Sunday, January 31, 2010
Herman Sammie Rigby Jr.was released from prison in October 2008.
A man wanted by Dorchester County sheriff's deputies turned himself in early Saturday, according to a statement from the Sheriff's Office.
They were looking for a man mistakenly released from prison more than a year ago.
Herman Sammie Rigby Jr. was released Oct. 9, 2008, from the S.C. Department of Corrections after he had served a sentence for robbery. In April 2008, Rigby was charged with a series of kidnappings and sexual assaults that occurred in the Summerville and Dorchester County area more than 20 years ago.
Rigby, 52, had been served with warrants and charged with the crimes and was placed under bond by a Dorchester County judge. He was returned to prison to continue serving his sentence, according to the Sheriff's Office. After completing his sentence on the robbery, he was to have been returned to Dorchester County to be held pending trial on the kidnapping and sexual assault charges. He was mistakenly released.
The Sheriff's Office learned of his release when an alleged victim called Summerville police and asked about Rigby's status. When police learned he was no longer in prison, they contacted the Sheriff's Office and a warrant was obtained.
Labels: Dodging Child Support, New Hire Reporting
Saturday, January 30, 2010
We posted "TELL PUBLIC HOW MONEY IS SPENT IN FAMILY COURTS AND SHERIFFS' OFFICES" on June 2, 2009. Given South Carolina's increasing unemployment rates and declining ability to provide social services for its most vulnerable citizens, we renew the call.
Labels: Family Court Reform, User Fees/Hidden Taxes
Friday, January 29, 2010
Labels: Jail Overcrowding
Thursday, January 28, 2010
According to Rebecca Hamil of the Federal [Child Support] Enforcement and Collections [Division?] of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, "All 54 states and territories participate in the Passport Denial Program. South Carolina's contact for the program is Glenn Hastie. If you have further questions about the program, you can contact him at (803) 898-9468."
Labels: Child Support Collection, Passport Denial Program, Welfare Reform
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Labels: Child Support Collection, Responsibility, Welfare Reform
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Based upon a viewing of the video of South Carolina Lt. Governor Andre Bauer's controversial speech, it is apparent that he either does not know or does not care that "The National School Lunch Program" is a federal program established in 1946 under President Truman. Therefore, if Mr. Bauer wants to either end or modify that program, he should run for Congress and--if elected--team up with Jim DeMint to "stop the madness."
Unfortunately, the "National School Lunch Program” is not the only federal assistance program of which Lt. Governor Bauer appears to be unfamiliar. As noted in today’s Post and Courier editorial “Bauer's beastly 'metaphor'," “Perhaps Mr. Bauer missed out on the comprehensive welfare reform that restricted federal aid to families with dependent children, and the related efforts aimed at halting the culture of dependency.”
Although the editorial does not refer to the Clinton era legislation by name, the referenced legislation is the “1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act.” Furthermore, as we have written on a number of occasions, a major component of this act is the requirement that States set up a system to identify the fathers of illegitimate children, set child support obligations, and enforce those obligations through such methods as wage with-holding. And although South Carolina has accepted hundreds of millions of dollars in federal aid to DSS and has also been fined approximately $72 Million for its failure to implement a state-wide computerized child support tracking and collection system, the State remains the only State in the Country that has no such system. This system, which should have been in place by 1998, is not scheduled to come on-line until September of 2011. Therefore, South Carolina will in all likelihood be fined another $20 Million or so before the system is operational.
Under the circumstances, maybe Mr. Bauer should spend some of his energies putting a fire under the butts of DSS and the South Carolina General Assembly rather than engaging in hate/fear-mongering against Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) recipients who have satisfied their eligibility requirements. After all, the State of South Carolina itself is the real "Deadbeat" for accepting money from the federal government while not meeting its obligations.
Labels: Child Support Collection, Computerized Child Support System, Federal Fines, Welfare Reform
Monday, January 25, 2010
Labels: Child Support Collection, Civil Contempt, New Hire Reporting
Sunday, January 24, 2010
The Associated Press has reported "Edwards admits he fathered videographer's child" and has agreed to pay child support. According to the article, "In the statement Edwards released Thursday, he said, 'I will do everything in my power to provide her (Frances) with the love and support she deserves...I have been providing financial support for Quinn and have reached an agreement with her mother to continue providing support in the future. "
Judge Screenings on Hold
Labels: Child Support, Dodging Child Support, Election of Judges, Family Court Backlog, Responsibility
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Labels: Child Support Collection, Computerized Child Support System, Institutional Mismanagement, Problems at DSS, Silly Laws, Welfare Reform
Friday, January 22, 2010
Labels: Child Support Collection, New Hire Reporting, Welfare Reform
Thursday, January 21, 2010
A legislative committee will release a report by Feb. 1 that will call for changes in the punishments for dozens of crimes and will suggest using more alternative sentences for non-violent criminals.
The state's overcrowded prisons are a driving force behind the report, which is the result of more than a year of study by the S.C. Sentencing Reform Commission.
"I wouldn't say it's the number one reason, but it's an issue," said Sen. Gerald Malloy, D-Darlington, the commission chairman. "In order to continue on the path we're headed, we're going to have to build more prisons, and we don't have the funds to do that."
The commission hopes its recommendations ensure public safety by sending high-risk, violent offenders to jail for longer terms, Malloy said. At the same time, the state will need to reduce the prison time for other crimes.
The commission also will recommend that the state beef up its Department of Probation, Parole and Pardon Services to better supervise criminals once they are released from prison.
The commission will present draft legislation based on the report, Malloy said. The challenge will be finding money in a strapped state budget to implement some of the recommendations.
"The real answer to this is to build a new prison," said Laura Hudson, S.C. Crime Victims Council executive director.
Labels: "Deadbeat Dads", Civil Contempt, Jail Overcrowding, Judicial Reform
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
In his January 11, 2010 post "Official Child Neglect by the S.C. General Assembly and Governor Mark Sanford," South Carolina journalist/author/columnist/blogger Will Moredock challenges those who can make a difference to make a difference.
Some folks who are familiar with Mr. Moredock's work may pass this off as just another case of "Left-wing whining." However, we remind them that Mr. Moredock is writing about the "Welfare Reform Act" and South Carolina's failure to implement programs designed both to get mothers and children off of welfare and to make fathers financially responsible for their children--not exactly your usual "Left-wing whining." Additionally, we take this opportunity to point out that Mr. Moredock appears to be suggesting that government ought to be both accountable and competent--again not your usual "Left-wing whining" sort of idea.
Labels: Computerized Child Support System, Federal Fines, Responsibility, Welfare Reform
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Labels: Child Support Collection
Monday, January 18, 2010
Bells aren’t the only thing jingling this holiday season—12 families will have extra coins in their pockets. But this is no holiday happenstance; it’s the result of collections from noncustodial parents whose passports have been denied through the Federal Passport Denial program. The payments are attributed to either overseas employment opportunities or leisure travel plans for the noncustodial parents.
- California $106,584: Collected inheritance; used to help the oldest child in medical school and the youngest child buy a car
- Puerto Rico $91,050: New employment opportunity; custodial parent was able to purchase a home for the family
- New York $71, 636: Caribbean vacation
- Nebraska $59,008: Employment in the Middle East
- New York $50,422: Employment in Indonesia
- Texas $41,900: Job opportunity overseas
- Michigan $37,000: Professional athlete with competition in London
- New Jersey $33,617: Middle East vacation
- Tennessee $30,000: Employment in Canada
- Virginia $26,549: Business travel to Middle East
- Ohio $20,966: Taking a cruise; ecstatic custodial parent contacted her local child support agency to verify the validity of the payment
- llinois $14,600: Professional athlete in Japan needed pages added to his passport
Since 1998 the passport denial program has collected over $183 million in voluntarily reported lump-sum payments.
Labels: Child Support Collection, Passport Denial Program, Welfare Reform
Sunday, January 17, 2010
"Octomom" Nadya Suleman is defending the doctor who helpedher conceive 14 children, including her famous octuplets, after the California Medical Board accused him of negligence and violating professional guidelines.In a video posted to RadarOnline.com, Suleman said Dr. Michael Kamrava did nothing wrong. She joked that, if the doctor loses his license, she doesn't know who she'll get treatment from if she wants more babies.The state licensing board says Kamrava, a fertility doctor in Beverly Hills, acted "beyond the reasonable judgment of any treating physician" in treating Suleman, who's identified by her initials only in the complaint. According to the document filed Dec. 22, Kamrava displayed repeated negligence during his treatment of Suleman, beginning in 1997 and culminating in the Jan. 26, 2009, birth of her octuplets.
Labels: Responsibility
Saturday, January 16, 2010
And in neglecting the needs of children, the state is failing itself by adding more costs long-term and stunting South Carolina's prosperity, former Democratic Gov. Dick Riley said Monday.
Riley's comments came with the release of a new report, "The children's budget: behind the numbers," which measures the impact state budget cuts have had on the services provided to children. The report was put out by South Carolina Appleseed Legal Justice Center with the backing of about 65 advocacy groups.
"Hungry children can't learn; sick children can't excel," Riley said. "We must step up to the plate as a state and do what's best for our children."
The report's release coincides with the Legislature's return to session today. Each legislator will be given a copy of the report and the advocacy groups will push for the state to restore programs and services to children, Sue Berkowitz, director of Appleseed Legal Justice Center, said.
Berkowitz said the state must re-evaluate how it raises revenue and decide whether to make changes in taxation to meet the needs of children.
The report found:
• More than 22,000 fewer children will receive community-based mental health services in 2010 than in 2007.
• An expansion of state Children's Health Insurance Program has room for 70,000 children, but only 16,000 are enrolled. The Department of Health and Human Services is suppressing enrollment as a cost-saving measure, according to the report.
• The Department of Social Services has not had an increase in its workforce since 1993 despite the fact that the number of individuals who receive food stamps has almost doubled since that time to 745,307 individuals, including approximately 360,000 children.
• Nearly 2,000 individuals are on the waiting list to receive Medicaid-funded mental retardation, autism and head and spinal cord services through the Department of Disabilities and Special Needs.
• Fewer than half of the approximately 18,500 children who suffer from substance abuse in the state will get help through the Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services in this fiscal year.
• Approximately, 5,000 teens at risk of getting pregnant will not receive counseling, after-school programs and guidance to help them complete school because teen pregnancy prevention funds have been cut in half.
The coalition of advocacy groups that back the report have not adopted recommendations with regard to taxes, but John Ruoff, program director for South Carolina Fair Share, said legislators must consider some alternatives to raising money. Such ideas include removing the cap on sales tax for cars and adding a surcharge to people who earn $500,000 or more, he said.
BY THE NUMBERS
45 — South Carolina's ranking nationally for overall child wellbeing.
25 — The percentage of incoming ninth- graders who drop out of high school.
10 — The percentage of children who fail first, second or third grade.
26 — The percentage of children younger than six who live in poverty.
13 — The percentage of children younger than 17 who had no health insurance in 2007.
33 — The percentage of children between 10 and 17 who are obese.
Source: "The children's budget: behind the numbers" by the South Carolina Appleseed Legal Justice Center
Labels: Child Support Collection
Friday, January 15, 2010
David Goldman and his supporters, as well as many commentators have expressed concerns that the Brazilian family has exercised enormous mind control over Sean Goldman and that the parental alienation he's experienced will create some difficulties for him in adjusting to life back in the United States. To get an idea of just how capable, how ruthless the Lins e Silva family might be in using parental alienation in this case, watch this 10-minute segment of a lecture delivered by Joao Paulo Lins e Silva, a lawyer specializing in family law in Rio de Janeiro. Lins e Silva delivered this lecture at a conference at The Hague. Then imagine him tutoring Bruna Goldman and her Brazilian mother in the techniques of parental alienation.Click here to access both the video of the lecture and Ms. Hannah's article. There are those that argue that Parental Alienation Syndrome is non-existent. But if Ms. Hannah is to be believed, it not only exists, but is alive and well in Brazil.
For the record Joao Paulo Lins e Silva is the father of Paulo Lins e Silva, also a family law attorney. The younger Lins e Silva married Bruna Goldman in Brazil even though she wasn't divorced from David. Below is Part I of "Parental Alienation Syndrome", available at YouTube. [Lins e Silva has to say that some folks at his luncheon table educated him about not calling this "a syndrome" anymore.]
Labels: Parental Alienation Syndrome, Parental Kidnapping
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Labels: Custody, Wasting Court Time
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
We belive that the South Carolina State house freshmen have received ther answers to their questions--sort of. Following are the three links to DSS’s “explanations" of why it has failed to comply with the Federal Mandate to install a computerized child support tracking and collection system in South Carolina:
Labels: Computerized Child Support System, Federal Fines, Problems at DSS
Tuesday, January 12, 2010
“An Arizona couple who tried to adopt an 8-month-old baby who’s been missing since Christmas say they now feel the mother of the baby duped and used them.” “Baby Gabriel’s mom ‘played us,’ couple say.”
Labels: Parental Kidnapping
Monday, January 11, 2010
December 30, 2004 - In a letter dated December 30, 2004, OCSE told DSS they would not approve the RFP because the RFP stated that allocation of child support collections for all case types must be based on state law. OCSE said state law conflicted with the federally mandated allocation hierarchy. To address the allocation issue, the State first sought to negotiate the issue with federal authorities. When this did not provide relief, the General Assembly amended state statute to conform with federal law during the 2004-2005 legislative session. This allowed DSS to amend the RFP and gain federal approval (emphasis added).
Labels: Problems at DSS, Responsibility
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Labels: Parental Kidnapping
Saturday, January 09, 2010
The most ambitious efforts in decades to reform New York State’s vast network of small-town courts — where sessions can be held in a garage, and where more than 1,450 judges who are not lawyers conduct trials —have stalled in Albany. Even a seemingly modest compromise, one that would allow a defendant to request that the judge be a lawyer, seems doomed, its sponsor says...After a series of articles in The New York Times in 2006 showed extensive failings in the courts — including town and village justices who mishandled money, made racist remarks, released friends without bail, denied some defendants lawyers and jailed some of them without trials — state court officials appointed that commission, which concluded by proposing the measure that Mr. O’Donnell later introduced (emphasis added).
Labels: Institutional Mismanagement, Judicial Reform, Sixth Amendment
Friday, January 08, 2010
On February 24, 2009 we wrote:
We do not know whether DSS has yet presented the South Carolina with "a detailed report on the status of the Child Support Enforcement System including actions currently being undertaken to become compliant with federal government requirements; the cost required to meet minimum federal guidelines; total funds spent so far on the system; the amount of fines assessed by the federal government associated with non-compliance; how much has been spent to satisfy actions taken by the state judicial system; and how much has been spent related to actions taken by any other entity which may have altered the amount required for meeting minimum federal guidelines." However, we remind everyone that this report was supposed to have been submitted to the General Assembly by August 31, 2008.
Labels: Computerized Child Support System, Federal Fines, Problems at DSS
A South Carolina man has been sentenced to 10 years in prison for stealing an $80 slab of meat.The Times and Democrat of Orangeburg reports Thursday that 51-year-old Mark Zachary of Orangeburg received the maximum sentence after jurors found him guilty Wednesday of shoplifting.
Prosecutors said the sentence was justified because the Aug. 26 theft from Reid's grocery store in Orangeburg was his ninth offense.
Authorities said when a store manager approached Zachary about the missing New York strip and the big bulk under his shirt, he fled, right into the arms of an off-duty police officer.Assistant Solicitor Glenn Justis asked jurors "Where's the beef?" in his opening argument.Zachary testified he was "massaging" the meat, not stealing it.
So in their wisdom, the people of South Carolina will keep Mark Zachary in prison for ten years for stealing an $80 slab of meat. Understandably, the people are annoyed because this is his ninth offense. So the people are going to spend approximately $240,000 to protect themselves against one meat thief??? Well, the people of South Carolina are sure tough on crime, aren't they? Maybe the good people of South Carolina should reconsider their priorities.
Labels: Jail Overcrowding
Thursday, January 07, 2010
According to "DSS’s Response to Budget Proviso 13.27 of the FY 2008-2009 Appropriations Act":
Because of the State’s failure to have a certified statewide CSES operational by October 1, 1997, South Carolina became subject to federal penalties. The full federal penalties are severe. OCSE can disapprove the State’s Child support Enforcement (Title IV-D) State Plan because of the lack of the system. Disapproval would result in the OCSE’s withdrawal of all federal funding, about $22.8 million annually, for the State’s Child Support Enforcement program. The second level of penalty would be the potential disapproval of federal funding for the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, potentially $99 million annually.
Congress made a less severe alternative penalty available to states that lacked a statewide system if the state was willing to work under federal oversight and under a corrective compliance plan designed to implement a system within a reasonable time.
In January 2001, OCSE notified the State that the alternative penalty was retroactive to federal fiscal year (FFY) 1998, and that continued availability of the alternative penalty to South Carolina is dependent on the State’s good faith efforts to develop and implement a federally certified statewide CSES. In January 2001, South Carolina elected to be subject to the alterative penalty and OCSE approved the corrective compliance plan.
The federal penalty is calculated by CSE for each federal fiscal year based largely on South Carolina's Child Support Enforcement program's actual expenditures, including system development expenditures, reported quarterly to OCSE by DSS.
The alternative penalties will be assessed until lifted by the federal authorities. When the State submits a letter to OCSE requesting certification of CSES, federal system penalties will be placed in abeyance while OCSE certifies CSES. Ninety percent (90%) of any system penalties actually paid for the federal fiscal year in which the letter was submitted are rebated by OCSE back to DSS once the CSES is certified.
For federal fiscal years 1998-2007, the amount of funding lost to penalties was $55,200,000. These penalties are paid with 100% state dollars.
Penalties will continue to be assessed until CSES is deployed and operational, currently projected for June 1, 2010. The amount of these projected penalties is $20,740,046, which includes a 90% reduction of penalties paid in the federal fiscal year in which statewide implementation is intended to occur.
Labels: Child Support Collection, Computerized Child Support System, Federal Fines, Institutional Mismanagement, Problems at DSS, Welfare Reform
Wednesday, January 06, 2010
Labels: "Deadbeat Dads", Child Support Collection
Tuesday, January 05, 2010
The Gwinnett County Sheriff's Department says a program that allows specially trained sheriff's deputies to enforce federal immigration law is working well.
The program began on Nov. 16 when 18 deputies returned from training by federal authorities. The sheriff's department says 62 percent of the foreign-born population in the county jail has been found to be in the country illegally.
Deputies have placed immigration detainers on 286 inmates. The charges against them include aggravated assault, rape, child molestation, DUI, robbery, sex crimes and trafficking.
The program is called 287(g) after the section of immigration law that governs it. It has been championed by illegal immigration foes and decried by immigrant rights and civil liberties groups (emphasis added).
Labels: New Hire Reporting
Monday, January 04, 2010
The last sentence reminds us of what we have been saying and bears repeating: "in the current hard economic times, strapped states are beginning to realize that they do not have the money to keep people in prison who do not need to be there." So the question is whether states want to be like Michigan with its innovative cost-saving approach or be like Florida with its budget-busting mandate that all prisoners serve a high percentage of their sentences.The United States, which has less than 5 percent of the world’s population, has about one-quarter of its prisoners. But the relentless rise in the nation’s prison population has suddenly slowed as many states discover that it is simply too expensive to over incarcerate.
Between 1987 and 2007 the prison population nearly tripled, from 585,000 to almost 1.6 million. Much of that increase occurred in states — many with falling crime rates — that had adopted overly harsh punishment policies, such as the “three strikes and you’re out” rule and drug laws requiring that nonviolent drug offenders be locked away.
These policies have been hugely costly. According to the Pew Center on the States, state spending from general funds on corrections increased from $10.6 billion in 1987 to more than $44 billion in 2007, a 127 percent increase in inflation-adjusted dollars. In the same period, adjusted spending on higher education increased only 21 percent.
In 2008, the explosion of the prison population ground to a near halt, according to data released last month by the Bureau of Justice Statistics. About 739,000 inmates were admitted to federal and state facilities, only about 3,500 more than were released.
One factor seems to be tight budgets as states decide to release nonviolent offenders early. This can not only save money. If done correctly, it can also be very sound social policy. Many nonviolent offenders can be dealt with more effectively and more cheaply through treatment and jobs programs.
Michigan, which has been hard hit by the recession, has done a particularly good job of releasing people who do not need to be in prison. As the American Civil Liberties Union’s National Prison Project details in a new report, Michigan reduced its prison population by about 8 percent between March 2007 and November 2009 by taking smart steps, notably doing more to get nonviolent drug offenders out, while helping in their transition to a productive, and crime-free, life.
Not every state has gotten the message. Florida, for example, has a state law mandating that all prisoners serve a high percentage of their sentence, which is both dubious corrections policy and terrible fiscal policy.
For many years, driving up prison populations has been an easy thing for elected officials to do, popular with voters and powerful corrections officer unions. The new incarceration figures suggest, however, that in the current hard economic times, strapped states are beginning to realize that they do not have the money to keep people in prison who do not need to be there.
Labels: Jail Overcrowding, Judicial Reform, Silly Laws
Sunday, January 03, 2010
One of the things that interests us about the article "Back From Brazil, Seeking an Ordinary Life for a Son" is that Representative Christoper H. Smith of New Jersey, who helped Mr. Goldman get his son back, has introduced legislation to place a time limit on such court battles and to help with legal costs. We believe that legislation should also be enacted to compensate the victims of Family Court such as fathers who were wrongly incarcerated for Contempt, mothers who had their children removed from their homes after false allegations of child abuse were made, and folks who spent time in jail as a result of either accounting errors or clerical errors of the Court Administration.
Labels: Family Court Reform
Saturday, January 02, 2010
Lisa Miller, who was ordered by a court in Vermont to turn over her child to her former partner, has missed the 1pm EST January 1st deadline. A Vermont judge had ordered Lisa Miller to turn over daughter Isabella to Janet Jenkins at 1 p.m. Friday at the Falls Church, Va., home of Jenkins' parents.
This case has drawn worldwide attention as Miller and Janet Jenkins were lesbian partners. After a civil union ceremony in 2000, Miller was artificially inseminated and gave birth to a daughter. In 2003, the couple separated and Miller (the birthmother) renounced her homosexuality and became an evangelical Christian.
Years of court battles ensued with U.S. Supreme Court opting note to hear the case. The Virginia Supreme Court ruled in favor of Jenkins who argued that Miller had not allowed her to visit with their daughter and ignored the custody rules set down by the Vermont Family Court.On November 20th, the Vermont court reversed a prior custody arranged ordering full custody to Jenkins. The court also ruled that on January 1st, Lisa Miller, the birth mother, must return the child over to Janet Jenkins.
Labels: Civil Contempt, Custody, Parental Kidnapping
SOUTH CAROLINA DOES NOT WANT TO FOLLOW IN NEW YORK'S FOOTSTEPS
South Carolina should heed the advice presented in the Editorial "No backsliding at DJJ." As illustrated in the article "Treatment of Youths in New York Prisons Spurs Suit," violating the legal and constitutional rights of youthful prisoners invariably leads to the filing of successful class action lawsuits.
Friday, January 01, 2010
It's no secret that the Legislature passes numerous pieces of legislation that have major constitutional issues, even ignoring opinions from the attorney general's office. For the most part, the time and expense involved allows these laws to stand unchallenged, with the efforts of Greenville's citizen-watchdog, Edward Sloan, a major exception. This time, more than 10 years after the fact, it took a highly controversial decision to rouse members of the legal community to look critically at the composition of the commission (emphasis added).
Labels: Election of Judges, Judicial Reform