Current:Home > Stocks'We Were Once a Family' exposes ills of U.S. child welfare system -MacroWatch
'We Were Once a Family' exposes ills of U.S. child welfare system
View
Date:2025-04-15 00:38:20
The saga of the Hart family murder-suicide slammed the zeitgeist in 2018 with its brutal combination of cruelty, violence and social media narcissism.
In late March of 2018, Jennifer Hart and her wife Sarah drove their family off a cliff. Seated in the back seat of their SUV were Ciera, Abigail, Jeremiah, Devonte, Hannah and Markis — all between 12 and 19 years old. Jennifer and Sarah were white, all of the children were adopted from Black or blended families.
In her new book We Were Once a Family, journalist Roxanna Asgarian's tenacious and vulnerable reporting reveals the foundation of this intensely disturbing story — a broken child welfare system whose singular accomplishment has been the uniformity by which its bureaucracy has ruined lives across state lines.
The adoptions by the Harts moved six children out of foster care in Texas to a new home in Minneapolis. What investigators discovered during the coroner's inquest was a fatal paradox — the Hart home environment was abusive, the children malnourished and used as props for rosy social media posts on Facebook. Numerous witnesses reported disturbing incidents of abuse. Too often, when the couple was reported to child welfare officials, the Harts would leave the jurisdiction or pull the children out of school.
Ciera, Devonte and Jeremiah were siblings whose mother lost custody of them due to substance abuse. They were placed with their aunt, but the family arrangement was terminated when a case worker discovered the children's mother was their babysitter. As a result the children were removed from their family and eventually adopted by Sarah and Jennifer. Siblings Abigail, Hannah and Markis were adopted by the Harts in 2006. Their birth mother was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder and lost custody of the children when medical personnel reported her to child services for alleged insufficient attention to their medical needs.
Asgarian's reporting spares no one involved in the tragedy — including herself. Her investigation elucidates the complex family relationships, good and bad decision making, and Kafka-esque child protective corporate state that paved the road to the Hart's perdition. We learn in the book's preface about Asgarian's own unstable childhood, and deeply felt personal connection to the story. Asgarian declares at the outset she is not a passive observer of injustice, and catalogs for the reader places where she influenced aspects of the story.
The book's transparency is our benefit and an informed invitation to step into the nature of family abuse. It's not easy reading. But Asgarian's personalized fact finding provides essential context for understanding what happened, the behavior of the families involved — and the impact of child removal on birth mothers, their children, and adoptive families equally. Her reporting unpacks what the phrase "best interest of the child" really means in a legal environment focused on speed adoption.
The book highlights the Adoption and Safe Families Act whose purpose was expediting removal of children from unsafe homes and placement with adoptive families. The law sets a timeline the moment a child welfare case is initiated and requires termination of parental rights if a child has been in foster care for 15 of the last 24 months. Proponents of the law argued their reform of the child welfare system safeguards children's rights, and that keeping biological families together often sacrifices children's interests for the sake of parental rights.
But Asgarian notes that the "ASFA created a wave of more than two million children whose parents' rights were terminated. Black children are 2.4 times more likely to have their parents rights terminated than are white children." In Texas, where the Hart children were born, "Black children were almost twice as likely as white children to be reported as victims of child abuse. They were also removed from their families at a higher rate, spent longer in substitute care, and less likely to be reunited with their families," she writes.
The Texas adoption pipeline was also a revenue generator. ASFA came with Federal fee incentives paid to states to increase the number of completed adoptions, the book details. By 2015 Texas received 15% of the total $84 million Federal fee budget. Asgarian reports the majority of Texas fee income was allocated to non-adoption related expenses. Meanwhile, she writes, a substantial portion of Jennifer and Sarah's income derived from fees associated with their children's adoption. None of this financial assistance sustained a safe home environment for their children.
The fate of the Hart children is a horrible clarion call. Asgarian's Klieg light reporting, in the muckraking tradition of Martha Gellhorn and Lorena Hickok and with the storytelling agency of Ernestine Eckstein, compels us to listen and act.
Marcela Davison Avilés is a writer and independent producer living in Northern California.
veryGood! (66)
Related
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Jussie Smollett says he has 'to move forward' after alleged hate crime hoax
- Stuck NASA astronauts welcome SpaceX capsule that’ll bring them home next year
- Red Sox honor radio voice Joe Castiglione who is retiring after 42 years
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Why Lionel Messi did Iron Man celebration after scoring in Inter Miami-Charlotte FC game
- Yankees' Anthony Rizzo fractures fingers in season's penultimate game
- Alabama football wants shot at Texas after handling Georgia: 'We're the top team.'
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Could a doping probe strip Salt Lake City of the 2034 Olympics? The IOC president says it’s unlikely
Ranking
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- An asteroid known as a 'mini-moon' will join Earth's orbit for 2 months starting Sunday
- Indigenous Group Asks SEC to Scrutinize Fracking Companies Operating in Argentina
- Rashee Rice's injury opens the door for Travis Kelce, Xavier Worthy
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- 3 easy mistakes can be deadly after a hurricane: What to know
- DirecTV will buy rival Dish to create massive pay-TV company after yearslong pursuit
- Do food dyes make ADHD worse? Why some studies' findings spur food coloring bans
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
Trump lists his grievances in a Wisconsin speech intended to link Harris to illegal immigration
Why Lionel Messi did Iron Man celebration after scoring in Inter Miami-Charlotte FC game
Attorneys for NYC Mayor Eric Adams seek dismissal of bribery charge brought by ‘zealous prosecutors’
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
Week 4 fantasy football rankings: PPR, half-PPR and standard leagues
Handing out MLB's 2024 awards: Shohei Ohtani, Aaron Judge earn MVPs for all-time seasons
The final day for the Oakland Athletics arrives ahead of next season’s move away from the Bay