“The New Jersey Supreme Court ruled this week that authorities can seek custody of a child, even where there’s no evidence of abuse or neglect. The case involved a divorced Camden County mother of 9-year-old twin girls. In 2007, she asked New Jersey’s Division of Child Protection and Permanency for help, claiming she was unable to care for the girls who had psychological and developmental disabilities and needed to be placed in residential care. ‘You can turn to the Division for help, but it may come with a cost,’ says Diana Autin, executive director of Statewide Parent Advocacy Network of New Jersey.”
Related posts:
Nigerian Currency Touches Record Low After Official Devaluation
Homeland Security's domain seizures worries Congress
Massive Kenya water discovery will transform drought-prone ‘cradle of mankind’
EBay asks 145 million users to change passwords after cyber attack
Air strike kills 15 civilians attending wedding in Yemen
Obama ‘guidebook’ for targeted killings to include exemption for CIA drone strikes in Pakistan
Weed War: Marijuana Plants Sprout across German City
Amid economic crisis, Puerto Rico cuts spending by $150 million
Americans find it difficult to open bank accounts in UAE
We’re in a worse position than in 2008: Marc Faber
JPMorgan Joins Goldman in Designing Derivatives for a New Generation
Indian cleric warns Americans to leave over anti-Muslim film
Global Debt Exceeds $100 Trillion as Governments Binge, BIS Says
Why Google's Waze Is Trading User Data With Local Governments
Hacker: Sim card flaws leave ‘hundreds of millions of phones’ vulnerable to attack