As the previous paper in this series noted, of the
roughly 2.7 million reports alleging child abuse every year, about two-thirds
typically are false.
But
to a child saver, there is virtually no such thing as a false allegation of
child abuse. False reports are labeled "unfounded" or
"unsubstantiated" but child savers insist that's not the same thing
as false. They offer several reasons why, in all likelihood, any parent accused
of child abuse must be guilty. Such arguments are a classic example of a
half-truth. They are, quite literally, half of the truth.
Of
course, America's stumbling, bumbling child-saving bureaucracy is going to
mislabel some real cases of abuse -- some guilty families will be let off the
hook after an investigation. But that same bureaucracy repeatedly labels
innocent families guilty.
This question was examined by a major federal study,
commonly known as the second National Incidence Study or NIS2. This study
second-guessed child protective workers, re-checking records to see if they had
reached the right conclusion. The researchers found that protective workers
were at least twice as likely and perhaps as much as six times more likely to
wrongly label an innocent family guilty as they were to wrongly label a guilty
family innocent.[1] Thus, not only are about two-thirds of all allegations false,
chances are that figure is an underestimate.
Yet
child savers insist that false reports are not really false. These are their
reasons, and why those arguments don't wash:
· The case was labeled unfounded because
the worker couldn't "prove" guilt. In fact, workers don't have to
prove guilt. There is no trial, no judge, no jury. A worker can label a parent
guilty and place his or her name in a state central register based entirely on
her own suspicions.
The real problem is the reverse: innocent people whose
cases have been wrongly "substantiated." In half the states, workers
need only believe it is slightly more likely than not that maltreatment
occurred to declare the case “substantiated.”[2] In the other half, the
standard is even lower: Typically, in these states, a worker can label a case
"substantiated" if she thinks she has "some credible
evidence" of maltreatment, even if there is more evidence of innocence. In
a case brought by a member of the NCCPR Board of Directors, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled in 1994 that "the 'some
credible evidence' standard results in many individuals being placed [in the
Central Register] who do not belong there."[3] It is grossly misleading for child savers to label such
cases as "confirmed" or "substantiated."
· The parents are guilty but the law
doesn't define what they did as child abuse. State laws are so broad that
virtually anything a parent does or does not do can be labeled abuse or
neglect, if a worker sees fit. Indeed, as the previous paper explains, the
largest single category of "substantiated" maltreatment is
"neglect," a category filled with cases in which parents have been
accused of maltreatment solely because they are poor.
· The investigator had so many cases that
she couldn't investigate long enough to uncover abuse or she was not trained
well enough to detect it. The same worker may miss evidence showing that a
parent is innocent for the same reasons.
· The parents are guilty but the system
has no help to offer, so the case was labeled unfounded. On the other hand,
often the system will provide help for any kind of family problem only if the
family is accused of child abuse. Therefore, workers sometimes deliberately
mislabel innocent parents guilty in order to get them help with other problems.
In addition, most states lump together cases in which
there has been actual maltreatment with cases where the worker thinks something
just might happen in the future. These so-called "at risk" cases may
make up half or more of the 40 percent of all allegations that are "substantiated."[4] And finally, the enormous pressure on workers has to be
considered. If they label a case false and harm comes to a child, they face
loss of their jobs, the enmity of the press and the public, and perhaps even
criminal charges. If they wrongly label parents guilty, even if that leads to
needless foster care placement and all the harm that can cause for a child, the
worker suffers no penalty. So workers practice "defensive social
work" and wrongly accuse innocent parents.
For
all of these reasons it is clear that of the 2.7 million reports alleging child
abuse every year, a minimum of about two-thirds are false -- not
"unfounded," not "unsubstantiated" -- just plain false.
1. Study Findings: Study of National Incidence
and Prevalence of Child Abuse and Neglect: 1988
(Washington: U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, National Center on Child
Abuse and Neglect, 1988), Chapter 6, Page 5. Back to Text.
2. U.S. Dept. of
Health and Human Services, Administration on Children, Youth and Families.
Child Maltreatment 2001 (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office,
2001). See Appendix D, also available online.
3. Valmonte v. Bane, 18 F.3d 992 (2nd Cir. 1994).
Back to Text.
4. For example, unlike most states, Kansas does not lump
these categories together. Therefore, in Kansas, only 11 percent of all reports
are substantiated. (Office of the Legislative Post Auditor, Performance
Audit Report, 1990, p.6). Back to Text.