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Title: Police: Family Lived In Filth, Bathed In Pond
Source: www.local6.com
URL Source: http://www.local6.com/news/9728253/detail.html
Published: Aug 24, 2006
Author: Staff
Post Date: 2006-08-24 12:55:16 by Ferret Mike
Keywords: None
Views: 235
Comments: 22

Two parents in Lake County, Fla., were arrested after their children were found living in a filthy home without running water, according to a Local 6 News report.

Police arrested Christine Foels and her fiancée Christopher Curran after receiving an anonymous call from a neighbor about their filthy home. The pair was living in the home with two girls, ages 5 and 4 months.

"Investigators with the Department of Children and Families said the conditions were more than disturbing," Local 6 reporter Louis Bolden said. "They said it was criminal."

Officers said a refrigerator inside the home was filled with rotting food. Also, the house has not had running water in more than a month, so the toilets were filled with feces.

"They bathed in a pond that was in the back of the property," Lake County sheriff's Sgt. Christine Mysinger said.

The baby's crib was also used as a trash bin, the report said.

Foels said her family is just going through some financial problems. She said she has not done anything wrong.

"I don't deserve this," Foels said. "I didn't do anything wrong. I'm not a bad mother. I'm doing everything they are asking me to do and now I'm here."

Foels and Curran are being held in the Lake County Jail on $5,000 bond.

(Video of story in header link)

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 14.

#4. To: Ferret Mike (#0)

personally - I don't feel good about government taking kids away from parents. kids typically go into foster home system and it is in itself an abusive thing to do to the kids. even in a dirty home kids are almost always better off with parents.

look at the money spent bashing the parents. does that help the kids? perhaps the money should be spent helping the parents.

perhaps we should think about how over-valued US dollar pushing down wages if we care about children. over-valued US dollar helps rich people, but it destroys wages for the poor and middle income because it makes a situation where no domestic industry can compete with foreign based competitors due to the over-valuation of our currency. how humanitarian are we when we do that to our poor people? And then take their children.

Red Jones  posted on  2006-08-24   14:00:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Red Jones (#4)

I have to disagree, Red. As someone who grew up with serious family problems (alcoholic father, mentally ill mother), I usually strongly feel that children should be taken from their families, whether it's to be in foster care, adopted or placed in orphanages. I had the opportunity to be adopted a couple of times and the agencies ended up putting me back with my family. BIG mistake, and something I have always regretted. They weren't bad people, or abusive - just neglectful and sick. I actually preferred the orphanage I was in for a while. I just hate to see abusive or neglectful people get these poor little kids back - it usually means the kids will have little or no chance at life.

Which reminds me - we need to bring back orphanages. It's just so much better than much of what passes for foster care out there, and I think they've just gotten a unnecessarily bad rap. Yeah it sucks not to have a family, but it sucks more to have an abusive or neglectful one.

mehitable  posted on  2006-08-24   14:13:25 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: mehitable (#8)

Which reminds me - we need to bring back orphanages. It's just so much better than much of what passes for foster care out there, and I think they've just gotten a unnecessarily bad rap. Yeah it sucks not to have a family, but it sucks more to have an abusive or neglectful one.

I am sorry to learn of your childhood.

BigBrother couldn't make any $$$ from private, church-run, children's homes; so they had to go.

For most of her working career, my mother taught HomeEc at a christian children's home where the vast majority of the kids were not orphans, but were either unwanted by their parents, or the legal system gave them "one last chance" to get it together before going to jail. The home was trying to do right by the kids - not for the money, not to drug'em up, not to let them get into the prison system, but to give them the attention, care, and mostly love, that was missing from their lives.

Lod  posted on  2006-08-24   14:45:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 14.

#18. To: lodwick (#14)

For most of her working career, my mother taught HomeEc at a christian children's home where the vast majority of the kids were not orphans, but were either unwanted by their parents, or the legal system gave them "one last chance" to get it together before going to jail. The home was trying to do right by the kids - not for the money, not to drug'em up, not to let them get into the prison system, but to give them the attention, care, and mostly love, that was missing from their lives.

Dayum, loddie, we need more Christian ladies like your mother. And whatever happened to HomeEc??? I guess nowadays they're using the bananas for sex ed classes :)

As for me, you take the cards you're dealt and do the best you can. My parents were good people, but poor and sick. My father never recovered from his terrible WW2 experience and my mother just had a very difficult background. But they did the best they could.

mehitable  posted on  2006-08-24 23:21:29 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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