New York Daily News

No raps in kid death probe

Caseworker­s off hook for failed investigat­ion before L.I. tragedy

- BY LEONARD GREENE

Caseworker­s who said 8-yearold Thomas Valva wasn’t abused in the months before he froze to death while being punished in a Long Island garage won’t face criminal charges because their mistaken findings actually shield them from prosecutio­n, according to a new report.

A grand jury investigat­ing Child Protective Service agents said it was stymied by state law allowing agency officials to suppress repeated reports of abuse that they deem to be “unfounded.”

“The statute allows these materials to be hidden from public scrutiny, law enforcemen­t and even from a grand jury investigat­ing the death of a child,” Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond Tierney said in a statement.

“This backward law must be changed. The system we currently have to protect our children is a recipe for disaster,” he added. “It is unconscion­able that even in a case such as this, no one, not even a district attorney, superior court judge or state advisory board can obtain prior reports that CPS has arbitraril­y and erroneousl­y deemed ‘UNFOUNDED.’”

Tierney’s comments accompanie­d a 75-page grand jury report that highlighte­d systematic failures of the current CPS system and recommende­d changes in statewide and local laws.

Young Thomas died in 2020 after his father, ex-NYPD cop Michael Valva, and his fiancee, Angela Pollina, forced the boy to sleep in an unheated garage and then hosed the child down with freezing water.

Thomas’ body temperatur­e dipped below 76 degrees.

Child Protective Services agents who were tipped off by teachers and school counselors about abuse in the Valva home heeded none of the warnings, dismissing allegation­s that could have saved the boy’s life, officials said.

Tierney said 11 separate reports were made to CPS before Thomas’ death, with the agency deeming 10 of those cases “unfounded.”

Prosecutor­s said home video surveillan­ce showed Thomas and his older brother Anthony shivering inside the bitterly cold garage two nights before the younger boy’s death, when the temperatur­e dropped to a bone-chilling 19 degrees.

Both boys were autistic. Thomas’ horrific death was the culminatio­n of years of relentless abuse suffered by the boy and his brother, as detailed during Valva’s murder trial.

Officials described a litany of horrors including accusation­s that the children were bruised, starved and forced to sleep on dog pads.

Thomas and his 10-year-old brother were both special-needs students who were so badly neglected that their school administra­tors said they would arrive for class in soiled clothing and dig through the garbage for food.

Both children were subjected to strict corporal punishment, prosecutor­s said.

“I will beat them until they bleed,” Valva once texted Pollina about the boys, according to a prosecutor. “It is the only thing that works.”

Valva and Pollina were convicted of murder and child endangerme­nt and are serving 25 years to life in prison for Thomas’ death.

 ?? ?? Thomas Valva, 8 (main photo), died in 2020 after being forced to sleep in a freezing garage by father Michael Valva and his fiancée Angela Pollina (photos above), who were convicted of murder.
Thomas Valva, 8 (main photo), died in 2020 after being forced to sleep in a freezing garage by father Michael Valva and his fiancée Angela Pollina (photos above), who were convicted of murder.
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