DCFS timeline shows agency visited family one day before 8-year-old’s
death
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[June 08, 2022]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
Amaria Osby’s friends and family were to
gather Tuesday, not to celebrate her eighth birthday, but to attend her
funeral. Andrea Hagler, Amaria’s mother, won’t be there. She is charged
with the first-degree murder of her daughter.
Amaria’s death once again drew scrutiny of Illinois’ child protection
agency, the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, for
failing to protect the state’s most vulnerable children.
A timeline provided by DCFS showed that a DCFS investigator failed to
contact Amaria’s parents for two months after receiving a hotline call
that the girl was being neglected. Under state law, the department has
60 days to complete a child abuse and neglect investigation, although
most child abuse and neglect investigations are completed within 30
days.
As a result, a DCFS worker and a supervisor have been removed from child
protection duties, according to DCFS spokesman Bill McCaffrey.
DCFS has been involved with the family since Amaria was three, according
to a DCFS timeline released last week. On Sept. 8, 2017, a report to the
child abuse hotline came in alleging neglect after Hagler was arrested
for driving under the influence and child endangerment.
An investigator visited the family the next day, but found no signs of
physical abuse or neglect. DCFS provided a safety plan for Amaria. The
agency found there was evidence Hagler neglected her daughter, stemming
from the DUI arrest. DCFS initiated an intact family case to provide
services to the family.
Hagler participated in substance abuse treatment and community services
from Nov. 7, 2017, to March 21, 2018. The child protection worker noted
that there were no concerns of abuse or neglect during the home visits
and the case was closed.
For three years, DCFS had no involvement with the family.
But on March 23, 2022, the DCFS hotline received a call reporting that
Amaria was being neglected. The call came after a domestic violence
incident between Amaria’s parents at a Chicago restaurant. Police were
called but no arrests were made.
According to DCFS’s timeline, an investigator tried to find the family
the next day, but was unsuccessful. The timeline does not show any
additional attempts by that investigator to check on Amaria. For the
next 60 days, the agency did not have contact with the family.
On the 61st day, a second investigator visited Amaria and Hagler. They
noted no concerns for physical abuse or neglect.
The day after that visit, on Wednesday, May 25, the child abuse hotline
received another call regarding Amaria. She was dead.
A relative had found Hagler and Amaria in bed. Amaria had a plastic bag
over her head. Another relative called 911. An autopsy found the
second-grader suffered injuries during an assault and died as a result
of asphyxiation.
The first investigator and a supervisor were subsequently relieved of
their duties, McCaffrey said.
Amaria’s death is the latest high-profile death of a child who died
after DCFS had contact with their families since December 2021.
The other children who died recently while under DCFS care were:
Damari Perry, 6, who was found dead in an alley in Gary, Indiana. DCFS
took Damari into care in 2015, but returned him to his mother along with
his siblings two years later. There were two more allegations of abuse
reported to DCFS, but he remained in his mother’s care until Dec. 29,
2021, when he was beaten and thrown into a cold shower. His mother and
two older siblings are charged with his death.
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Amaria Osby, 8, was found dead in her bed on
Wednesday, May 25, one day after her family was visited by the
Department of Children and Family Services. (Photo from Andrea
Hagler Facebook page)
Sophia Faye Davis, 1, of Dawson, died Feb. 8 during a visitation with
her father. Her father’s girlfriend Cierra Coker faces charges of
aggravated battery of a child and first-degree murder. Sophia was taken
to the hospital a month earlier after her mother found Sophia sustained
facial injuries and a broken arm after a visit with her father and
Coker. DCFS did not suspend visitations and found there was not enough
evidence to conclude the injuries were the result of abuse.
Zaraz Walker, 7 months, of Bloomington, was reported missing on Feb. 12.
Kimberlee Burton, the baby’s mother, told relatives the child died in
her sleep and she left the body in a Bloomington cemetery. Zaraz’s body
has not been found. At the time Zaraz went missing, DCFS had an open
case, but could not find the family.
Tamsin Miracle Sauer, 3, of Nelson, died from a stroke brought on by
malnutrition and dehydration and a mass of undigested hair in her
stomach on March 26. Over the course of four years, Sauer’s family had
been visited by DCFS investigators more than two dozen times on abuse
and neglect allegations. Six different investigators failed to
substantiate those claims. Frank and Dana Sauer, Tamsin’s parents, face
charges of child endangerment.
Navin Jones, 8, of Washington, died on March 29. Navin was involved with
DCFS from birth after he tested positive for narcotics. DCFS
investigated his parents for taking him from his legal guardian, as well
as allegations the couple beat, berated and starved the boy. When he was
found unresponsive in the home, he weighed 30 pounds.
In addition to the deaths, Cook County Judge Patrick Murphy has found
DCFS Director Marc Smith in contempt of court 11 times. Four of those
cases have been purged after the children were moved to their department
recommended settings. Smith still faces seven contempt citations in Cook
County for failing to abide by court order to move children in their
care to appropriate placements.
Several contempt cases have been consolidated with arguments to be made
to the First District Court of Appeals in Chicago. No dates have been
set.
As of Tuesday, a 13-year-old girl in a Chicago hospital whose case was
the subject of the 10th contempt citation filed against Smith, remains
in that locked psychiatric ward.
Smith was found in contempt for failing to move her. Doctors discharged
her on March 21, 2022. On April 14, 2022, the court ordered Smith to
move her out of the psychiatric hospital. Smith was found in contempt on
May 12.
Smith faces a $1,000 daily fine for every day those 11 children remained
in those settings. In Leah’s case, those fines totaled $26,000 as of
Tuesday. Those fines have been stayed by an appellate court.
Smith has said there is a shortage of specialized placements for foster
children and DCFS is trying to convince private agencies who provide
services to families and children in state care to reinstate services
that were folded during the budget crisis during the previous
administration.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government that is distributed to more than 400
newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press
Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |