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Home Brighton

Brighton girl, 4, must stay with adoptive parents in ‘profoundly concerning’ case

by Frank le Duc
Wednesday 12 Apr, 2017 at 7:42PM
A A
17
Boy, 17, given seven-year sentence for machete attack

A four-year-old girl from Brighton must stay with her adoptive parents, the most senior family court judge in the country has ruled.

Her father is raising her three siblings but Brighton and Hove City Council put his youngest child – referred to as “W” for legal reasons – up for adoption. The children’s mother had mental health problems and was unable to care for them.

A High Court judge, Alison Russell, ruled that the girl should be returned to her “devoted” father almost two years ago.

Ms Justice Russell criticised the council, four social workers and the girl’s legal guardian in what was described in court as a “tragic” case.

But the adoptive parents – referred to as “Mr and Mrs A” – appealed and Sir James Munby, president of the Family Division of the High Court, supported their case.

He described the girl’s father as “exceptional” and said: “The father comes over as an impressive individual and a highly capable and emotionally attuned parent. He is intelligent, articulate and insightful.

“He has proved to be resilient, resourceful and adaptable. He has risen to the challenge, parenting his children while facing a significant number of obstacles, not least the loss of W, the end of his relationship with the mother of his children, the highly negative attitude of the local authority and the near continuous proceedings since the end of 2012 – all matters of which he spoke movingly.

“He has exceeded the expectations of the professionals.”

Sir James Munby

Sir James echoed earlier criticisms of the council and its social workers who, among other things, inexcusably hounded the girl’s father from his job. He also criticised two of his fellow judges for their handling of earlier hearings in the protracted case.

The judge removed the girl’s legal guardian, Richard Madge, from the case, describing his position as untenable.

But he said that legal proceedings had gone on for so long that the girl was settled with her adoptive parents who were also praised.

Sir James said: “There are ‘considerably’ more risks and uncertainties in moving W from Mr and Mrs A than in leaving her where she is.

“There was a clear consensus among all the experts that, if W is to remain with Mr and Mrs A, it is in her best interests that there should be increased contact leading to direct contact with her birth family as soon as is practical.

“There was general agreement that W’s long-term psychological wellbeing – her ability to understand her status as an adopted person and to put her particular ‘narrative’ in context – would be best safeguarded if contact with her birth family took place sooner rather than later.”

Sir James also said: “This is a very complex and worrying case. It is, I think, by some margin the most difficult and concerning case of its type I have ever been involved in.

“This litigation has been proceeding for an unusually long time. To say that it has proceeded in an unsatisfactory manner would be understatement on a grand scale.

Ms Justice Russell

“The simple fact, which demands explicit acknowledgment, is that the system has failed W, her siblings, her father and mother and Mr and Mrs A, on a scale which although, happily, unique in my experience – no comfort, of course, to those involved – must be profoundly concerning to anyone and everyone involved in the family justice system.

“The delay for W has been deplorable. And the terrible reality, and there can be no shrinking from this, is that this delay – I am referring here to the delay down to the hearing before me, not to the very regrettable further delay, for which I apologise, since I reserved judgment – has, in the event, been determinative of the outcome; an outcome which might perhaps (I emphasis, might) have been different had the case been resolved sooner.

“The case is complex. The history is both complex and disturbing.”

The judge criticised Brighton and Hove City Council’s conduct and the way that social workers behaved, highlighting “the local authority’s cavalier approach to the facts”.

They had infected earlier – crucial – hearings with false evidence polluted by insinuation and he said: “How a careful and conscientious local authority could have acted in this way is beyond me.”

The judge added: “There is one other aspect of this to which I must draw attention. In February 2015 the local authority made certain disclosures to the father’s employer.

“The disclosure was inaccurate and misleading. It led to him losing his job.

“The local authority’s failure to comply with the law was shocking.


“The local authority has apologised and said that it did not intend the father to lose his job. This no doubt is true but quite beside the point.

“What happened was the all too foreseeable, indeed probably the little short of inevitable, consequence of the local authority’s actions.

“And, as the local authority well knew, this was a father who was bringing up three children.”

In a previous hearing Ms Justice Russell had criticised social workers for making unsubstantiated allegations about the girl’s father and for spouting psychobabble.

The council has previously apologised for its conduct, promised to learn lessons and said it always tried to work in the best interests of the child.

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Comments 17

  1. Valp says:
    9 years ago

    How much is all that mindbending blundering going to cost BHCC when the father sues for damages?

    Why are socialworkers so often off their trollies or plain negligent?

    Reply
  2. karen young says:
    9 years ago

    psychobabble Lol….just about sums up social workers!

    Reply
  3. Eve says:
    9 years ago

    Totally agree with you Karen some social workers need to listen to real people parents not to do everything from a text book yet again got it so wrong will they ever learn.

    Reply
  4. Nick pannett says:
    9 years ago

    Seems that so many social workers can’t see the wood for the trees

    Reply
  5. Nick pannett says:
    9 years ago

    And now we learn that some are downright evil!

    Reply
  6. Pat Goode says:
    9 years ago

    Typical ,these bloody do good social workers haven,t a clue ,this poor family have lost a child through their bungling ,yet again ,their heads should rolk

    Reply
  7. Vlad says:
    9 years ago

    And what if the child had gone home and died? No doubt that would be the social workers fault too

    Reply
  8. Anita, SW13 says:
    9 years ago

    Blindingly obvious story is this has gone on for FOUR YEARS. Lots of greedy lawyers done very well out of this methinks.

    Reply
  9. jim says:
    9 years ago

    So to sumarise the Judge says BHCC Social Services are liars and the Council(LA) sweep it under the carpet… 4 Social Workers ? so not like a bad apple it’s a barrel of rotten apples. Nothing I did not know having had my claims of bias and failure to protect upheld,,,gues what LA igniored the findings…

    Reply
    • John robson says:
      9 years ago

      Very true my friend. He criticised them all and then done nothing. Anyone surprised ?

      Reply
  10. John robson says:
    9 years ago

    Don’t get how a loving Dad can’t have his child back? Judge said social workers lied and mislead judges in previous hearing so can anyone enlighten me why they have not been charged with perjury?
    Time and again we show what these disgraceful social workers do. Prove what they have done and nothing happens. Flog them for mentally abusing children

    Reply
  11. Jean kane says:
    9 years ago

    It’s so typical – social workers have very little experience in real world issues – and they are just taking instead of helping people keep their kids – shame they are not targeted on successful family outcome helping !!!

    Reply
  12. Charlie Dimock says:
    9 years ago

    The Courts system is mind numbingly oblivious to families and the need to keep siblings together. I foresee only more damage can be done by not allowing her to go back to her father. Why can’t the adoptive parents be the ones with visiting rights ?

    Reply
  13. Debbie boxley says:
    9 years ago

    This dad should have his child home. Too many social workers get it wrong and ots the children and families that duffer unbelievable pain. These social workers involved should be on prison for lying. What about the long term affect of the girl not being with her birth family? Growing up in a false life, when she could of been at home with her dad and siblings. The whole corrupt system social workers, guardians psychologists, family court is not for for purpose. They do more harm than any good. Makes me so angry.

    Reply
  14. Against says:
    8 years ago

    Unbelievable case.How many more to come,how many children already suffered.The girl will be damaged for the rest of her life when she will give birth herself.The pain of knowing that you was taken away from loving family will be unbearable.Although the judges are too old now to face her when she comes with questions.

    Reply
  15. Rennie says:
    8 years ago

    Perhaps she could have been slowly transitioned back to her birth family so that she is not abruptly taken from probably the only home she knows, but that over time this could be done. I have also known some very good social workers. So sad this case was so corrupt.

    Reply
  16. Alan says:
    6 years ago

    I have experienced this court administration mounting a complete fake court hearing – no Judges or Justices Clerk involved, just a ‘private’ hearing organised by a member of the administration team which then issued official Final Court Orders.
    The root of this problem is the little known fact that Family Lawyers take over £1.6 Billion each year in the UK (according to industry market research.) Lawyers cannot justify collecting up to £100,000 on a single case if they can’t ‘arrange’ a satisfactory result. Lawyers are never going to give up that sort of income stream just because it means the children are being abused.

    Reply

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