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Katie A. v. Bonta: case summary, news updates, court documents and more resources on this case
Examples of plaintiffs from Katie A. v. Bonta
“Charlie” Is Still Waiting
The boy we call Charlie had been abused for years by his mother,
who had a drug addiction and who often left him in the care of
other addicts for days at a time. His grandmother, Judy Lowe, rescued
him and became Charlie’s legal guardian, but the experience
left him with severe emotional disorders. By the time he was 6
years old, Ms. Lowe, could no longer care for him. She made the “heartbreaking
decision” to send him to foster care.
For the next year, Charlie bounced back and forth between a series
of foster homes and Ms. Lowe’s, ending up in Metropolitan
State Hospital, which even state officials describe as “the
end of the line.” After two more years, a court-appointed
expert recommended his placement in a therapeutic
foster home with wraparound services. But it never happened. Instead, for the past
five years, Charlie has been shunted from one residential placement
to another, each more restrictive, expensive and abusive than the
last, and finally back to Metropolitan.
“I now believe,” Ms. Lowe says in a declaration
for the Katie A. plaintiffs, “that therapeutic
foster care and wraparound could have saved Charlie from a lost childhood
scarred by bad experiences and rejection.” Ms. Lowe lives
in San Bernardino and is willing to tell Charlie’s story
(but not his real name) to media; contact Melinda Bird
to arrange
an interview at (213) 427-8757 x 3006 or
melinda@pai-ca.org.
How Wraparound Changed Casey’s Life--And His Family’s
Casey has always enjoyed a close relationship with his mother,
Carol, and younger sister, Annie. But his social and behavioral
problems isolated them from friends and other branches of the family.
By the time Casey was 15, Annie was so frightened of her brother’s
behavior that she suffered from chronic stomachaches and Carol
was getting written up at work for excessive absenteeism. Casey’s
therapist and teacher both told Carol that her only alternative
was to have her son placed in residential treatment. Then the principal
of Casey’s school told Carol about a new program called Wraparound
Sacramento that might be worth a try.
Wraparound staff joined with Casey, Carol, Annie and Casey’s
mental health social worker to create a Child and Family Team.
The team met once a week in the family’s home to acknowledge
each member’s strengths, address concerns, identify goals
and devise action plans. Intense staff support during the first
months enabled Carol to sleep at night, get back on track at work
and get Casey in a school program better suited to him. With coaching
from staff, Casey began being able to solve problems, his hygiene
and social skills improved, and his mother learned how to give
consequences without power struggles. Over time, other key people
joined the team, including some at Casey’s school.
Casey’s, Annie’s and Carol’s relationship with
each other has been transformed by learning to focus on each others’ strengths. “It
took me a long time to warm up to the process,” says Carol, “but
staff was patient and encouraging. The first meeting drove me crazy
because they wouldn’t let me complain and be negative. I
didn’t see how anything else could help, but the strength-based
stuff helped the most. We feel safer and more normal now, not worried
or scared all the time.” Casey says that without Wraparound
Sacramento he would be “either locked up in a hospital or
juvenile hall.” Instead, two years after graduating from
wraparound, Casey attends a local community college, his mother
has bought a home and is active on county task forces related to
mental health, and Annie proudly introduces her friends to her
big brother.
A Therapeutic Foster Parent Needs Support Too
Dianne Magnatta received some training by Humboldt County in order
to be approved for a therapeutic foster care license, but found
it inadequate “to meet the high-level special needs of the
foster children who have lived with me.” On her own she attended
trainings focused on techniques for working with children with
attachment disorder, which she found “invaluable because
they have given me practical ways of managing the behaviors that
are typical of children who have grown up without developing health
attachments.” She also received training in wraparound.
Josh came to live with Ms. Magnatta when he was 7. She was his
ninth foster placement. Three years later, she learned that wraparound
would be available. For a year and a half, Josh received wraparound
services, with a therapeutic behavioral assistant, an educational
aide and an occupational therapist. The team held weekly meetings
and Ms. Magnatta had respite time to attend workshops and training. “The
wraparound services provided to Josh gave me the energy to keep
going,” she said. But then wraparound ended and the boy’s
behavior “began to deteriorate.” When Josh’s
plan became outdated, Ms. Magnatta tried to prepare a new one “to
jumpstart the process,” but couldn’t get the county
agency to sign off in it. “Without services or support, I
felt I could not take care of Josh,” and he was placed with
a male foster parent. “He is not doing well at all,” Ms.
Magnatta reported; “it would not surprise me if Josh ended
up in an institutionalized setting some time soon. It makes no
sense that we let our children hit rock bottom,” she added,
before intervening with appropriate care.
Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
1101 15th Street, NW, Suite
1212
Washington, DC 20005
Phone: 202-467-5730
Fax: 202-223-0409
Email: webmaster at bazelon.org
Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
1101 15th Street, NW, Suite
1212
Washington, DC 20005