What is the name of your state? NY
Here's our situation:
Our baby was born April 1st, at Bellevue Hospital NYC. The mother and I are both clean and on Methadone programs (her 1 year, me two years). I have no previous children or ACS involvement. The mother has two other children: a 6 year old girl who, it seems she has lost her parental rights to and has no contact with, and a 2 year old boy who lives with her aunt in the Bronx and who we visit regularly. Neither case was an ACS removal - she turned temp custody over both times voluntarily but now ACS is saying that they have an "indicated" finding saying that she was abusing drugs around the time she turned her son over to her aunt. This "finding" was made after the fact and without the knowledge of the mother - meaning she didn't even know they were investigating her or had made a claim against her. The matter had already been settled.
NOW: The baby and mother tested postive ONLY for the methadone she is prescribed at her program. However, we live in NJ and only had the baby in NY because we just moved out of state and all her prenatal appts had been there. At her last appt they decided to induce her. The caseworker at the hospital called ACS and claimed the baby was toxic (but didn't tell them that it was methadone and the mother had a prescription) and that we were homeless and had nothing for the baby. When we told them we lived in NJ DYFS came out to the house and saw where we lived and everything we had for the baby and told us everything was OK. ACS went to a judge last week and he declined the case and now they are going back this week with the only new piece of info they have is this "indicated" case and the fact that her rights were terminated to her first child. Her indicated case was not an abuse or neglect charge - it was something like insufficient guardianship - but the find was made without ever talking to her.
What I want to know is: why would a judge put restrictions on the baby living with the mother if she hasn't done anything wrong now? Her past mistakes had to do with having a drug problem and she is in current outpatient methadone treatment with letters from her counselors verifying her progress and abstinence for the last year. What are our rights here and how can we fight this??
I am desperate for help.
Mike Hattem
Here's our situation:
Our baby was born April 1st, at Bellevue Hospital NYC. The mother and I are both clean and on Methadone programs (her 1 year, me two years). I have no previous children or ACS involvement. The mother has two other children: a 6 year old girl who, it seems she has lost her parental rights to and has no contact with, and a 2 year old boy who lives with her aunt in the Bronx and who we visit regularly. Neither case was an ACS removal - she turned temp custody over both times voluntarily but now ACS is saying that they have an "indicated" finding saying that she was abusing drugs around the time she turned her son over to her aunt. This "finding" was made after the fact and without the knowledge of the mother - meaning she didn't even know they were investigating her or had made a claim against her. The matter had already been settled.
NOW: The baby and mother tested postive ONLY for the methadone she is prescribed at her program. However, we live in NJ and only had the baby in NY because we just moved out of state and all her prenatal appts had been there. At her last appt they decided to induce her. The caseworker at the hospital called ACS and claimed the baby was toxic (but didn't tell them that it was methadone and the mother had a prescription) and that we were homeless and had nothing for the baby. When we told them we lived in NJ DYFS came out to the house and saw where we lived and everything we had for the baby and told us everything was OK. ACS went to a judge last week and he declined the case and now they are going back this week with the only new piece of info they have is this "indicated" case and the fact that her rights were terminated to her first child. Her indicated case was not an abuse or neglect charge - it was something like insufficient guardianship - but the find was made without ever talking to her.
What I want to know is: why would a judge put restrictions on the baby living with the mother if she hasn't done anything wrong now? Her past mistakes had to do with having a drug problem and she is in current outpatient methadone treatment with letters from her counselors verifying her progress and abstinence for the last year. What are our rights here and how can we fight this??
I am desperate for help.
Mike Hattem