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Baby Damaged By Drugs In Foster Home
Wednesday, December 20, 2000California: Baby damaged by drugs in foster home
$4 million settlement proposed for child with brain damage
LOS ANGELES - The county should pay $4 million to care for a child who was left severely brain-damaged because her foster mother fed her Prozac, Xanax and other drugs for years, a panel recommended.
The lawsuit settlement, if approved by the Board of Supervisors on Jan. 9, would be among the largest the county has ever paid to a single plaintiff, County Counsel Lloyd W. Pellman said. It was recommended Monday by the county claims board.
The money would provide overall care for the 4-year-old girl, who is in a round-the-clock care facility, said attorney Richard Voorhies, who filed the negligence lawsuit in Superior Court on the girl's behalf.
"What happened to this child was absolutely horrendous," Voorhies said.
- The Associated Press
In a memo to supervisors, county lawyers said the county failed to follow its own guidelines for supervising the girl, identified in legal papers as Baby S.
The girl, then 6 months old, was placed with Lynette Harms of Carpinteria in 1996. According to the lawsuit, Harms, who had adopted Baby S's older sister, was a drug addict and over several years gave the child Phenobarbital, the sedative Xanax, the antidepressant Prozac, the sleeping drug chloral hydrate and other drugs.
Some drugs were prescribed by a local pediatrician but required court approval was never sought, according to the lawsuit.
In 1999, the comatose girl was taken to Santa Barbara Hospital, where she was found to have brain and liver damage.
The lawsuit, alleging negligence, said some of the five social workers on the case failed to make legally required visits to the home. None were made between April and October 1998, according to a claims board document.
Harms was convicted of shoplifting in Santa Maria in 1998 and her foster license was revoked the next year, the lawsuit said.
Harms, the pediatrician and pharmacies previously agreed to settle their parts of the lawsuit for $3.45 million.
posted by Linda for FightCPS.Com at 2:47 PM
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (6)
at 17:06 on July 6th, 2008
Very sad story!
JJ
at 07:23 on July 9th, 2008
O my gosh! This is the kind of thing that makes you scared to have a babysiter. Its just horrible!
at 07:31 on July 9th, 2008
They need to create the proper laws to stop this kind of thing from happening!
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at 13:00 on September 9th, 2008
sad
at 13:03 on September 9th, 2008
sad
at 02:45 on July 19th, 2009
doesn't anyone wonder why she got to adoprt her other four kids a year after this happened. doesn't anyone wonder why Santa Barbara CPS and Santa Maria CPS found her not at fault
no one knows what another person might do in a law case if it had draged on that long or was taking such a toll on family and finances
ask yourself she lost everything but still faught to keep her other kids and to this day
those other kids have NEVER been acccused of being overmedicated
she talks about her missing baby with the eyes of such sarrow
And they are all happy well adjusted kids who love their mom (2009)