
Press
Release
Sheila Matthews
203-594-1700
sheila@ablechild.org
Federal Court Decision May Place More Children At Risk
The Court ultimately concluded that children accepted into the Program must be accepted by the
State because these "at-risk" children were part of the original settlement in the lawsuit.
AbleChild addressed the flawed intake methods in a friend of the court brief. The concern of
AbleChild is that many of the children identified for the Program are not "at-risk." The real
danger is that some of these children, who are not "at-risk," will now be put into harm’s way by
taking them away from their families without cause and forcing them to ingest dangerous psychotropic
medications.
Unfortunately, in trying to help more "at risk" children, the Court ignored the State's current intake methods for determining which children are truly “at risk.” Often times, the State concludes a child is “at risk” without any justification. Children are taken away from their families on the basis of a single phone call into a “hotline” and even without the filing of a police incident report. When this happens, innocent children are unjustly put at risk, and the child's family is forced to prove to a court that their child is not in danger.
AbleChild appreciates the Court's concern regarding the well-being of all of Connecticut's children; however, Ablechild also recognizes that children who enter DCF, regardless of whether the children are "at-risk," are typically diagnosed with a mental illness and treated with psychotropic drugs. Ablechild believes the parties, and the Court, should make a commitment to first insuring that no child is unnecessarily taken away from their family.