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UK
How many homes are broken by the closed and secretive
family courts?
Frighteningly, we don't know
Innocent but presumed guilty
THE 1990 ROCHDALE abuse scandal, brilliantly
documented last night in Real Story on BBC One, is one of the most
extreme in the lexicon of social service disasters. One minute a little
boy is telling ghost stories, the next he finds himself in care amid
rumours of satanic abuse. Even when a judge throws out the case, he is
kept in care for ten more years, because the social workers change their
story and claim that his parents are unfit. We all hope that things have
changed since then. But the almost complete censorship of what goes on
in the world of “child protection” makes it impossible to know even how
many cases go through the family courts. And 15 years on, the BBC’s
court battle to identify the Rochdale social workers shows that the
professionals still close ranks just as they always did.
The full Rochdale story is only being told because the
children are now over 16 and are free to cry out against the social
workers who refused to tell them why they were in care, or why they
could see their parents for only an hour a month. Rochdale Council
claimed that the social workers could not be named because to do so
would hurt the children. The mantra of “child privacy” was used to
protect the professionals. Now that the children have gone public, the
council argues that the BBC is wrong to broadcast something that might
put people off social work. Right.
To acknowledge that decent people make mistakes, as
the Rochdale judge did in 1991, is not to “demonise” social workers. It
is to lessen the likelihood of miscarriages of justice that tear
innocent families apart. Family courts, which operate in camera,
generally have a lower standard of proof than criminal courts, because
they cannot send people to jail. But to lose your children, and for them
to lose you, is a life sentence of another kind.
In the past year I have been approached by several
parents who have had children taken away. Even those who managed to get
them back are still too frightened to talk publicly. They describe what
it is like to find yourself on the other side of a one-way mirror,
innocent but presumed guilty, by professionals who are almost completely
unaccountable. Your instinct is to cry for help, but you are told that
talking to anyone could jeopardise your case. It is impossible for me to
judge the merit of these cases, since I am not permitted to read the
legal papers. Even if I could, I suspect that not all would be
clear-cut.
The courts struggle daily to weave solid judgments
from the strands of frayed, imperfect relationships. But what is
unbearable is the bewilderment and helplessness of parents who can be
plunged overnight into a world of acronyms, key workers, guardians,
counsellors, summonses, complex reports and, for many, an ever-changing
cast of legal aid solicitors who are always rushing to the next case.
A mother (I shall call her Sarah) entered this world
voluntarily, when she began to suspect that her daughter was being
abused by her former parter, father of the girl. She approached social
services for help. But they ended up taking her daughter away from her,
and placing her with the very man she had accused. I have heard only her
side of the extraordinary story. The expert psychiatrist appointed by
the court decided that Sarah had coached her daughter to make false
allegations — something that is not unknown. But he did so without ever
having met Sarah, her daughter or the boyfriend her daughter accused. He
never appeared in court to be cross-examined. He merely watched the
police video of her daughter’s interview and posted his report. Yet the
judge apparently considered this a sufficient basis on which to take
Sarah’s daughter away.
The business of interviewing young children about
abuse allegations is an extremely delicate one. It has become more
sophisticated since Daniel dreamt about ghosts in Rochdale in 1990.
Children are rarely put through more than two interviews at most, to
spare them the trauma and to lessen the likelihood of embellishment. The
language they use is analysed to see, for example, whether the words
they use are too mature for their age and likely to have been suggested
to them. But in the end professionals have to make notoriously tricky
judgments. And they are not always right.
Sarah is now desperate. She believes her daughter is
living with an abuser. Sarah has been offered no counselling, though
that would surely be a logical outcome of the court’s conclusion. She
communicates with her daughter only by postcards, some of which have
been returned by social workers as unsuitable. In a situation that would
make me physically sick with fury and fear, she still does not look like
the unstable liar she is accused of being.
It is not surprising that a judge would rely upon an
expert that they knew. But insulating child protection professionals so
completely does increase the likelihood that they will sometimes
reinforce in one another a mistaken view. The veil of secrecy also
spawns a host of rumours. I know mothers who have not taken their child
to A&E after a minor accident, for fear of some spurious allegation
being made against them. I know mothers who have stopped themselves
admitting the extent of their post-natal depression, when they saw a
certain look in the doctor's eye.
The media has been kept out of the family justice
system to stop prying eyes making delicate situations even messier. But
the secrecy is too complete. In 2004 Mr Justice Munby said: “We cannot
afford to proceed on the blinkered assumption that there have been no
miscarriages of justice in the family justice system. This is something
that has to be addressed with honesty and candour if the family justice
system is not to suffer further loss of public confidence.”
Allowing journalists into family courts, even on a
restricted reporting basis, could make both sides more honest. It could
give the innocent a chance to cry for help and be heard. The media must
keep its mouth shut much of the time but we should let it keep its eyes
open, not only to what happened 15 years ago, but also to what may be
happening today.
Camilla Cavendish
12 January 2006
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,23729-1981051,00.html
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