Monday, April 21, 2014

Heartbroken dad: Jail DCF officials

Heartbroken dad: Jail DCF officials

The heartbroken father of Jeremiah Oliver — found dead on a highway Friday seven months after his disappearance — told the Herald yesterday he doesn’t just want to see Department of Children and Families officials fired, he thinks they deserve prison time for their failure to manage his son’s case.

Note: The news feeds are filling up with this one, so I will update this post instead of flooding you with the same story.


5 comments:

  1. This poor sweet angel was let down by so many people in his short tragic life. However, it started with the donor who hadn't seen him in two years. Now he wants to play the grieving father? Sorry dude! Too little too late! A real dad would have known what wad going on with his children. I'd bet my last buck the loser paid no support. My heart hurts for this little boy. But, IMO his "father" is no better than all the others who failed this child.

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  2. Do you have proof of this Lynn? Or are you just a feminazi man-hater shooting her gums off?

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  3. Anonymous4:26 PM

    agree sorry for your loss cps sucks

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  4. Hi Dot, He stated in one of the interviews I've read that he hadn't seen his son in two years because of a protection order. Don't get me wrong the agency screwed up big time! However, this poor baby was let down by so many. You know I'm no fan of the wreckers and their handlers. In fact I'm thrilled that people throughout the country are waking up. However, I just think the father and the family need to take responsibility for their own failures. If it wasn't for his sister, would they still be unaware he was missing? It's just incredibly sad that no one in the family checked in on these kids. It's heartbreaking. I'd love to see the day when police investigate instead of wreckers. Maybe this will stop happening if someone trained in investigations was in charge. I'd certainly trust the police over these young inexperienced workers.

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  5. She was probably using the protection order as a way to get the upper hand in a custody battle, or perhaps the father once accused her of abuse and she needed a quick and easy scapegoat.

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