How Could You? Hall of Shame-Isaiah Starks case-child Death
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.
A 2020 case has come to light
From Hot Sulphur Springs, Colorado, adoptee Isaiah Sparks ,7, died on February 18, 2020.
He died of “ingesting too much sodium, the coroner found, likely due to drinking olive brine. The parents had used olives and olive brine as a form of punishment, a mandatory reporter later told a child abuse hotline. Isaiah was also malnourished at the time of his death.”
[ Sounds like the Buddy Cook case? ]
“Jonathan and Elizabeth Stark arrived at a park outside Granby on a late-April day in 2020 to meet with Grand County’s assistant coroner and a sheriff’s investigator.
Their conversation, captured on a body-worn camera, concerned the investigation into the Feb. 18 death of their 7-year-old son, Isaiah.”
“The Starks were well-known community members in the small mountain town of Hot Sulphur Springs, especially in law enforcement circles, with Jonathan Stark serving as an officer in the Granby Police Department.
Ninety minutes into their conversation, the assistant coroner, Tawnya Bailey, told the parents, “I will do everything in my power to make sure this stays here,” according to a report by the Colorado Bureau of Investigation. She added that the sheriff’s investigator, Bobby Rauch, would do the same.
The Starks asked what the district attorney would do with the autopsy findings. The DA would review the report and “throw it aside,” they were told. Rauch assured the Starks that “the case was done.”
The suspicious circumstances surrounding Isaiah Stark’s death and subsequent revelations about the ensuing investigations have prompted serious concern from child welfare workers, who question whether officials in the rural Colorado county adequately and impartially probed the child’s fatality.
The Child Protection Ombudsman of Colorado, tasked with investigating child safety concerns, explicitly called out the Grand County sheriff’s and coroner’s offices, as well as the 14th Judicial District Attorney’s Office, for neglecting several key portions of a normal death investigation. The state’s Child Fatality Review Team, which compiles reports on youth deaths, divulged little information about Isaiah’s death, but concluded it was “needless and could have been prevented” if only medical and mental health professionals had appropriately monitored the situation.
In all, at least seven separate entities reviewed the case over the past five years, including one outside county investigation that found the parents had committed “fatal medical neglect.” The local district attorney, however, declined to bring charges.
“We have many unanswered questions, and those responsible for giving these answers are unwilling to do so,” said Stephanie Villafeurte, the ombudsman, in an interview.
The Starks declined to comment for this story.
District Attorney Matt Karzen, in a statement, said his office declined to prosecute this case “because the autopsy, and then subsequent additional review by medical professionals, could not confirm the exact cause of death nor establish any culpable mental state required for a criminal prosecution under applicable Colorado statutes.”
Publicly available information about the autopsy shows the coroner did, in fact, rule on the cause and manner of death, and an independent pathologist later said the boy was so dehydrated it may not have taken much olive brine to kill him.
The Grand County Sheriff’s Office, in a statement, said it conducted a “comprehensive, professional death investigation into this matter.”
“This has been classified as a death investigation, and while this is a tragic death, there are no findings to support a criminal case, and specifically not a ‘homicide’ classification,” the statement read.
But The Denver Post’s investigation reveals that some in the child welfare system, including the child protection ombudsman, believe Isaiah Stark’s death underscores how vulnerable children can fall through the cracks of Colorado’s human services and criminal justice systems and highlights the conflicts of interest in small, close-knit communities.[Bullsh@t!]
The Post compiled this report through documents obtained through open records requests with the ombudman’s office and a heavily redacted investigation produced by the CBI at the behest of the ombudsman. The Post also reviewed a limited report from the Child Fatality Review Team, as well as a medical review performed by an outside doctor.
The Grand County Sheriff’s Office declined to provide case investigation documents to The Post, including the body-camera video from the park, saying that disclosure of the records would be “contrary to the public’s interest.”
Isaiah Stark was born Jan. 15, 2013, to a substance-using mother, according to a 2023 letter sent by Villafuerte’s office to the CBI. The boy, who was also born with multiple developmental issues, had been in the Starks’ care since he was three months old, placed with the family through the Florida foster care system.
The Grand County Department of Human Services met with the family monthly for three months in 2016 and 2017, noting no safety concerns, the ombudsman’s letter states.
But caseworkers expressed concerns about the validity of the difficulties that Elizabeth reported regarding Isaiah’s behavioral health issues, including Reactive Attachment Disorder, a rare but serious condition in which an infant or young child doesn’t establish healthy attachments with parents or caregivers, the letter says.
Caseworkers noted that the mother also appeared overwhelmed by parenting in general.
On March 22, 2017, the Starks legally adopted Isaiah.
Two years later, the family contacted Isaiah’s doctor, requesting a change in his medication.
“I am desperate for help,” Elizabeth said, according to the records reviewed by the ombudsman and described in the letter. “Is there a stronger medication that you can prescribe ASAP that will take the ability away from him to keep him awake and completely force his body to sleep?”
These messages continued at least once a month.
On Feb. 16, 2020, Elizabeth sent the doctor another urgent request.
“I am still having significant problems with his sleep,” she wrote. “He says he is sleeping at night, and he seems to be, but he is wanting to sleep all day and we are held hostage by this, unable to do anything because he keeps falling asleep.”
The following day, Elizabeth sent another message, noting that things are “getting worse.” Isaiah was vomiting and engaging in other unwanted behaviors, according to hospital and law enforcement records reviewed by the ombudsman.
The parents decided to take Isaiah to Children’s Hospital Colorado in Aurora. But on the way there, Isaiah became unresponsive.
Elizabeth reversed course, bringing her son to the Middle Park Medical Center in Granby. He died the following day.
At his funeral on Feb. 22, 2020, at the Winter Park Christian Church in Tabernash, the mother described Isaiah’s death as “God rescuing him,”
according to transcripts included in a 2023 CBI report. She said this was not the outcome she wanted or prayed for, but she felt his death “set him free from his disorder.”
[Yikes! That Winter Park Christian Church started in 1986! and on their website they have their “Doctrinal Statement” which reads:
“3. God’s Eternal Purpose and Election subsection 3.2 “We believe that God upholds and governs all things -from galaxies to subatomic particles[
], from the forces of nature to the movements of nations[
]and from the public plans of politicians [
]to the secret acts of solitary persons [
] all in accord with His eternal, all-wise purposes to glorify Himself.
Yikes! and they “quote” from the “bible” on all of this…🤔My bible doesn’t have these quotes!🤔]
Jonathan Stark, in an Instagram post that day, wrote, “My son is not lost to us, was not taken from us. He is well and whole with his Father.”
“This is the greatest pain I’ve felt and some of the greatest joy for my son’s peace,” he wrote.
‘More than an accident’
An autopsy showed the 7-year-old died of severe hypernatremia, a condition characterized by a high concentration of sodium in the blood. The likely culprit, the coroner determined, was olive brine. Isaiah was also malnourished and dehydrated at the time of his death, with his small and large intestines markedly distended.”
“That same day, the Starks met with the sheriff’s investigator and deputy coroner at the Granby-area park. Bailey, the assistant coroner, told the parents that if she were to receive a records request, she would respond with, “Geez, I can’t find that file” and that she “would take a long time to find that record,” the CBI report states.”
Reported to child abuse hotline
“Despite numerous red flags, Isaiah’s death wasn’t reported to the state child abuse hotline until November 2021 — nearly 21 months after his death. Three mandatory reporters called it in.
”
“On Dec. 20, 2021, the 14th Judicial District Attorney’s Office said it would not file criminal charges because the case “cannot be proven beyond a reasonable doubt,” the CBI report states.
Four months later, Jefferson County Human Services concluded that both parents were determined to be “founded” for fatal medical neglect and “neglect injurious environment” of Isaiah, the ombudsman’s letter said. Jefferson County declined to provide this report or discuss the investigation with The Post, citing child confidentiality laws.
“Founded,” as defined by the Code of Colorado Regulations, means that the abuse and/or neglect assessment is established by a “preponderance of the evidence that an incident(s) of abuse and/or neglect occurred.”
“Fatal neglect” is when the physical or medical needs of the child are not met, resulting in death. An “environment injurious to the welfare of a child” is when the environment caused injuries to the welfare of the child or “reasonably could be foreseen as threatening to the welfare of the child and is in control of the parent,” the regulations state.
Findings of child abuse and neglect go into a parent’s record in the state’s child welfare database, and could impact their ability to be foster parents in the future. Reports of known or suspected child abuse or neglect must be transmitted immediately by the county department to the district attorney’s office and to local enforcement.
Often, prosecutors work closely with human services and others involved with a child abuse case, including the person who conducted the autopsy and mandatory reporters who worked on the case.
Jonathan Stark expressed concerns that the Jefferson County findings would impact his employment and was encouraged to speak to an attorney, the ombudsman’s letter says.[The Hubris!]
Karzen, the district attorney, told The Post he was “aware” of the Jefferson County report, though he didn’t say whether he received or reviewed it as part of his charging decision. He said he believes Jefferson County investigators received additional information from independent medical experts, but did not know whether they re-evaluated their conclusions in light of that medical evidence.”
A limited child fatality review
“The ombudsman in May 2022 received a complaint about Isaiah’s death. The reporting party expressed concern that the fatality did not appear to have received a thorough investigation due to Jonathan Stark’s job in law enforcement.
The ombudsman’s office reviewed a host of records from the sheriff’s office, including body-worn camera footage, incident reports, video, dispatch records and calls. Villafuerte, the ombudsman, said the criminal investigation did not include crucial information such as interviews with surviving siblings, observations of the family’s home, and a review of medical and child welfare records.”
“In June 2023, the Child Fatality Review Team conducted an assessment of Isaiah’s death, with its three-page report shedding light on the parents’ struggles dealing with Isaiah’s needs.”
****
The Child Fatality Review Team conducts in-depth case reviews of all incidents of egregious child abuse or neglect, near-fatalities, and fatalities substantiated for abuse or neglect when a family has had previous involvement with a county human services agency within three years prior to the incident.
Elizabeth Stark admitted that the boy was “different and difficult to parent” from the time of his placement to the time of his death, the report notes under a subsection detailing identified risk and contributing factors that may have led to the incident. She said Isaiah, at just two months of age, “hated her.” The parents described the child as “damaged” when they took him into their home as an infant.
The mother, the report states, blamed every negative aspect of his life on his Reactive Attachment Disorder. The parents attributed Isaiah’s actions to “manipulative behaviors and willfulness.”
Other risk factors included the children being homeschooled, a lack of available resources in rural Grand County, and a lack of referrals made regarding Isaiah’s extremely low body mass index and other medical issues that “should have been red flags in the medical community.”
The review team said the death was “needless and could have been prevented had the child received appropriate monitoring and intervention from medical and mental health professionals.”
*****
“The First Judicial District’s DA was never appointed as special prosecutor.
In April 2024, Karzen requested the state attorney general’s office review the death. The DA did this, he told The Post, because human services workers “seemed to believe the criminal declination decision was not appropriate.”
The AG’s office consulted an independent forensic pathologist to look at the circumstances that may have caused Isaiah’s death. The doctor reached three conclusions, according to a summary of his findings provided to The Post by Karzen: Isaiah had compromised kidney function at the time of his death; Isaiah was significantly dehydrated at the time of his death; and a small amount of olive brine could have been fatal to someone in Isaiah’s condition.
The pathologist, Dr. Michael Arnall, said Isaiah’s lab results showed he was suffering from a renal impairment, causing his kidneys to function at only 50% to 66% of normal at the time of his death. This impairment, known as prerenal azotemia, can be caused by dehydration and reduces the body’s ability to excrete sodium, causing sodium levels to rise.
Isaiah’s dehydration was significant, Arnall found, and likely contributed to elevated levels of sodium in his bloodstream at the time of his death.
The pathologist’s research showed four ounces or half a cup of olive brine could be a fatal dose for an otherwise healthy child. However, for someone in Isaiah’s condition, the amount could be as little as one to three ounces.
Arnall, though, said he could not determine the exact cause of Isaiah’s death. It’s possible, the summary states, that the boy succumbed to hypernatremic dehydration and renal impairment alone, without the ingestion of a large sodium load.
But these two conditions made Isaiah extremely susceptible to a large amount of sodium, the doctor said. If he ingested olive brine in this state, his body would have been unable to excrete sodium fast enough, inducing fatal hypernatremia.
“I do not believe that I will be able to prove which alternative this case represents or the relative contribution of each (cause),” Arnall stated in the summary.
Eventually, the case made its way back to Karzen.
In a March 25 letter to the CBI, the DA said his office had, for the second time, declined to prosecute anyone connected to Isaiah Stark’s death. The initial autopsy report classified the death as an “accident,” he wrote. Additional review by medical experts revealed “substantial uncertainty as to exactly what events and medical conditions led to the death of (Isaiah Stark).”
“Because there is insufficient evidence of any crime related to the death, specifically a lack of scientific evidence establishing the required culpable mental state for criminal liability, prosecution of this matter is again declined,” Karzen wrote.
Villafuerte, meanwhile, is still trying to figure out how a series of systems failed this 7-year-old boy. This situation, she said, is symptomatic of a much larger problem.
“Ultimately, we adults need to ask ourselves: When it comes to a child fatality, was the death preventable? And what can we learn about all of our roles? What can all of us learn from a child’s death so we don’t repeat it again?” Villafuerte said. “We have been denied answers to those questions. That’s the biggest concern here.”
A Colorado boy likely died from drinking too much olive brine. A county tried to make the suspicious case disappear
Arizona Daily Sun 5/20/25 by Sam Tabachnik]
Literally, “declined to prosecute anyone connected to Isaiah Stark’s death” and “don’t repeat it again” are the only lessons that you got out of this?
Colorado, ROT in HELL!
REFORM Puzzle Pieces


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