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State of NH settles wrongful death lawsuit with Elijah Lewis' father
State of NH settles wrongful death lawsuit with Elijah Lewis' father

Yahoo

time23-05-2025

  • Yahoo

State of NH settles wrongful death lawsuit with Elijah Lewis' father

The state of New Hampshire has reached a settlement with the family of Elijah Lewis Lewis was killed by his mother and found dead in a Massachusetts park in 2021. The boy's father filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the state, alleging that DCFY failed to act when the boy's safety was called into question. Timothy Lewis claimed in the lawsuit that New Hampshire's Division for Children, Youth and Families was negligent and failed to keep his son safe while the boy lived with his mother, Dauphinais. The settlement reached is worth 2.25 million dollars, the same amount that the Granite State settled with the mother of Harmony Montgomery. Under the terms of the settlement, the state doesn't have to admit any wrongdoing or unlawful conduct. Elijah Lewis' mother pleaded guilty and is serving more than 50 years to life in prison. Crews searched for the boy before finding his body several miles away in a shallow grave in a state park in Abington, Massachusetts. His death was ruled a homicide. Crews searched for the boy before finding his body several miles away in a shallow grave in a state park in Abington, Massachusetts. His death was ruled a homicide. An autopsy later determined the boy died of 'violence and neglect, including facial and scalp injuries, acute fentanyl intoxication, malnourishment and pressure ulcers.' Download the FREE Boston 25 News app for breaking news alerts. Follow Boston 25 News on Facebook and Twitter. | Watch Boston 25 News NOW

New Hampshire's Bad Parenting Bill Is a Nightmare
New Hampshire's Bad Parenting Bill Is a Nightmare

Yahoo

time10-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

New Hampshire's Bad Parenting Bill Is a Nightmare

The New Hampshire legislature is considering a parenting bill that would make it easier for the government to investigate parents for child abuse or neglect. It accomplishes this by removing the word "safety" from the legal definition of child abuse and replacing it with "physical, emotional or psychological welfare." That could be almost anything, of course. "I happen to be a tax-and-spend liberal," Richard Wexler, executive director of the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform, tells Reason. "But this bill provides not one iota of additional help. It simply turns the [Division for Children, Youth and Families] into the 'well-being' police." House Bill 553 has 14 sponsors from across the political spectrum. State Rep. Alicia Gregg (D–Hillsborough), who filed the bill, told the New Hampshire Bulletin that she believes the state needs an "updated definition of what child abuse and endangerment looks like." She has worked with domestic abuse victims and hopes the bill will allow the state to set aside its "hesitancy to step in" and intervene "before we have a crisis." But New Hampshire already has "robust and effective" laws to protect children, says Will Estrada, senior counsel at the Home School Legal Defense Association. In fact, New Hampshire removes children from their families at a rate nearly double the national average, says Wexler. Overall, 37 percent of American children will be investigated by child protective services sometime before age 18. For black kids, that number is 53 percent. The proposed law does contain some good provisions for the children who are removed from their families, making sure there are "frequent" reviews of their case, and that children are returned home as soon as possible in cases of overreach. But its vagueness would allow state intervention not only when a child is in imminent danger—which most of us would want and is already the case—but whenever there is a "risk to a child's psychological or emotional well-being…or mental health." The bill also stipulates that "exposure of a child to verbal abuse, or psychological maltreatment directed at the child, a sibling, the other parent or significant other or another person living in the home" could also impair a child's well-being, opening the door to investigating parents who fight or shout at one of the kids. Finally, the law also comes down hard on "adultification," a new term for making a child take on some of the responsibilities an adult should presumably be doing for them. This happens in incredibly dysfunctional families as well as in incredibly functional ones—say, when a child of immigrants proudly translates for their parents at the doctor's office or the auto repair shop. Looking back on any tragedy, there's always the feeling that someone ought to have intervened sooner. But inviting the state to intervene in many, many more cases—and perpetually expanding the definition of abuse—will cause more problems than it solves. The post New Hampshire's Bad Parenting Bill Is a Nightmare appeared first on

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