Children can be confiscated from loving, attentive parents, based on a one-time recreational drug use. Not all that different from consuming alcohol at a party.
Neglect and child abuse are no longer the standard.
This little girl was happy and healthy with her parents. Once CPS took her, she was drugged up until she couldn't keep her tongue in her mouth, and looked like she was starving.
3-year-old in CPS' care overprescribed psychotropic drugs
Neglect and child abuse are no longer the standard.
This little girl was happy and healthy with her parents. Once CPS took her, she was drugged up until she couldn't keep her tongue in her mouth, and looked like she was starving.
3-year-old in CPS' care overprescribed psychotropic drugs
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXt9c8s4o50"]www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXt9c8s4o50[/ame]The only reason CPS took custody was the young parent's recreational drug use. Something they admitted to and lived to regret.
But ironically Rachel would be the one hooked on drugs while under CPS's watch including Risperdal, a drug used to treat Schizophrenia and Bi-Polar disorder and according to the FDA, should not be given to a child under 10.
CPS wouldn't allow the family to see Rachel for two months. What they say they saw was a drooling, lethargic emaciated looking little girl who wanted to play a very strange game.
"She was also writing prescriptions, Rachel which is not normal," her mother said. "They might play doctor but she was writing prescriptions on paper, here take your medicine."
The family spent months asking CPS if Rachel was on drugs. "We kept asking but they kept denying," Christina Harrison said.