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View Full Version : Illness 'got out of hand,' lawyer says



sws4420
08-09-2005, 06:15 PM
Deborah Robinson didn't call a doctor, prosecutors said yesterday, when her daughter botched an attempt to pierce her own belly button and a life-threatening infection set in. She didn't call one when the girl, in excruciating pain, took to the living room couch three weeks ago and basically stopped eating or moving, prosecutors said. And she didn't call when her daughter lost control of her bowels; instead, prosecutors say, Robinson put her 13-year-old in diapers.

Robinson told a court psychologist yesterday that she was afraid that a doctor would sexually abuse her daughter. The 38-year-old Hyde Park resident, charged Saturday with child neglect after paramedics found her daughter emaciated and near death last week, was ordered held without bail yesterday until a more complete psychiatric evaluation is conducted to determine whether she is competent to stand trial.

West Roxbury District Court Judge Robert N. Tochka ordered the evaluation after the court psychologist testified that Robinson was showing signs of mental illness, including paranoia.

Robinson's daughter, meanwhile, underwent another in a series of surgeries at Boston Medical Center to stem the infection and treat numerous abscesses in her abdomen, prosecutor David Deakin said. She remained in critical condition. The Globe is withholding the girl's name to protect her privacy.

Robinson listened attentively but with little emotion as Deakin described what state social service officials have called one of the most shocking cases of neglect in years.

Last week, paramedics found her daughter, a tall girl wasted away to about 75 pounds, lying on the living room couch wearing a diaper, despondent, and with no detectable blood pressure. Doctors diagnosed her with sepsis, a bloodstream infection that would have caused ''incredible pain" within 24 hours of onset. Deakin said she could have been sick for as long as four weeks.

Police searched the family's Garfield Avenue townhouse and found more diapers that Robinson said she bought for her daughter to wear and to soak up fluids oozing from her belly, Deakin said. Robinson told police that she was doing the best she could to take care of the girl at home. ''She indicated she doesn't believe in doctors," Deakin said.

Robinson's court-appointed lawyer said she is a single mother with no job and no health insurance who called paramedics to her townhouse when her daughter's illness ''got out of hand."

''She loves her daughter and tries to do the very best she can," lawyer William Concannon said.

The court psychologist, who spoke with Robinson and some of her family members before yesterday's arraignment, told the judge that Robinson has a history of mental illness in her family, and that Robinson had lately become isolated and distrustful. Family members said she had recently begun talking to herself and not making sense.

Forensic psychologist Helene Presskreischer told the court that while Robinson ''understands the factual situation, I'm not sure she appreciates or understands the severity of the situation."

Robinson was arrested Saturday and charged with wantonly and recklessly permitting substantial bodily injury to a child under 14, a felony that carries a maximum sentence of five years in state prison. She was also charged with child endangerment, a misdemeanor with a maximum sentence of 2 1/2 years in county jail.

Paramedics were called shortly before 3 a.m. last Wednesday after the girl had become unresponsive. They notified police and the state Department of Social Services, which launched investigations after doctors determined the girl's condition was caused by delayed medical care. DSS took custody of the girl, a student at William Barton Rogers Middle School in Hyde Park, and placed Robinson's other child, a 15-year-old boy, with relatives.

''We have to make medical decisions, because obviously the mom can't," DSS spokeswoman Denise Monteiro said yesterday.

Robinson will undergo an evaluation at Caritas Carney Hospital in Dorchester and is scheduled to return to court Aug. 26 for a status hearing and possible bail hearing.

Several family members attended yesterday's court proceeding, some dabbing their eyes, others looking forlorn, resting their head in their hands. Robinson stood a few feet away in a partially glass-enclosed defendants' bay, her hands clasped in front of her as the charges were read.

A family friend, who relatives said would speak on their behalf, told reporters later that Robinson was a good, protective mother.

''She walks her kids to school and picks them up every day," said Pamela Gray, a friend and neighbor who said she has known Robinson for nine years. ''She was really involved."

Gray said that without income or insurance, Robinson has been struggling recently. ''She's been going through a lot," Gray said.


http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2005/08/09/illness_got_out_of_hand_lawyer_says?mode=PF

trojanmiro
08-09-2005, 07:36 PM
here my honest opinion. you need a license to do anything in this world. even a license for a dog. sterilize every human at birth. after a psych exam, and parenting classes, passing both, you get a license to reproduce and become unsterilized.

Crystal
08-10-2005, 01:54 PM
First off the kid shouldnt' have been piercing her own belly button. I hope this taught her a lesson as to be a good kid. She still shouldn't have had to been dealing with it for this long, but basically it was her own fault.

Secondly, if the family members knew that this mother had a mental illness, why didnt' they stop by and see how she was doing or see the kids? Why didn't the 15 year old tell someone that his sister was sitting on the couch shitting herself and extremely ill?

As for making every parent take some sort of test to have kids, I think that ridiculous. Some people don't act like there going to kill there kids, or abuse there kids, or neglect there kids, so what would a test prove? That they were sane when they gave birth? So after they have the kids and then become bad parents, we take there license away? Isn't that basically what we do now? Isn't that was social services is for? Maybe we need more intelligent people to work for social services, because there are alot of abused kids out there, whose parents are under supervision, and shit still happens to the kids.

Bob
08-10-2005, 02:33 PM
Mike no offense but I think that's the stupidest thing that ever came out of your keyboard. That defies everything about a democracy. People get pissed off if you even mention the fact that you want to nix smoking in your car. You think people are going to let them sterilize you then prove yourself. What about the concept of innocent until proven guilty. I'm sorry but that was just retarded. I hope that was the xxx talking.

Bob
08-10-2005, 02:47 PM
Don't get me wrong, I'm not defending this lady for her actions. There should be some course of action but there is no way to track these things to determine what will happen in the future. We are turning into a society that wants to pass laws for each individual problem we encounter to resolve it from happening again. It'll come back and bit us in the ass soon enough, you'll see.

And as far as what would I suggest: Nothing. Shit happens.

trojanmiro
08-10-2005, 09:48 PM
personally i thik too many retards or unfit parents have kids. scale down the gene pool and crime would prolly drop. overpopulation of our planet is a serious situation enough on its own. im all for it.