The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia finds no fault with group home after girls’ escape, assault

No penalties imposed on Heritage House, but case details sparse.

- By Alan Judd ajudd@ajc.com

The group home from which three teenage girls escaped, only to be sexually assaulted by a gang of men they met nearby, bears no blame in the episode, a state investigat­ion has concluded.

Officials imposed no penalties on Heritage House, run by a faith-based charity in Cobb County under contract with two state agencies. Instead, the Georgia Division of Family and Children Services made the facility eligible to again take in girls who have been declared wards of the state. Of- ficials had suspended placements of children in the home after the May 26 escape and sexual assault.

“They did everything they could have done to protect these children,” said Ashley Fielding, a DFCS spokeswoma­n.

But why the agency absolved the facility is far from clear.

DFCS lawyers blacked out large sections of a report on the investigat­ion, citing a state law that considers “each and every record concerning reports of child abuse” to be confidenti­al.

The lawyers redacted not only informatio­n identifyin­g the girls, who were ages 14, 15 and 16, but also most details of how officials conducted the inquiry. For example, they blacked out all of a five-para- graph statement by the group home.

However, a public portion of the report says that — without investigat­ion — DFCS decided the girls experience­d no maltreatme­nt at the home.

The agency closed the maltreatme­nt case as a “screen out,” the report says. That means either that a report was deemed too vague to investigat­e or that, even if true, allegation­s did not constitute a violation of laws or rules.

No investigat­ors interviewe­d the girls who escaped, officials said. But case workers who have spoken to the girls would report any allegation­s they made about abuse or neglect in the group home.

According to public records, the girls escaped by

distractin­g a Heritage House staff member — the only one on duty — and bolting out the front door. The girls walked to a Walmart store, where they met a group of six men who took them to a residence around the corner from their group home. The men gave the girls marijuana and alcohol, one girl’s mother said last month, and the girls later told the police that the men took turns sexually assaulting them until the next afternoon. The police arrested one man on child-molestatio­n charges. The other five, some of whom may have been juveniles, have not been publicly identified.

Heritage House, which belongs to a nonprofit called Light of Hope and Love Inc., is a “transition­al living” program for older teenagers who need skills for independen­t living, said Dianne Kelly, DFCS’ foster care services director. The home, in a residentia­l neighborho­od, is not a secure facility, and residents are not locked indoors, Kel- ly said.

The facility, which is licensed to house as many as six children between 6 and 18 years old, collected $173,000 in state payments in 2014. Its chief executive declined to be interviewe­d Thursday.

Although cleared in the escape investigat­ion, Heritage House still has no residents. But the DFCS report says the facility hopes to change its licensing status — it wants to offer more intensive services than currently allowed.

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