Eleven adopted and foster children forced to sleep in cages
by their adoptive parents have reached a $1.2 ($NZ2) million
settlement with the Ohio county where they once lived.
Lawyers for the children contended that Huron County
children's services workers should have discovered what was
before they did and removed the children.
"There were red flags that should have had the county in
their sooner," said attorney Jack Landskroner.
Instead of filing a lawsuit, attorneys for the children
negotiated with the county on the settlement, announced on
Wednesday.
The children suffered from problems such as fetal alcohol
syndrome and ranged in age from 1 to 14 when authorities
removed them from their Norwalk home in 2005.
Their adoptive parents, Michael and Sharen Gravelle, are
serving two-year prison terms for abusing some of the
children.
The county has denied blame and said the social workers did
nothing improper.
A message seeking comment was left Wednesday with the
children's services agency.
County officials, Landskroner said, decided it would be
better to settle with the children than spending money
fighting a lawsuit in court.
A trustee who will oversee the settlement will determine how
much money each child will receive while courts will help
determine when they receive the money. Two of the oldest
children filed a separate a lawsuit last year against the
Gravelles and caseworkers who arranged the adoptions.
The suit said the Gravelles were unfit to be parents and
should never have gotten custody of the children. Landskroner
said that all the children who were placed with foster
parents are doing well now and that the oldest is now in
college.
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