Warning: This post deals with themes of child abuse and may be distressing for some readers.
Update:
Four-year-old Chloe Valentine died from severe injuries after being forced to ride a motorbike despite repeatedly crashing it, an inquest heard today.
The inquest also heard little Chloe, from Adelaide, had been surrounded by drugs and squalor and was chronically neglected throughout her short life, the Daily Mail reports.
Chloe’s grandmother, Belinda Valentine, has pleaded pleads for changes within Families SA, which had received 20 notifications of Chloe’s situation prior to her tragic death. Ms Valentine also called for specialised staff training to prevent such deaths, the Daily Mail reports.
The ABC reports a friend of Chloe’s drug-using mother had raised concerns about the woman’s behaviour before Chloe was born.
Previously, Mamamia wrote…
IN court today, Ashley Jean Polkinghorne will reportedly serve at least four years in jail for the manslaughter of her daughter Chloe.
Justice Trish Kelly said that Polkinghorne and her partner Benjamin Robert McPartland laughed as Chloe feel from the bike and failed to call an ambulance when the four-year-old was knocked unconscious.
Polkinghorne was jailed for seven years, with a non-parole term of four years and two months.
Mamamia previously reported:
A court has heard of a mother who forced her four-year-old daughter to ride a 50-kilogram motorbike over and over, while laughing at her daughter and filming her.
Top Comments
It is sad when workers find it so difficult to persuade a judge for a child protection order. Holding the mothers hand to 'keep families together ' may seem ridiculous but is what workers are expected to do. In Qld child protection laws are focused on 'the child's safety is paramount.' Still, as a retired worker myself the system is overloaded. If only the salvo worker wrote a more scathing report instead of glowing and the mother had frequent drug test the child would definitely be removed. This didn't happen. The system failed little Chloe. We hate the thought of adoption, but let me say every child I met on long term orders dreamt of it happening to them. When we will put their rights first? Not what's politically correct. We wait for parents to pull themselves together at the expense of their children.
I agree. Adoption should be considered. Many mums and dads cannot look after their kids and we need a safety clause that allows them to put the kids first, I have worked in the system and was bugged by our 2IC forcing us to give drugged up parents every opportunity, even when their active addiction made it impossible for them to care for themselves. We need a paradigm shift, away from keeping families together, towards child protection.
Should be a new law , called Chloes law , in her name we should save other children around the world