Post by rectitudo on Mar 26, 2014 10:16:30 GMT -5
CBS : Judge Awards ‘Permanent’ Custody Of Justina Pelletier To State
March 25, 2014 11:55 PM
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Judge Awards ‘Permanent’ Custody Of Justina Pelletier To State
March 25, 2014 11:55 PM
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CBS Boston, Justina Pelletier, Lana Jones, Sera Congi, WBZ
BOSTON (CBS) — The judge in a year-long custody battle over a Connecticut teen has awarded permanent custody to the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families.
Judge Joseph Johnston issued the ruling Tuesday afternoon, in response to a motion, presented by the 15-year-old’s court-appointed lawyer and the lawyers for her parents, Linda and Lou Pelletier of West Hartford, Conn., which called for the parents to be awarded “conditional custody” of their daughter Justina.
It’s now up to DCF to determine if or when Pelletier should be allowed to go home or whether she can be moved to a foster home closer to her family in Conn.
The state of Massachusetts took charge of Pelletier when her parents and doctors at Children’s Hospital clashed over her diagnosis and treatment in 2013.
Pelletier allegedly suffers from mitochondrial disease — a rare and controversial disorder where the body’s cells can’t produce energy, triggering chronic fatigue and severe digestive problems. The Pelletiers brought Justina into the Children’s Hospital ER where they say doctors quickly cast aside her diagnosis, instead concluding her problems were of psychiatric origin.
When the Pelletiers objected, Children’s brought in DCF and the state took custody of Justina, essentially ruling her parents were committing child abuse by pursuing medical rather than mental health treatment.
In his ruling, Judge Johnston said Justina’s parents are “unfit” to care for her and “continue to engage in very concerning conduct.”
In a sit-down interview with WBZ-TV, Lou Pelletier says his daughter’s life is on the line and he won’t stop fighting.
“Once DCF gets custody, you fall in this deep, dark rabbit hole that you can’t get out of,” Pelletier said.
Lou and Linda Pelletier have vowed the appeal the judge’s decision.
boston.cbslocal.com/2014/03/25/judge-awards-permanent
March 25, 2014 11:55 PM
Local
Judge Awards ‘Permanent’ Custody Of Justina Pelletier To State
March 25, 2014 11:55 PM
Share on email 114
View Comments
Related Tags:
CBS Boston, Justina Pelletier, Lana Jones, Sera Congi, WBZ
BOSTON (CBS) — The judge in a year-long custody battle over a Connecticut teen has awarded permanent custody to the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families.
Judge Joseph Johnston issued the ruling Tuesday afternoon, in response to a motion, presented by the 15-year-old’s court-appointed lawyer and the lawyers for her parents, Linda and Lou Pelletier of West Hartford, Conn., which called for the parents to be awarded “conditional custody” of their daughter Justina.
It’s now up to DCF to determine if or when Pelletier should be allowed to go home or whether she can be moved to a foster home closer to her family in Conn.
The state of Massachusetts took charge of Pelletier when her parents and doctors at Children’s Hospital clashed over her diagnosis and treatment in 2013.
Pelletier allegedly suffers from mitochondrial disease — a rare and controversial disorder where the body’s cells can’t produce energy, triggering chronic fatigue and severe digestive problems. The Pelletiers brought Justina into the Children’s Hospital ER where they say doctors quickly cast aside her diagnosis, instead concluding her problems were of psychiatric origin.
When the Pelletiers objected, Children’s brought in DCF and the state took custody of Justina, essentially ruling her parents were committing child abuse by pursuing medical rather than mental health treatment.
In his ruling, Judge Johnston said Justina’s parents are “unfit” to care for her and “continue to engage in very concerning conduct.”
In a sit-down interview with WBZ-TV, Lou Pelletier says his daughter’s life is on the line and he won’t stop fighting.
“Once DCF gets custody, you fall in this deep, dark rabbit hole that you can’t get out of,” Pelletier said.
Lou and Linda Pelletier have vowed the appeal the judge’s decision.
boston.cbslocal.com/2014/03/25/judge-awards-permanent