How Could You? Hall of Shame-Michael Diaz UPDATED

By on 7-28-2019 in Abuse in foster care, How could you? Hall of Shame, Massachusetts, Michael Diaz

How Could You? Hall of Shame-Michael Diaz UPDATED

This will be an archive of heinous actions by those involved in child welfare, foster care and adoption. We forewarn you that these are deeply disturbing stories that may involve sex abuse, murder, kidnapping and other horrendous actions.

From Chelsea, Massachusetts, foster father, Michael Diaz, 33, “of Chelsea, was arrested July 19 on nine counts of indecent assault and battery on a child under 14, six counts of aggravated rape of a child under 16 and one count of distributing matter harmful to a minor.”

“A Massachusetts man is facing multiple charges for allegedly raping two foster children who were in his care.”

“According to the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office, Diaz was a state Department of Children and Families approved foster parent to the victims when the alleged sexual abuse occurred.

Both victims disclosed the alleged abuse by their former foster father during interviews conducted last week.

“These allegations are incredibly disturbing to me not only as District Attorney but as a licensed foster parent and an emergency foster care provider,” District Attorney Rachael Rollins said in a statement. “Foster children are brought into strangers’ homes during some of the darkest, most frightening times in their young lives. Foster parents are tasked with providing the safety, support, and stability that these children need to move forward and recover from the trauma many have experienced prior to DCF involvement.”

“That an individual would further harm those most vulnerable represents the ultimate breach of trust. I promise the children and families who have contact with DCF and our foster care system that we will do everything within the power of this Office to ensure they receive exceptional care and protection. Further, I promise that this individual will be held accountable for his egregious and criminal behavior.”

DCF issued a statement Friday saying it finds the allegations “deeply disturbing.” The agency said it immediately removed the two children in March 2019, closed the home and notified the district attorney.

“DCF is collaborating with law enforcement throughout the investigation,” the statement said.

Diaz was arraigned Monday in Chelsea District Court and bail was set at $50,000. He is scheduled to return to court on Aug. 21.”
Chelsea Man Charged With Raping His 2 Foster Children
[NBC Boston 7/26/19 by Marc Fortier]

REFORM Puzzle Piece

Update:A former foster parent for the Department of Children and Families pleaded not guilty Friday to a slew of disturbing criminal charges alleging he preyed sexually on two vulnerable girls in his care.

Michael Diaz, 34, of Chelsea entered his plea in Suffolk Superior Court to 13 charges: four counts of aggravated rape of a child, six counts of indecent assault and battery on a child, and one count each of dissemination of material harmful to a minor, posing a child in a state of nudity, and possession of child pornography, according to District Attorney Rachael Rollins’s office.

Diaz was released on the $25,000 bail he had previously posted. He walked out of the courtroom Friday next to his lawyer and kept his head down and did not respond when a TV reporter asked, “Did you rape these two children?”

According to Rollins’s office, Diaz allegedly abused two foster daughters between 2017 and 2019. At the time of the alleged abuse, prosecutors said, Diaz was a DCF-approved foster parent.

In a statement, a DCF spokesperson said the agency “collaborated with law enforcement throughout this investigation and will continue to do so. The mistreatment of any child in a foster home is unacceptable, and in March 2019, DCF immediately removed the youths from the home and notified the District Attorney, consistent with the department’s policy to notify the District Attorney any time an allegation of sexual assault is filed.”

Rollins’s office, meanwhile, said Diaz allegedly exerted pressure on both girls to keep quiet about the alleged abuse.

“Both girls had been instructed by the defendant to keep this behavior a secret, and for a while they did so,” Rollins’s office said in a statement. “The defendant also gave the 12-year-old child two cellular phones and continued to communicate with her after she was removed from his foster home. Those phones are now in the care and custody of the Chelsea Police Department.”

A major break in the case came on June 29, 2019, Rollins’s office said. That’s when the 12-year-old girl told her biological mother that Diaz had sexually assaulted her repeatedly, according to prosecutors. The child also said she was concerned about her 11-year-old foster sister.

Both girls later disclosed the alleged abuse to investigators in separate interviews, Rollins’s office said.

“Forensic examinations of the defendant’s phone and the two phones given to the 12-year-old by the defendant have produced corroborative photographic evidence,” the statement said. “Photos on the defendant’s cellular phone depict the 12-year-old child unclothed. The defendant and victim’s phones also contain an image of the defendant and a grown woman engaging in oral sex.” Prosecutors said the act had been “described by the 11-year-old victim.”

“This is the most evil betrayal of trust I can imagine,’’ Rollins said in the statement. “I am revolted by the charges, not only as District Attorney but as a licensed foster parent and an emergency foster care provider.”

The county’s top prosecutor continued her withering criticism, saying that “foster children are brought into strangers’ homes during some of the darkest, most frightening times in their young lives.”

Foster parents, Rollins said, “are supposed to provide the children in their custody with the safety, support, stability, and care they need in order to move forward and recover from the trauma many have experienced prior to Department of Children and Families involvement. That an individual would further harm the most innocent and vulnerable among us represents unfathomable depravity.”

According to DCF, the agency has a specialized unit to investigate abuse and neglect allegations in foster homes, and the agency performs criminal background checks on all foster parents before they’re licensed, and every year thereafter.

In addition, officials said, 30 hours of training is required before someone can get licensed as a foster parent, and there are 4,300 foster homes throughout the state including kinship homes.

 

Former DCF foster parent charged with sexually assaulting children in his care

[Boston Globe 01/10/2020 by Travis Andersen]

 

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