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Carolyn
RILEY
By Ed Baker - Wickedlocal.com
February 10, 2010
Weymouth - Carolyn Riley will spend the rest of
her life in prison with the possibility of parole after a Plymouth
County Superior Court jury convicted her on Feb. 9 of
second-degree murder in the death of her four-year-old daughter
Rebecca in December, 2006.
Judge Charles Hely sentenced Carolyn Riley
after Robert Davidson, who is the adoptive father of Rebecca
Riley’s 17-year-old sister, offered a victim impact statement.
“Rebecca was my sister,” said Davidson as he
read his adoptive daughter’s statement. “I was only a freshman in
high school when she died. I was devastated to hear of her death.
My biological mother let her die. My mother. It is so hard going
through life ‘normally’ knowing what she did to Rebecca. Knowing
what could have happened to (Rebecca’s siblings) and even to me if
I hadn’t been taken away. Knowing what she did to my sister has
made every day a challenge – just to get up every morning. Knowing
I will never see Rebecca again – you don’t know how much that
hurts. The only good thing about that is that because of Rebecca’s
death, (Rebecca’s siblings) were taken from the horrible
environment in which they were being raised.”
Hely pronounced the life imprisonment term on
Carolyn Riley after Davidson read the statement.
She showed no emotion as the verdict was read.
Court officers placed handcuffs on Carolyn
Riley after the jurors said yes when Hely asked them if they
unanimously agreed with the verdict.
“Today was a small measure of justice,” said
Plymouth County District Attorney Timothy Cruz shortly after the
jury rendered its verdict. “It’s a tragic case.”
He praised the efforts by prosecutors Frank
Middleton and Heather Bradley and police, who pieced together the
evidence that led to Carolyn Riley’s conviction.
Prosecutors sought to have Carolyn Riley
convicted of first-degree murder.
Cruz said that the jury took much time to weigh
the testimony that included 1,000 pages of medical records and
testimony offered by defense expert witnesses before the
second-degree conviction was rendered.
State law permits Carolyn Riley to seek parole
after 15 years and appeal her sentence.
Prosecutors accused Carolyn Riley of
deliberately causing Rebecca to die from an overdose of Clonidine,
which is prescribed for attention deficit disorder (ADHD), and
Depakote, which is administered for bipolar disorders.
Rebecca’s father, Michael Riley, has also been
charged with first-degree murder in connection with his daughter’s
death and is scheduled to go on trial on March 8.
He is serving a two and a half year jail term
for giving pornography to a minor in an unrelated case.
Court officers led Carolyn Riley from the
courtroom to a holding cell where she met briefly with her
attorneys, Michael Bourbeau and Victoria Bonilla.
Carolyn Riley’s mother Valerie Berio shed tears
as her daughter left the courtroom.
“I prayed for three years for this to be over
and never thought it would go so wrong with a verdict like this,”
Berio said.
Bourbeau said that Riley was devastated that
the jurors could believe she was responsible for Rebecca’s death.
“She was always hopeful (about an acquittal),”
Bourbeau said.
Carolyn Riley’s attorneys maintained that
Rebecca died of a fast developing case of pneumonia, and they
administered the medications to their daughter under the
instructions of her psychiatrist, Dr. Kayoko Kifuji of Tufts-New
England Medical Center.
Kifuji diagnosed Rebecca with the behavior
disoders when she was two and prescribed Clonidine for ADHD and
Depakote for the bipolar condition.
A pathologist, Dr. Jonathan Arden, who
testified in Carolyn Riley’s defense, stated on Feb. 3 that
Rebecca died of pneumonia and not from a deliberate overdose of
behavioral prescription drugs.
Arden was the first witness who stated that
pneumonia was responsible for Rebecca’s death.
He suggested that Massachusetts’s medical
examiners committed an error by not pursuing further lung and
blood cultures on Rebecca after she died.
Arden also told jurors that “Clonidine is
rarely fatal,” and since sections of dead tissue in Rebecca’s
lungs suggested a “necrotizing,” pneumonia and bronchitis had
caused her death.
He said that an infection would explain why
Rebecca had a fever and incessant coughing in her final days.
Prosecutors responded to Arden’s testimony by
portraying him as a professional witness-for-hire.
Prosecutors said that Carolyn Riley
intentionally caused Rebecca to die from an overdose of Clonidine
and Depakote as part of an elaborate scheme to collect Social
Security disability payments.
Assistant District Attorney Middleton said that
Carolyn Riley needed to keep Rebecca on the behavioral medications
so she could get Social Security Insurance payments for her in
addition to the SSI payments she was receiving for her two older
children who were diagnosed with mental disorders.
Prosecutors also alleged that Rebecca had
potentially lethal amounts of Clonidine in her system, and her
parents never called their pediatrician as the girl became sicker
and sicker.
Dr. George Behonick, the former director of the
state’s toxicology lab, said on Jan. 27 that Rebecca had three
times the maximum level of Clonidine in her body when she died.
The jury began to deliberate Carolyn Riley’s
fate on Feb. 5.
They met for seven hours on Feb. 8 and
reconvened on Feb. 9 to deliberate before coming back with a
verdict shortly after 4 p.m.
Material from GateHouse News Service was used
in this story.
The medical examiner's office determined the
girl died from "intoxication due to the combined effects" of the
drugs Clonidine, valproic acid (Depakote), Dextromethorphan, and
Chlorpheniramine and that her heart and lungs were damaged due to
prolonged abuse of these prescription drugs.
Police reports state she was taking 750
milligrams a day of Depakote, 200 milligrams a day of Seroquel,
and .35 milligrams a day of Clonidine. Rebecca had been taking the
drugs since the age of two for bipolar disorder and ADHD,
diagnosed by psychiatrist Kayoko Kifuji of the Tufts-New England
Medical Center.
Family
Michael and Carolyn Riley were taken into
police custody on February 6, 2007 for Rebecca’s death and charged
with first degree murder. Their two other children, who were also
on a number of prescription medications, have been moved to foster
homes and the Department of Social Services reports the parents
have a history of being abusive and neglectful.
On February 9, 2010, Carolyn Riley was found
guilty of second degree murder in the death of her daughter and
was sentenced to life in prison with the possibility of parole in
15 years. Michael's trial began on March 8, 2010.
On September 27, 2010, Michael Riley was found
guilty of first degree murder and received the automatic sentence
of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
CBS News
February 11, 2009
On Dec. 13, 2006, police responded to a 911
call and found a little girl lying dead on the floor next to her
parents' bed. The autopsy revealed that she had died from an
overdose of psychiatric drugs. Rebecca Riley was being treated for
bipolar disorder, or manic depression, even though she was just
four years old.
If that sounds unusual to you, it's not. As
Katie Couric reports, until recently the disorder was believed
to emerge only in adults. Now, it is estimated that there are
nearly one million children diagnosed as bipolar, making it more
common than autism and diabetes combined. And to treat it, doctors
are administering some medications that have yet to be approved
for children. In the case of Rebecca Riley, that cocktail of
medications proved fatal and now her parents have been charged
with her murder.
*****
Carolyn Riley is now in jail in Boston awaiting
trial and is being medicated for depression. She told 60
Minutes her daughter's problems began when Rebecca was
only two years old. Carolyn took her to a psychiatrist because she
had difficulty sleeping and seemed hyperactive.
"Constantly getting into things, running
around, not being able to settle down," Riley remembers.
"Did you ever think, 'Well, she's two and a
half years old.' There's this thing called the terrible 2's. Did
you think this could, in fact, be normal?" Couric asks.
"Yes," Riley tells Couric. "The psychiatrist
said that she thought that it was more than just normal."
The toddler who could barely speak in full
sentences was diagnosed with bipolar disorder after several
sessions over eight months. She had just turned 3. And she wasn't
the only one in the family: her ten-year-old brother and
four-year-old sister were already being treated for the same
illness by the same doctor at Tufts-New England Medical Center.
Rebecca was eventually prescribed three medications to stabilize
her mood: Seroquel, an anti psychotic; Depakote, an anti seizure
drug; and Clonidine, a blood pressure medication -- medications
that would ultimately prove fatal on Dec. 13th.
Riley says she thought Rebecca had just a
little bit of a cold and gave her daughter "Children's Tylenol
Plus Cough & Runny Nose."
In the middle of the night, Riley remembers her
daughter didn't want to go to sleep. "So I brought her in the
room. She was right beside me on the floor. And I laid down and
went to sleep," she recalls.
Before she put her to bed that night, next to
her on the floor, Riley says she gave her daughter half a
Clonidine.
Asked why, Riley tells Couric, "Because she
hadn't been able to get to sleep since six o'clock."
"Then what happened?" Couric asks.
"Then I woke up to the alarm in the morning.
And knelt down to wake her up. And there was no waking her up,"
Riley replies.
Riley says she knew at that point that her
daughter had died. Carolyn Riley and her husband Michael were
charged with first-degree murder.
The prosecutor alleged at their arraignment in
February that they were overdosing Rebecca by repeatedly giving
her more medication than she was prescribed. "It was used on
Rebecca, her sister and her brother for one simple purpose by
these defendants: to knock them out and make them sleep," the
prosecutor claimed.
But the Rileys claim that they were following
doctor's orders. 60 Minutes wanted to talk to the
psychiatrist, Dr. Kayoko Kifuji, but she declined. Instead
60 Minutes got a statement from her hospital: "The care we
provided was appropriate and within responsible professional
standards."
60 Minutes did obtain a copy of
Rebecca's medical records. In them, Dr. Kifuji notes Rebecca's
increased risk of mental illness because of her family history.
She diagnosed Rebecca after Carolyn said her daughter was - quote
- "driving me crazy" and her mood switches within a minute. She
would eventually prescribe the preschooler more than ten pills a
day.
Riley says she did feel that that was a lot of
pills for a little girl, but she says she went ahead and gave
Rebecca the prescriptions. "I trusted the doctor," she says.
Dr. Kifuji has stopped practicing, pending a
ruling by the state medical board. But her lawyer has said she was
just practicing mainstream psychiatry. It's now estimated that
nearly one million children like Rebecca Riley have been diagnosed
with bipolar disorder, or manic depression. And while some
psychiatrists told 60 Minutes that early diagnosis
is saving lives, a growing number of doctors say it is being
over-diagnosed.
60 Minutes went to talk to one of
the leading proponents of the diagnosis of bipolar disorder in
children and whose research Dr. Kifuji has said influenced her. He
is Dr. Joseph Biederman, professor at Harvard and head of child
psychopharmacology at Mass General Hospital.
"Previous studies that were conducted in the
'70s and '80s determined it was very, very rare for a child to
have bipolar disorder. And now you're saying up to a million
children are running around with this," Couric remarks. "Why such
a sea change?"
"The idea is rare if you define it in very
strict ways," Dr. Biederman explains. "Our contribution has been
to describe the many ways that this condition may emerge in
children that may make it a little bit more diagnosable and less
rare than people have thought about it."
The classic adult definition for manic
depression or bipolar disorder is dramatic mood swings from severe
highs to severe lows, which can last for weeks or months. Dr.
Biederman's definition for children, though, is much broader. It
emphasizes extreme irritability and at least four other symptoms
such as recklessness, sleeplessness and hyperactivity. And while
most doctors now believe that a child can be bipolar, there is no
definitive medical test.
Now there's a cottage industry of bestselling
books, magazine covers and Internet sites where you can test your
child online. But even the top researchers can not agree on
exactly what bipolar disorder looks like in children or at what
age it can be diagnosed.
"The average age of onset is about four,"
Biederman says. "It's solidly in the preschool years."
"What about those who say, 'Oh, come on Dr.
Biederman, a preschooler displaying these characteristics is often
acting like a preschooler,'" Couric asks.
"Absolutely not," Biederman says. "The bar to
consider a diagnosis in a very young child is very high."
Asked if he worries that his work is being used
or applied too broadly and that too many children are being
diagnosed as a result, Biederman tells Couric, "I am not so
concerned if a practitioner recognizes that the symptoms have to
be severe, debilitating, devastating, to consider the diagnosis."
Rhys Hampton was three years old when he began
to have violent and explosive outbursts. After a year of
treatment, his mother, Diana, says a psychiatrist told her he
thought Rhys was bipolar.
"Would you describe his behavior as behavior
that is extraordinary, severe, dangerous, and effects every,
single aspect of his life?" Couric asks.
"Yeah. Every single aspect of his life,"
Hampton says.
"Bipolar disorder is also described as manic
depression. Did he ever get depressed? Did he ever get sad?"
Couric asks.
"He would tell us, you know, 'You don't love
me.' 'You don't like me.' 'I don't like myself.' 'I hate myself.'
'I'm stupid.' 'Nobody likes me.' 'I wanna die.' Four-year-olds
don't talk like that," Hampton says.
After Rhys' psychiatrist suggested a fourth
medication, the Hamptons said "Enough."
They took their son to Seattle Children's
Hospital, where they were told Rhys wasn't bipolar. He now takes
medication for hyperactivity and a sleep disorder. And he's
learning to deal with his explosive moods through a behavioral
program.
"I mean, there's no comparison to the child
that we're parenting today, as opposed to the one that we had last
year," Hampton says.
Dr. John McClellan, who's familiar with Rhys'
case, says the children's psychiatric hospital he runs in
Washington state is filled with kids who have been misdiagnosed as
bipolar. He says it has become a catchall for aggressive and
troubled children.
"I think it's a problem to label kids with a
major adult psychiatric disorder when they're five years old or
when they're three years old," Dr. McClellan says. "Little kids
are not adults. And little kids do things that if an adult did
them, it would be evidence of a mental health problem."
"Having said that, if someone is bipolar and it
presents later in life, doesn't it make sense that these issues
exist really from birth?" Couric asks.
"No, that does make sense," McClellan says.
"The problem is symptoms like irritability or recklessness or high
energy when you're an eight-year-old don't necessarily predict in
the long run developing bipolar disorder. Some might. Do you
expose all those kids to medications to prevent the one kid that's
going to get it?"
"Not that I don't use medicines, I do but the
average kid comes into my hospital now on four different
medicines. We had one kid that was recently admitted to our
in-patient program that was on 12 psychotropic agents. At some
level, there needs to be something else that's used besides just
continuing to add medication after medication," McClellan says.
Dr. McClellan says we don't really know how
these drugs interact or effect developing brains because most are
being used off-label, which means they haven't been approved by
the FDA for use in children.
"Does it disturb you or worry you that many of
these medications, most of these medications are being used
off-label, and have not been tested in children?" Couric asks
Biederman.
"Yes. I recognize the fact that we have a gap
in knowledge," Biederman says. "But the patients that come to me,
and the families in tears and despair with these type of problems,
I in good faith cannot tell them, 'Come back in ten years until we
have all the data in hand.' I still need to use medicines that I
am assuming that if they work in adults, with appropriate care and
supervision, may also work in children."
Many parents told 60 Minutes
their children are so out of control and disruptive, medication is
the only option. A parent who took her children to Biederman's
Mass General clinic, Maria Lamb says she depends on medication for
eight-year-old Annie and nine-year-old Casey, who his mother says
would rage for hours when he was just two years old. Casey was
recently admitted to a psychiatric hospital when he was taken off
one of his medications.
"I don't think they would be able to function.
I wish they could. It was a last resort, seeing the kind of rages
they would have, destroying their room, kicking the door off the
hinges," Lamb says.
But during one recent visit, Maria's worried
that Annie is eating incessantly. Dr. Biederman's partner Dr.
Janet Wozniak says it could be a side effect from one of Annie's
three medications and suggests another medicine may help.
"Actually its most common usage has been to
help people with alcohol addictions resist alcohol. But it seems
to also have an effect on food cravings," Dr. Wozniak remarked.
One of the biggest problems with these
medications is side effects, including major weight gain, hand
tremors, shakes, drooling and muscle spasms. And side effects are
at the heart of the Rebecca Riley case.
Carolyn Riley tells Couric she never observed
any sluggish or lethargic behavior in her daughter.
"This is what her preschool teacher said. She
was like a floppy doll. So tired, she had to be helped off the
bus. She had a tremor and had to go to the bathroom almost
constantly. So how could she have these side effects at school,
and yet, you never observed them at home?" Couric asks.
"I don't know," Riley replies. "She never acted
like that at home at all."
But the prosecutor is charging the Rileys with
murder because, he says, they ignored the warning signs and
instead just kept giving Rebecca more pills than she was
prescribed, even in the last few days of her life. And key to the
case: 200 additional pills Carolyn Riley got from the pharmacy.
She insists she was only replacing pills that were lost or
damaged.
"For those who see you as somebody, who just
wanted her kids to be less annoying and bothersome, who gave them
too many pills because she couldn't deal with it, you would say?"
Couric asks.
"I don't know. They weren't annoying. They were
my life," she says.
"According to the medical examiner, her heart
and lungs were damaged, and this was due to prolonged abuse of
these prescription drugs, rather than one incident. Prolonged
abuse of these prescription drugs," Couric remarks.
"Yes. And the doctor had Rebecca on .35
milligrams, daily, for months. And I didn't know anything about
dosages. How much was fatal," Riley says.
The medical examiner ruled that Rebecca died of
a drug overdose from a mix of medications. And that the amount of
Clonidine alone would have been fatal.
Today, awaiting trial, Carolyn Riley says she
now knows more about bipolar disorder than she ever did when her
daughter was alive.
Asked if she thinks Rebecca was really bipolar,
Riley says, "Probably not."
"What do you think was wrong with her, now?"
Couric asks.
"I don't know," she says. "Maybe she was just
hyper for her age."
Produced By Kyra Darnton
By Dennis Tatz and Sue Reinert - The Patriot
Ledger
February 7, 2007
In a case that defies comprehension, a husband
and wife from Hull appeared in court today on charges of killing
their 4-year-old daughter with a deliberate drug overdose.
Police said Michael Riley, 34, who was awaiting
trial for attempted child rape, and Carolyn Riley, 32, gave their
daughter, Rebecca Jeanne, a fatal dose of prescription pills on
Dec. 13.
In an
affidavit filed with the court, State Police Trooper Anna
Brookes said there was evidence of a "slow and painful killing of
Rebecca Riley over a period of days."
Brookes said the Rileys refused to accept help
from agencies that had identified problems with the way Rebecca
was being given medicine.
The affidavit said the couple was indifferent
to her "obvious pain and suffering," and failed "to provide any
medical care to their own daughter as she lay visibly suffering,
drowning in her own bodily fluids on the floor beside their bed."
The state medical examiner's office said the
girl died from the combined effects of three drugs used to treat
bipolar disorder, including Clonidine, and two over-the-counter
cold medicines.
"This occurred as a result of the intentional
overdose of Rebecca with Clonidine," the Plymouth County District
Attorney's office said in a statement announcing the charges.
The Clonidine was prescribed by Dr. Kayoko
Kifuji, Tufts New England Medical Center psychiatrist, to treat
the young girl for hyperactivity and bipolar disorder. The other
two drugs were Depakote and Seroquel, which are also used to treat
bipolar disorder.
Authorities said the girl was diagnosed with
both disorders when she was 28 months old.
James McGonnell, Carolyn Riley's half brother,
and his fiancee, Kelly Williams, who lived with the family, told
police they had repeatedly asked the Rileys to take Rebecca to the
hospital or to a pediatrician.
They said the Rileys told them they has made an
appointment, but only offered excuses for not going. They said
Michael Riley told his wife to medicate the children when he
determined that they were acting up.
The state Department of Social Services placed
the Rileys' two other children, Gerard, 11, and Kaitlynne, 6, in
foster care about 10 hours after Rebecca's death.
"There were mitigating circumstances,"
department spokesman Denise Monteiro said yesterday. "We had to
take custody of the children. I can't say any more."
Carolyn Riley obtained a restraining order
against her husband in October, but allowed it to lapse after a
few weeks.
McGonnell and Williams told police they saw
Michael Riley grab his son by the neck and bang his head against
the back window of a pickup truck "in an apparent uncontrollable
rage," the affidavit said.
McGonnell said Riley was not allowed to live
with his family in Weymouth public housing because of a court
order issued after he was arrested on the sex charges in 2005.
Police were called to the Rileys' home at 70
Lynn Ave. in Hull's Kenberma neighborhood, opposite Nantasket
Beach, at 6:30 a.m. on Dec. 13. They found found Rebecca dead on
the floor of her parents' bedroom.
An obituary prepared by the couple and
published in The Patriot Ledger said the little girl had died in
her sleep.
The Rileys will be arraigned today in Hingham
District Court on charges of first-degree murder.
The couple was arrested yesterday at Michael
Riley's mother's home on Fallgren Lane in Weymouth. He was held
overnight at the Plymouth County jail and Carolyn Riley was held
at the Marshfield police lockup.
Michael Riley was indicted in September 2005 on
charges of attempted rape of a girl under 14, four counts of
indecent assault and battery on a child and giving pornography to
a child.
Weymouth Police Lt. George Greenwood said Riley
was arrested in June 2005 after police searched his apartment at
43 Memorial Drive in Weymouth and confiscated a computer, diaries
and notebooks.
He was scheduled for trial on May 29 in Norfolk
Superior Court.
He was free on $2,500 bail posted by his wife.
Court records show Riley has a bullet hole and
the letters "RRR" tattooed on his back.
Michael Riley graduated from Weymouth High
School in 1991 and his wife, the former Carolyn DiSalvo, graduated
in 1992.
On Dec. 30, two weeks after their daughter's
death, they attended his 15th high school reunion at the Weymouth
Elks Club. Michael Riley told a friend he and his wife needed to
get out so they would stop thinking about Rebecca.
Hull Police Chief Richard Billings praised
State Police Sgt. Scott Warmington, State Police Detective Anna
Brookes and Hull Police Detective John Coggins for their
investigation that led to the arrests.
A neighbor, Phyllis Lipton, said Carolyn Riley,
her three children, Carolyn's stepbrother, his girlfriend and
their son, moved into a home at 70 Lynn Ave. in mid-November.
Lipton, 51, said the family told her Carolyn's
husband, Michael, wouldn't be living with them although he
appeared to be there all the time.
"They moved in during the middle of the night,"
Lipton said. "All I could hear was foul language coming from the
house."
Lipton rarely saw the children, she said, but
added Gerard Riley once returned hedge clippers he had taken
without asking.
"He had obviously gone into my shed to get
them," she said. "He said his cousin was the one who got them from
the shed."
Lipton said when she heard someone had died in
the Riley home her first thought was that Michael Riley had killed
his wife.
"No one knew there was a child sick in the
house," she said. "We thought they had moved out."
Lipton said the Rileys left about two weeks
after their daughter's death. Carolyn Riley's stepbrother and his
family followed a few weeks later.
Lipton said all three Riley children had
special needs.
Rebecca attended the Elden H. Johnson Early
Childhood Center in North Weymouth. The school provides full- and
part-day classes for children ages 3 to 5. The center's principal,
Victoria Silberstein, declined to comment.
Michael Riley's mother, Kathleen Riley, would
not comment on the case when a reporter arrived at her home last
night.
By David Abel - The Boston Globe
February 6, 2007
The parents of a 4-year-old girl from Hull were
arrested yesterday on murder charges after investigators concluded
they poisoned their daughter, prosecutors said.
Michael Riley , 34, and his wife, Carolyn, 32,
were taken into custody at his mother’s house in Weymouth in the
death of their daughter Rebecca in December, said officials in the
Plymouth district attorney’s office.
Just after 6:30 a.m. on Dec. 13, Hull police
responded to a call for an unresponsive girl at the family’s home
on Lynn Avenue, prosecutors said. They found Rebecca dead on her
parents’ bedroom floor.
An investigation by State Police and Hull
police found the girl had been prescribed the drugs clonidine for
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and valproic acid and
Seroquel for bipolar disorder. A psychiatrist had diagnosed her
with both disorders at age 2 1/2, prosecutors said.
The medical examiner’s office determined the
girl died from “intoxication due to the combined effects” of the
drugs clonidine, valproic acid (Depakote), dextromethorphan, and
chlorpheniramine, the district attorney’s office said in a
statement.
“This occurred as a result of the intentional
overdose of Rebecca with clonidine,” the statement said. “The
manner of death was determined to be homicide….”
Denise Monteiro, a spokeswoman for the state
Department of Social Services, said the department “found evidence
for neglect” of Rebecca.
On Dec. 13, the agency removed the couple’s
other children, a 6-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy, from the
home, Monteiro said. They remain in foster homes.
In 2005, DSS began investigating allegations
that Michael Riley sexually abused a 13-year-old
girl,…identified…as Carolyn Riley’s daughter from another
relationship. The girl had been adopted to another home in 2002.
Also in 2005, DSS launched an investigation
into whether Carolyn Riley had neglected her children, Monteiro
said.
“We supported the allegations of abuse, and we
forwarded that report to the Norfolk district attorney’s office,”
she said. “We also supported the allegations of neglect against
the mother.”