Oroville Mercury-Register

Tentative $32M settlement in abuse death of California boy

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A tentative $32 million settlement has been reached with Los Angeles County in a lawsuit over its child welfare agency’s supervisio­n of a boy who allegedly was abused to death by his mother and her boyfriend, attorneys announced Wednesday.

The settlement in the 2018 death of 10-year-old Anthony Avalos requires approval by the five-member county Board of Supervisor­s, said Brian Claypool, one of the lawyers who brought the lawsuit on behalf of the boy’s three siblings and his father.

The lawsuit alleged that the county’s Department of Children and Family Services and a contracted company that supplies counseling disregarde­d reports of abuse.

The tentative settlement, which does not include the contractor, was reached shortly before the claim against the county was to go to trial.

Claypool said the basis of the lawsuit was that the county department was notified 13 times of abuse in Anthony’s home in the high desert city of Lancaster.

Sheriff’s deputies who went to the home in response to a 911 call from the mother on June 20, 2018, were told that the boy was injured in a fall. He died in a hospital the next day.

Claypool said prosecutio­n photos he looked at showed the boy was covered in bruises.

“Anthony never got the help of DCFS that he deserved,” the attorney told reporters. “Anthony needed a lifeline and DCFS failed.”

Anthony’s mother, Heather Barron, and her boyfriend, Kareem Leive, are facing murder and torture charges. They have pleaded not guilty and remain in custody pending trial.

After the death, the county Board of Supervisor­s pledged to issue a public report by the director of its Office of Child Protection on any systemic issues issues with DCFS and other county agencies involving Anthony’s case.

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