One December night in 2011, Colyssa Stapleton left her 7-month-old daughter, Nevaeh, upstairs in her Brooklyn apartment building while she went downstairs to receive a delivery of baby formula. For Colyssa, the consequences were severe. She was accused of endangering the welfare of a child, and as a result, she lost custody of Nevaeh for 6 months. Lawyers say Colyssa’s case is just one example of a troubling and longstanding phenomenon: the power of Children’s Services to take children from their parents on the grounds that the child’s safety is at risk, even with scant evidence. Lawyers working on these cases say the removals punish parents who have few resources. Their clients are predominantly poor black and Hispanic women, they say, and the criminalization of their parenting choices has led some to nickname the practice: Jane Crow. After a year and a variety of parenting classes, Colyssa’s criminal charges were functionally dismissed, and she was able to regain full custody of Nevaeh. But she says she’s aware of what she lost. “She didn’t take her first steps around me, so I missed that. Her first tooth, I didn’t get to see that,” Colyssa told @nytimes. “I don’t think anybody should be robbed of those things unless they really deserved it.” @edu_bayer took this photo of Colyssa getting her family ready for church on a Sunday morning in May. Visit the link in our profile to read more.

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ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月25日 06時05分


One December night in 2011, Colyssa Stapleton left her 7-month-old daughter, Nevaeh, upstairs in her Brooklyn apartment building while she went downstairs to receive a delivery of baby formula. For Colyssa, the consequences were severe. She was accused of endangering the welfare of a child, and as a result, she lost custody of Nevaeh for 6 months. Lawyers say Colyssa’s case is just one example of a troubling and longstanding phenomenon: the power of Children’s Services to take children from their parents on the grounds that the child’s safety is at risk, even with scant evidence. Lawyers working on these cases say the removals punish parents who have few resources. Their clients are predominantly poor black and Hispanic women, they say, and the criminalization of their parenting choices has led some to nickname the practice: Jane Crow. After a year and a variety of parenting classes, Colyssa’s criminal charges were functionally dismissed, and she was able to regain full custody of Nevaeh. But she says she’s aware of what she lost. “She didn’t take her first steps around me, so I missed that. Her first tooth, I didn’t get to see that,” Colyssa told @ニューヨーク・タイムズ. “I don’t think anybody should be robbed of those things unless they really deserved it.” @edu_bayer took this photo of Colyssa getting her family ready for church on a Sunday morning in May. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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