame.

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? SUMMER PAGE, Lexi’s former foster mother, says the family will keep fighting the federal law.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times SUMMER PAGE, Lexi’s former foster mother, says the family will keep fighting the federal law.

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