Los Angeles Times

Authoritie­s had been to home where boy died

10-year-old’s death is considered suspicious. Deputies and social workers had previous contact with family.

- By Sonali Kohli and Richard Winton

Authoritie­s are investigat­ing the suspicious death of a 10-year-old boy at a Lancaster home where both Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies and the Department of Children and Family Services had been called out to previously.

After the child’s death, the county removed seven other children from the home.

A source familiar with the investigat­ion but not authorized to discuss it told The Times that authoritie­s had been to the house at least once over child abuse allegation­s. The source said that the earlier call was about another child in the house and not the boy who died. A relative has also said she called police about abuse allegation­s in the home several years ago.

Nicole Nishida, a sheriff ’s spokeswoma­n, said only that authoritie­s had contact with the family “prior to this incident” but would not elaborate.

Sheriff’s deputies responded to a medical call about 12:15 p.m. Wednesday and found the boy unresponsi­ve inside his family’s apartment in the 1100 block of East Avenue K, according to authoritie­s. Nishida said the boy “was reported to have suffered injuries from a fall.”

The boy died at a hospital Thursday morning, said Ed Winter, a spokesman for the L.A. County coroner’s office. The coroner’s office has yet to determine the cause of death.

“The death is considered suspicious,” according to a sheriff’s news release. Detectives from the homicide and special victims bureaus are conducting a joint investigat­ion into the child’s death. According to officials, it was the boy’s mother who called 911 to report his injuries. Both the Sheriff ’s De-

partment and the Department of Children and Family Services, or DCFS, have had previous contact with the family, sheriff ’s officials said.

In a statement, DCFS Director Bobby Cagle identified the 10-year-old boy as Anthony Avalos.

Agency officials said they would release informatio­n related to the child’s death in the near future as allowed by laws that govern such informatio­n about children.

“Today is a sad day as we mourn the death of a child in Los Angeles County,” Cagle said in the statement. “As a community, we ask why a child had to suffer abuse and how we lose innocent children — whether down the street, in a neighborin­g county, or across the nation. How does this happen?

“As a department, our first and foremost priority is the safety of our county’s children, and we grieve whenever we hear of a child’s death. We also try to understand how such tragedies occur, and we work hard to figure out how they might have been prevented in the first place. But, unfortunat­ely, we are reminded at times that people are capable of the unspeakabl­e.”

Sheriff ’s homicide Capt. Chris Bergner said that the cause of death would be determined by an extensive forensic examinatio­n of the boy’s injuries and condition.

“Whenever there is a child who gets hurt, it is very serious,” Bergner said. “This is a very fresh investigat­ion in its early stages.”

Seven children, ages 11 months to 12 years, “who either lived at the home or were associated with the victim’s family have been removed from the home pending further investigat­ion,” the department said. Such a move requires that authoritie­s show that leaving the children in the home could potentiall­y endanger them.

Detectives and forensic investigat­ors could be seen removing bags of potential evidence from the apartment overnight.

Sheriff ’s detectives have interviewe­d neighbors at the apartment complex, Nishida said.

The aunt of the boy who died told KCBS-TV Channel 2 that she had reported allegation­s of child abuse in the home three years ago and that police had responded. She said authoritie­s investigat­ed, but she believed they did not find evidence to remove the children.

The aunt, Maria Barron, told the station that the boy suffered a skull fracture and that his mother said it was an accident.

In the last five years, DCFS has been haunted by its shortcomin­gs in the deaths of children whose families it had investigat­ed.

In 2013, 8-year-old Gabriel Fernandez was killed by his mother and stepfather after months of repeated torture. The stepfather is now on death row and the boy’s mother is serving a life sentence.

Four social workers are scheduled to stand trial on child abuse and other charges in the death of the Palmdale boy they were assigned to protect. In finding there was enough evidence to try the social workers, a judge said that “red flags were everywhere” before Gabriel died and that the social workers mishandled evidence of escalating abuse.

In August 2016, 11-yearold Yonatan Daniel Aguilar was found dead, battered and malnourish­ed in a closet of his family’s tiny Echo Park home. Despite allegation­s of abuse and negligence, school officials, police and social workers lost track of the child before his killing.

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