How Could You? Hall of Shame-Krystal Paredes

By on 11-02-2015 in Abuse in guardianship, California, How could you? Hall of Shame, Krystal Paredes

How Could You? Hall of Shame-Krystal Paredes

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 Santa Clara, California, in January 2014, Guardian and half-sister Krystal Paredes,21, of a “4-yo [girl] was observed with a bruise underneath of her right eye and some red dots on her left eye. Additionally, [the girl] has old cut under her nose. The tip of her right index finger appeared ‘smashed off and it was black.'”

On three different occasions, when social workers followed up on these reports, they saw visible injuries on the child but determined the reports of abuse were “unfounded.”

“This social worker saw two fresh cuts across her upper lip and left side of her face,” a report filed by a DSS social worker on March 10, 2014 said. “There was a mark on her left side neck.”

According to a report filed on April 5 by a different social worker, the girl was found with more injuries.”

“”This worker observed that the child had a little darkness around her eyes, some left over scab marks on her neck, hands and lips but it appeared to be clearing up,” the report stated. “She was not able to tell this worker about the skin conditions.”

Isabel Venegas [foster mother of the 4-year-old siblings]said she cried each time she learned the reports went nowhere.

“I don’t understand why this happened and why they let it go on, over and over, and here I am practically screaming and yelling and telling everybody I could think of,” she said. “And all they could say is ‘call the police next time you see her like that.'”

Each time social workers questioned Krystal Paredes about the child’s injuries, Paredes had an explanation. And each time, according to the agency’s records, the social workers believed Paredes.

Burns on the girl’s face were from an accident with a curling iron, according to the reports. Bruises were from the girl jumping on the bed. When a social worker asked why it appeared there was makeup on the girl’s face, “as if trying to conceal marks or bruises,” Paredes said she had recently taken the girl to a princess party.

But child welfare experts who spoke to NBC Bay Area about the case said there were flaws in the agency’s investigation.

Leslie Heimov has worked in the field of child welfare for 25 years, and now serves as the executive director of the Children’s Law Center of California. One of the first red flags social workers should have noticed, Heimov said, was the placement of the child’s injuries.

“Kids get bruises in the course of their day-to-day play, which is true,” Heimov said. “But they don’t get them on their necks and faces, they get them on their shins.”

Heimov pointed to other problems with the agency’s investigation, such as how social workers interviewed the child.

“When I read the various reports, the first thing that struck me was that the little girl was not interviewed privately by the social worker,” Heimov said. “That right there is a big red flag.”

A concerned teacher & forged doctor’s notes

During the time the Venegas’ and the girl’s mother were trying to sound the alarm, so was the girl’s teacher, according to records obtained by the Investigative Unit.

“[The teacher] provided me with a list of dates of injuries that were noted,” the police report stated. “The injuries always appeared after the victim was absent from school. [The teacher] suspected the absences were the result of Krystal trying to give the injuries time to heal.”

On multiple occasions the teacher reported suspicious injuries and prolonged absences to the girl’s social worker, according to her interview with police, but each time she was told there were legitimate excuses for the injuries or that Krystal had a doctor’s note.

Krystal Paredes presented at least 13 doctor’s notes to social workers and the girl’s teacher over a six month period between January and June, 2014, according to police records. But social workers never followed up with the doctor to confirm the notes were legitimate. As the criminal investigation would later find, at least seven of those notes were forged.

“The caregiver provided notes from the doctor, but it doesn’t appear that they were verified,” Heimov said. “And that seems highly unusual to me, that a social worker would accept a note and not follow up by having contact with the doctor’s office.”

Near death

Despite the stream of concerned people pointing out signs of abuse, it wasn’t until June 2014 that social workers realized they had allegedly been fooled by Krystal Paredes. The girl’s mother, according to records, convinced social workers to check on her daughter after she’d missed several scheduled visits. When a social worker entered the Paredes’ home, she found the girl with substantial swelling, scabbing and bruising on her face, according to police records.

However, instead of calling 9-1-1 or immediately removing the girl from the home herself, she told Paredes to take the girl to the hospital and left the home. The girl wouldn’t arrive at the hospital for another four hours, and when she did, doctors immediately recognized the girl had been the victim of severe abuse.

“She has numerous scabs and scars consistent with adult bite marks on her body,” medical records obtained by the Investigative Unit stated. “The bite marks are very deep and some of them involve flesh missing from the center of the bites. [She] has a split upper lip which has started healing but will leave a permanent deformity due to the delay in seeking care.”

Social workers with the Department of Social Services, and the agency’s director, Robert Menicocci, declined to answer questions about the case. Although the agency told the Investigative Unit Lori Medina, the director of the Department of Family and Children’s Services, would answer general procedural questions about how social workers are supposed to respond to reports of abuse, they later canceled the interview.

The girl is now recovering from her injuries and has been placed with new guardians. The Venegas’ hope to see her reunited with her mother soon. Becoming foster parents was never something they expected to do, but now they wonder if they were put in this position for a reason.

“In our old age, to be foster parents, maybe we were meant to be here for just this case,” Isabel Venegas said.”

The girl had “wounds covering nearly every part of her body, doctors soon concluded she had been the victim of prolonged physical abuse. What they didn’t know was that the Department of Social Services, the agency charged with protecting the toddler, had done little to follow up on multiple previous allegations of abuse against her guardians. In a system shrouded in secrecy, the case offers a rare glimpse into an agency that’s faced documented issues with how social workers respond to reports of child abuse.

According to medical records and police reports obtained by the NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit, the girl arrived at the hospital in critical condition and in need of a blood transfusion. Medical records show she suffered from blood loss, burns and human bites. Chunks of hair had been pulled from her scalp and bruising around her neck suggested she had been strangled with a belt.

Doctors saved the child, but more than a year later, questions remain about how social workers from Santa Clara County handled the case. While the case is a tragedy in itself, the girl’s situation is emblematic of a larger systemic problem. The agency refused to answer any questions about the toddler’s case, but a 2013 Board of Supervisors audit blasted the agency for not answering 41 percent of the calls to the county’s emergency child abuse hotline. The audit also found hundreds of callers waited on average for 20 minutes, and some over an hour, just to speak to a social worker. The failure to answer more than 7,000 calls each year, the audit stated, resulting in abused and neglected children remaining in dangerous homes, and put the agency in violation of State law.”

Near Death of Foster Child Sheds Light on Flawed System[NBC Bay Area 10/29/15 by Vicky Nguyen, Michael Bott and Mark Villareal]

REFORM Puzzle Piece

Accountability2

2 Comments

  1. I followed the link– her father was “alleged” to have struck her ONCE… and she was removed from the home. Her non-abusive mother wasn’t allowed to get custody.

    Yet there are REPEATED allegations of abuse in her foster home… and CPS simply accepts the foster mother’s excuses, again and again, without bothering to interview the child outside of her suspected abuser’s presence, or even check the doctor’s notes!

    The double standard for biological parents and foster parents is sickening.

    According to this, Santa Clara’s Child and Family Services Division is privatized to some extent, though you have to scroll down to the last eighth of the page to discover that.

    http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/GAOREPORTS-HEHS-98-6/html/GAOREPORTS-HEHS-98-6.htm

  2. Im jerry paredes sr I’m so hurt and embarrassed by the actions of my older daughter krystal paredes I was stunned when I found out the truth of this story Deanne , krystal I believe did this together What hurts me the most was these people had scared her so much that when I did have my supervised visits Angie never said hey dad sis is being mean to me she never said anything I never have access to the house after they got the children As a matter of fact they were on a mission and they had Darlene Sandavol under there thumb yes I do Have a past and they ran on it Darlene and Deanne were always plotting something to do to me Deanne should be in prison with her daughter I would Have never aloud it Darlene always had something to keep me from protecting my daughter I was having two supervised a week and on every visit I had during my visits she was sending someone to bring a letter and things I could not do with my daughter she took my job as a parent trying to protect my daughter away from me so I never had the opportunity to look at my baby girl But Krystal got what she deserves I wish I could see my baby girl it’s been 3 years now CPS is a racket Darlene Sandoval , Carmen and the other supervisorConnie Vega also should be held accountable But what the CPS DID WAS GAVE THEM AN EARLY RETIREMENT TO GET THEM OUT OF THE MIX I WISH SOMEONE WOULD GO INTERVIEW A MS SUSAN CALDWELL SHE HAS OVER 20 YEARS ON THE JOB I WISH THEY WOULD TALK TO HER AND QUESTION HER ABOUT ME IN THIS CASE I NEVER HAD ANY BAD REPORTS WHILE HAVING SUPERVISED VISITS

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