Judge says alleged sexual abuse of two children is
'most disturbing evidence' he has seen in 20 years
The children’s foster parents do not want them to be reunited with their
biological parents.
THE
ALLEGED SEXUAL abuse and brutal treatment of two children, both under the age
of 10, was “the most disturbing evidence I have read in 20 years on the bench”,
High Court President Justice Peter Kelly said today.
He made the remarks during an
application to have the children made wards of court by a couple who had
fostered them for four years and who want to stop them being reunited with
their biological parents.
After a District Court hearing for a
care order relating to the children collapsed after 29 days of evidence, the
Child and Family Agency (CFA) has been promoting their reunification with their
natural parents.
They have remained in the care of their
foster parents with overnight access to their biological parents over the last
two months and cannot be identified by order of the court.
Judge Kelly was told in the High Court
today that the CFA had carried out “an extraordinarily detailed risk assessment
study” before supporting family reunification. The children were to have been
reunited with their natural parents next Tuesday.
He said that day of reunification would
not now take place as he was of the opinion the status quo should be maintained
until another judge of the High Court had fully heard and decided on the wards
of court application.
He adjourned the matter until 8
September and said it would be dealt with by the vacation duty judge of the
day. He did not believe it would be in any way detrimental to the children not
to rejoin their natural parents before that date.
‘Very detrimental’
Judge Kelly said the children, on the
evidence he had read, would be going back into a situation that would be very
detrimental to them. He had concerns with regard to a suggestion that the
natural parents have overnight access to the children.
The judge said the court had seen
affidavits and reports alleging sexual abuse and cruelty of the children
involving a family relative. He was told that Pol O’Murchu, the solicitor for
the foster parents, would be opposed to any overnight access by the natural
parents to the children.
“The question of overnight access fills
me with considerable concern and those concerns would want to be allayed very
powerfully in order for overnight access to be allowed,” Kelly said.
He said that, in circumstances which he
found to be very strange, a District Court hearing that had lasted for 29 days
had been told that the application regarding the children’s future had been
withdrawn.
He said the District Court judge had
not been given any opportunity to make an order regarding the welfare of the
children.
Kelly said considerable work had been
done by the CFA towards reunification of the family unit but the evidence he
had read was truly disturbing and caused him very great concern, particularly in
relation to overnight access prior to further order of the High Court.
He said if any plan was being made to grant
overnight access between the children and their natural parents the court
wished to be told about it first. He had no objection to day-time access in a
supervised situation and appointed a guardian ad litem in the interests of the
children.
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