Connect with us

Crime

OCA report rules Fall River schools, DCF, could have done more to prevent autistic boy’s death

Published

on

Boston, Mass. — The Office of the Child Advocate released findings and recommendations Wednesday following a multi-system investigation into the death of David Almond, a Fall River teenager, last October.

According to the report, David Almond and his triplet brothers were each diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder at an early age, and due to abuse and neglect, were under the consistent supervision or care of the New York Office of Children and Families from 2013 to 2016. New York authorities returned the triplets to John Almond’s custody in 2016, and he brought the triplets to live with him, his girlfriend Jaclyn Coleman, and his mother in a small one-bedroom apartment in Fall River, Massachusetts. In less than one year, the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families began investigating the family for substance use and abuse and neglect of the children. In October 2017, DCF removed the triplets and a younger half-sibling from the home.

In early 2020, the triplets were living at a group home in Massachusetts when DCF initiated the process to return them to Almond and his girlfriend, who continued to live in the same one-bedroom apartment in Fall River that the triplets were removed from in October 2017. The report states that the decision to reunify the children with their father and his girlfriend was a serious error that was compounded by the pandemic. While one of the three triplets opted not to return to Almond, David and his brother, Michael, returned on March 13, 2020. The Governor declared a state of emergency due to the COVID-19 pandemic three days later. On Oct 21, 2020, Fall River emergency personnel responded to the home, where they found David emaciated, bruised, and unresponsive. Michael was also suffering from similar indications of abuse and neglect. Both were taken to a nearby hospital where David was pronounced deceased. Michael was hospitalized for several months but survived his injuries. The younger half-sibling was also in the home but appeared uninjured and physically unharmed.

The OCA identified several key findings relative to this case:

•The DCF area office decision to return the boys home was not clinically justified and failed to address the children’s special needs and safety.

•Almond and Coleman minimally engaged in the services required to support reunification; DCF area staff did not evaluate whether Almond or Coleman’s behavior and skills had improved to be able to parent children with autism. The Juvenile Court and the attorneys representing the caretakers and the children did not question DCF’s decision to return the children nor did they insist that a careful reunification plan be developed and approved by the Court prior to return.

•The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated the situation by preventing in-person services and visits. Almond and Coleman continuously circumvented contact with DCF area office staff, the Fall River Public Schools, and other human service providers. DCF area office did not adequately assess the effect that the pandemic had on this family, especially in light of the family’s history of abuse and neglect.

• DCF area office staff did not identify the family as being “high-risk” for future abuse or neglect, which would have required in-person home visits during the pandemic. As a result, David and Michael were never seen in-person and instead were visited only virtually between March 2020 and David’s death in October. The DCF high-risk criteria that was issued during the pandemic to identify families that required in-person visitation did not specify a child’s disability as a risk-factor.

•DCF area office staff missed many warning signs that David and Michael were in distress. For example, Almond and Coleman prevented the boys from attending any in-person or remote school, did not allow service providers to see or speak with David or Michael, and often prevented the boys from answering questions when they were seen virtually once a month by social workers. During one DCF virtual home visit, a visible wound on David’s face was seen by social workers and dismissed by Ms. Coleman as self-harm. Service providers raised concerns about the lack of engagement and what appeared to be the boys’ regression in function.

•Fall River Public Schools failed to provide David and Michael with a free and appropriate public education between March 2020 and David’s death in October 2020 because neither David nor Michael received any academic instruction or related special education service. The FRPS failure to provide David and Michael with the education they were entitled to is a direct result of the complexities of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The OCA stated in the report that they determined that there was a multi-system failure, complicated by the pandemic, and that the safeguards that were in place, especially at DCF, were inadequate. The OCA has highlighted the need for changes, some of which will require legislative action and others that will require policy and procedure changes at the departmental level. Examples include:

•DCF redesigning their reunification process to include more rigorous safety assessments and evaluations of parental capacity. Furthermore, during emergencies similar to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, there is a need for a protocol that more accurately identifies which children need be physically (rather than virtually) visited on a routine basis.

•DCF conducting a comprehensive review of their own practices related to how services to individuals with legally-identified disabilities are assessed and provided.

•DCF improving its quality assurance infrastructure to provide additional levels of qualitative monitoring and to create feedback loops that promote a culture of continuous learning.

•The Department of Education (DESE) creating operational standards for addressing school attendance and the actions school districts must take when children fail to attend school.

•School districts explicitly linking attendance in remote and hybrid models to the actual participation of students in their education and the following of all established policies and procedures for investigating and addressing attendance issues.

•DESE and DCF collaborating and determining how districts should ensure DCF has access to regular attendance updates for all students who are in the legal custody of DCF.

•The Juvenile Court playing a more active role in analyzing the merits of a proposed reunification case, including the requirement that DCF link the family’s action plan to the clinical needs of the family. Furthermore, the Court should more strictly ensure that the circumstances that led to DCF’s original decision to remove children from their home are completely resolved before allowing reunification to occur.

“We feared when this pandemic began, that families would experience economic, social and other stressors, and that vulnerable children would suffer from lack of interaction with trusted adults, and that is tragically what happened in this case. David Almond was a vivacious, smart, and fun-loving boy who was often described as the ‘mayor’ of his former school. His impact on those who worked with him and loved him was profound and everlasting,” said Maria Mossaides, Director of the Office of the Child Advocate. “Child welfare professionals have the most difficult job – one that is filled with challenging decisions and trying circumstances. We need to strengthen our systems so that the missteps that occurred in this case are never repeated. While there is nothing we can do to bring David back, we do have the opportunity to honor his memory by making permanent changes that will protect other children. My office is committed to ensuring that this important work takes place.”

On Friday, John Almond, 33, and Jacyln Marie Coleman, 26,​ were both indicted on charges of Second Degree Murder and Neglect of a Disabled Person–Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury. Jaclyn Marie Coleman was also indicted on a charge of Withholding Evidence From an Official Proceeding.

Advertisement
2 Comments

2 Comments

  1. MortisMaximus

    March 31, 2021 at 8:28 am

    All employees of these social service agencies continued to be paid while derelict in their job duties. Will still be paid, with management ceremoniously citing all the failures of their workers and their system. Not my kid,not my problem! These kids were tortured and suffered, let’s chalk this up to COVID! Good work people.

  2. Chuck Thibault

    July 20, 2022 at 3:27 pm

    This should never have happened,in my opinion DCF and any School Committee member that was in office and in favor of it at the time

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Trending

Copyright © 2017 Fall River Reporter

Translate »