New York Post

10 MORE ZYMERES

The kids who died ed on ACS’s watch in n only three months

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Zymere Perkins wasn’t the only child to fall through the cracks at the Administra­tion for Children’s Services. An audit found that 10 children who died between July and September of this year had homes that were visited four times or more by ACS — yet the gency failed to help.

Ten kids died despite each being the subject of at least four abuse or maltreatme­nt complaints to the city’s troubled child-welfare agency in the weeks leading up to the slaying of little Zymere Perkins, a probe by Comptrolle­r Scott Stringer’s office has found.

The tragedies were among 38 deaths involving vulnerable children flagged for high-priority investigat­ions by the Administra­tion for Children’s Services, Stringer found in the report, a copy of which was obtained by The Post.

In a letter to outgoing ACS Commission­er Gladys Carrion — who announced she was stepping down last week amid scrutiny of her handling of the agency — Stringer said his findings “starkly illustrate ACS’ persistent lack of progress in meeting its own targets for how those investigat­ions are conducted, supervised and managed.”

Without reform, Stringer warned, the bungling “will continue to prove fatal for an unknown number of children who will foreseeabl­y need to rely on ACS for protection from abusive individual­s in their own households.”

Carrion’s abrupt retirement came one day before the state ordered the appointmen­t of an outside monitor to oversee ACS due to shocking lapses in the handling of Zymere’s case.

Stringer’s report, which will be made public Thursday, said his office looked into 3,692 high-priority ACS probes opened between July 1 and Sept. 25 — one day before Zymere, 6, was beaten to death in Harlem following five ACS investigat­ions into abuse allegation­s against his family.

Zymere’s mom, Geraldine Perkins, and her boyfriend, Rysheim Smith, have been charged with endangerin­g the welfare of a child. Authoritie­s suspect Smith fatally bludgeoned the child with a broomstick.

The comptrolle­r’s probe found that 53 high-priority cases involving four or more complaints against a household were closed without any agency employees having “face-to-face contact” with the children in question.

Stringer also uncovered multiple instances in which ACS failed to follow official protocol in handling the investigat­ions. The lapses included 22.4 percent of the 3,692 cases in which there was no “face-to-face contact” with the child within 24 hours, and 25.9 percent that were closed without the “requisite number of face-toface contacts with the child” every other week.

In addition, 31.9 percent of the cases were closed without first being reviewed by a supervisor five times, as required, and 72.5 percent were closed without being reviewed by a manager even three times.

Those failures occurred despite ACS being so top-heavy with management that supervisor­s actually outnumber the caseworker­s assigned to deal with kids at risk, as revealed by The Post on Monday.

ACS also failed to produce a risk-assessment profile within 40 days, as required, in 68 percent of the cases, according to Stringer’s preliminar­y findings.

“It’s so alarming and concerning,” Stringer told The Post. “The sheer number of kids who have tragically slipped through the cracks makes your heart break.”

Since Zymere’s death, another child, 3-year-old Jaden Jordan, died from a beating, allegedly administer­ed by his mother’s boyfriend, Salvatore Lucchesse.

That abuse was uncovered on Nov. 28, three days after ACS workers investigat­ed a tip that mistakenly gave the wrong address for the family’s home in the Gravesend section of Brooklyn.

In his letter, Stringer said the probe was a follow-up to a June 15 report that “found significan­t deficienci­es in ACS’s processes.

In addition to Stringer’s findings, ACS is bracing for the release of a report by the city Department of Investigat­ion early next year.Last week, DOI Commission­er Mark Peters said his probe would reveal “failures at the highest level” of ACS.

Both ACS and Mayor de Blasio’s office disputed Stringer’s findings, saying 21 of the 38 deaths Stringer cited had no prior history with ACS.

They also said seven other deaths stemmed from unsafe sleeping conditions, two were illness-related, one was determined to be accidental, and the official cause of two others remained pending.

The existence of five other child death cases cited by Stringer is being disputed by the de Blasio administra­tion.

“It’s no surprise that ACS’s data was cherry-picked to support a simplified and largely inaccurate conclusion,” mayoral spokespers­on Aja Worthy-Davis said.

“This report contains many inaccuraci­es— such as a base misunderst­anding of child-protective review protocols and legal rules regarding risk assessment.

“Our focus remains on aggressive reform meant to protect every child that we interact with.”

 ??  ?? ON HOT SEATS: Gladys Carrion, who has resigned as chief of the Administra­tion for Children’s Services, and Mayor de Blasio are feeling the heat for the failures of the city to protect at-risk and abused kids. A scathing new report from the city...
ON HOT SEATS: Gladys Carrion, who has resigned as chief of the Administra­tion for Children’s Services, and Mayor de Blasio are feeling the heat for the failures of the city to protect at-risk and abused kids. A scathing new report from the city...

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