Texas
Lack of communication between child welfare and juvenile justice systems hurts foster kids, court monitors say
/static.texastribune.org/media/files/0622c5cc542086581f19205e4213aeb1/Bastrop%20Refuge%20JV%20TT%2019.jpg)
Join The Transient, our day by day publication that retains readers up to the mark on essentially the most important Texas information.
The dearth of communication between Texas’ baby welfare company and its juvenile justice system places foster care youngsters in danger, Texas foster care watchdogs stated in a Wednesday courtroom submitting after studying {that a} caretaker accused of exploiting youngsters at a Bastrop shelter had been beforehand fired from a state juvenile justice facility for misconduct.
The watchdogs additionally expressed concern over whether or not Texas’ Division of Household and Protecting Providers absolutely investigated allegations that the identical caretaker had trafficked youngsters earlier than and that she was courting one other sufferer’s former trafficker.
The Refuge, a foster care facility for victims of intercourse trafficking in Bastrop, has come below fireplace within the final a number of weeks after a former worker, Iesha Greene, was accused of soliciting and promoting nude images of kids in her care. The watchdogs, appointed by a federal choose to watch Texas’ long-term foster care system as a part of an 11-year-old lawsuit, are independently reviewing the scenario. Greene has not but been arrested. Makes an attempt to contact Greene for remark have been unsuccessful.
The courtroom screens stated they’re significantly involved that Greene was employed after being fired for misconduct at a Texas Juvenile Justice Division facility, as The Texas Tribune beforehand reported. The Refuge leaders didn’t find out about her historical past of misconduct as a result of they didn’t confirm her earlier employment with TJJD.
The state requires state-licensed baby care services to conduct a legal background examine on all potential staff however doesn’t require them to confirm all former employers earlier than hiring new workers.
In Wednesday’s courtroom submitting, the screens stated the truth that Greene was employed at The Refuge regardless of being beforehand fired and barred from future employment at TJJD “revealed gaps in reporting abuse, neglect, and exploitation to the Texas Register that pose a major danger to foster youngsters.”
The screens identified that there have been greater than 100 findings of abuse or extreme use of power by workers in state and county services every year between 2019 and 2021. However these findings usually are not shared in a state database, that means staff fired for abuse or neglect in that system can discover employment serving youngsters elsewhere — reminiscent of at a foster care facility.
“That is deeply regarding,” the screens wrote. “As a result of the company doesn’t report substantiated findings to the Texas Registry, a state or county juvenile justice worker who has abused a baby of their care will solely seem within the Texas Registry in the event that they had been additionally arrested or prosecuted for the abuse.”
The screens additionally stated they encountered boundaries to reviewing sure interviews associated to the occasions at The Refuge. Whereas the screens have been granted entry to a number of video interviews of kids beforehand housed on the shelter, they stated they haven’t had entry to others and plenty of of their questions stay unanswered.
Particularly, the screens stated that they had extra questions after reviewing a half-page abstract of one of many movies, which detailed an interview performed by a baby advocacy middle with one lady at The Refuge. The kid stated Greene’s boyfriend had trafficked her at the very least two years previous to the interview and that Greene was additionally a trafficker. These accusations emerged throughout a Senate committee listening to in March.
The lady stated she noticed Greene “accumulating cash from younger ladies,” in an space in Austin identified for legal exercise, in line with the abstract. The lady stated she was afraid that Greene and her boyfriend would retaliate towards her for revealing that data to investigators.
The screens stated it’s unclear how Texas’ Division of Household and Protecting Providers has responded to a few of the allegations within the interviews with The Refuge residents, or whether or not the company has absolutely examined all out there proof to emerge from them.
The screens stated DFPS responded to their request for a video of the interview saying the company couldn’t present it as a result of Bastrop County Sheriff’s Workplace had the recording. DFPS officers stated the sheriff’s workplace responded that the video “is unrelated to what occurred at The Refuge and is a part of an ongoing legal investigation,” Wednesday’s courtroom submitting stated. DPFS stated it hadn’t reviewed the footage both and couldn’t verify whether or not the Texas Rangers, who’re additionally investigating the scenario at The Refuge, had performed so.
The screens stated DFPS investigators ought to have interviewed the kid themselves to evaluate her claims that Greene’s boyfriend was a former trafficker. In addition they famous that the half-page report doesn’t say when the kid’s allegations first surfaced.
“The half-page doc fails to incorporate data associated to something [The Refuge victim] could have conveyed as to who she made her outcry to at The Refuge … and when she made the outcry,” the screens wrote. “Each are crucial for figuring out whether or not The Refuge … ought to have reported the outcry and if that’s the case, when.”
The screens say even the brief abstract of the interview reveals issues.
“Whereas regulation enforcement, moderately than DFPS, would examine the underlying allegations associated to [the victim’s] trafficker and whether or not [Greene] bought medication in Austin, [the victim] herself touched on a problem that DFPS might appropriately have investigated: whether or not data supported [the victim’s] declare that [Greene’s] boyfriend (or somebody related together with her boyfriend) was [the victim’s] trafficker and, if that’s the case, how The Refuge got here to rent somebody related to a trafficker to oversee victims of trafficking.”
Interviewing the kid or at the very least viewing the recorded interview “could be crucial to this inquiry,” the screens wrote.
“Ongoing investigations reveal vital security issues associated to care offered to youngsters at The Refuge previous to the suspension of its license,” the screens wrote of their report. “There are troubling lapses in [DFPS’] investigation into these security issues.”
Assist mission-driven journalism flourish in Texas. The Texas Tribune depends on reader assist to proceed delivering information that informs Texans and engages with them. Donate now to affix as a Texas Tribune member. Plus, give month-to-month or yearly now by Could 5 and also you’ll assist unlock a $10K match. Give and double your influence at present.

Texas
No. 9 Oklahoma baseball holds off Texas Tech comeback

Texas Tech isn’t the same team Oklahoma has dealt with in recent years. But given OU’s SEC series loss to Alabama over the weekend, the Sooners didn’t mind so much.
No. 9 Oklahoma knocked off their former Big 12 rivals in a one-off midweek game Tuesday, 8-6. The Sooners used a four-run third inning to break things open but ultimately had to hang on as Texas Tech brought the potential game-tying run to the plate in the ninth.
The Red Raiders trailed 8-3 entering the eighth inning, but a Logan Hughes solo home run in the frame and Antonelli Savaterre’s triple combined with Hughes’ RBI single in the ninth to make things interesting. Hughes’ single, however, came with two outs and Dylan Crooks retired the next batter to leave Hughes stranded to end the game.
Oklahoma ended up needing its four-run inning. All four OU hits in the third resulted in runs. Drew Dickerson and Dasan Harris each had RBI singles, turning a 1-1 game into a 3-1 lead. Harris’ knock came with two outs. As did Jason Walk’s RBI double and Easton Carmichael closed out the inning’s scoring with an RBI single to knock in Walk.
The big inning provided some breathing room for Sooners’ pitchers. Tech had just one hit through the first five innings. Even then, the Red Raiders finished with just five hits, as eight different Oklahoma pitchers kept the Tech bats relatively quiet, but struggled with walks and hit batters, giving up eight and two, respectively.
Walk, Carmichael, and Harris all had three hits for OU. Walk’s all went for extra bases as he finished 3 of 4 with two doubles, a home run, two walks, two RBI and two runs. Carmichael also homered for the Sooners, as did Jaxon Willits.
Tech is in danger of its first losing season since 2010 as the Red Raiders fell to 8-17 on the season. OU, which returns to Southeastern Conference play Thursday through Saturday against No. 6 LSU, lifted its record to 23-5.
Texas
Texas Longhorns Star Ends Hailey Van Lith’s Career in Shut-Down Fashion

Rori Harmon wants to be known for her defense. The senior point guard for the No. 1 Texas Longhorns prides herself on her ability to lock down some of the best point guards in the sport night in and night out. And in Texas’ Elite Eight win over TCU, she locked down Hailey Van Lith, one of the nation’s most electric scorers.
Two years after Van Lith ended Harmon and Texas’s season in the second round, Harmon got her revenge. In the Elite Eight, Harmon locked down Van Lith, limiting her to just 3-15 from the field and forcing her into seven turnovers. Before the Elite Eight matchup, Harmon shared her excitement to guard a player like Van Lith, and while she talked a big game, she backed it up with her play.
“I don’t really have to prove much, I’ve been doing this for a while, ever since I was a freshman, or even before college, I’ve been playing defense the way I do, I’m just more fundamentally sound at it now,” Harmon said. “I’m excited for that matchup, I’m excited for the competition, I’m always gonna take on whoever their best player is, I love that, I take that with responsibility. Like what my teammates and my coaches say, how I come out and attack and punch on defense, that’s basically how the team is going to play.”
Harmon set the tone early on defense for the Longhorns and Texas would go on to force 21 turnovers and allow just 12 made field goals.
While Harmon is not one of the four finalists for Naismith Defensive Player of the Year, she’s going to keep locking down the teams she comes across.
“I would say team defense always is the number one thing, trying to limit her touches as much as possible,” Harmon said after beating TCU. “She’s a three level scorer and a great basketball player, and she played very, really well for them, but yeah, just kind of standing firm, I think, with a good basketball player and ball hander like she is, like me personally, I can’t, like gamble and on dribbles and heads these like I have, to just stay disciplined stay in front, cut her off and stuff like that. Just get her to like go the ball because a lot of her off a lot of their offense runs through her, and she makes great play so just kind of getting the ball out of her hands is definitely is one of the keys.”
Harmon and the Longhorns will take the court next for their fourth game against South Carolina, this time in the Final Four.
Texas
The numbers show a child welfare revolution in Texas

In 2015, U.S. District Judge Janis Graham Jack declared that the conditions for children in the Texas foster care system were so bad that it represented a violation of the children’s constitutional rights. Texas children, she wrote, had been “shuttled throughout a system where rape, abuse, psychotropic medication, and instability are the norm,” and where children “often age out of care more damaged than when they entered.”
Ten years later, dramatic changes have shaken the child welfare system in Texas. Much work remains, but the outcomes are nothing short of shocking. Texas now removes fewer children, keeps more children out of foster care, and protects more children from abuse and neglect than ever before. Accomplishing all three of these goals at the same time is something few people thought was possible.
Many Texans may not realize how quickly a child can be removed from their home if Child Protective Services believes there is an immediate risk. Even today, after years of reforms, a court has the authority to take a parent’s child even when the parent, CPS, and the judge all agree that the parent is most likely innocent of abuse and neglect.
Nationally, 1 out of every 3 children will experience a CPS investigation by age 18, according to a study published by the American Journal on Public Health. For Black and Native American children, it’s more than 1 out of every 2.
Once a child is removed, he or she will stay in foster care for an average of 14 months. In Texas, only a third of them will ever return home. Reform advocates often point out that a stranger who is accused of abusing a child is entitled to a litany of due process protections in a criminal trial that a parent is never afforded in a civil trial — even when the parent is accused of the same conduct. Yet, it is the parents who face the prospect of losing their child completely.
Termination of parental rights is often referred to as the “death penalty” of civil law. It’s not hard to see why. Most parents would sooner go to jail than lose their children.
In 2018, Texas removed 20,685 children from their homes. That same year, 211 children died from abuse and neglect in Texas. But since that time, the system has been shocked by a barrage of reforms. In 2024, Texas removed 9,220 children — a 55% drop in just six years. Furthermore, 99 children died from abuse and neglect in 2024 — a 53% drop.
Also in 2018, a new set of CPS reforms began taking effect, reforms that would set the tone for nearly eight years of earthshaking changes to the child welfare system in Texas.
State Reps. Gene Wu, D-Houston, James Frank, R-Wichita Falls, and Dustin Burrows, R-Lubbock, who is now the speaker of the Texas House, worked together in 2017 to craft and pass HB 7 with the help of Sen. Bryan Hughes. The bill included a long list of due process reforms to Texas CPS law. Among other reforms, the bill prohibited child removals based on a family being low-income, required CPS to end its practice of suing parents in multiple courts at the same time (one court for each child), and prohibited CPS from terminating the rights of both parents when they only had evidence against one. The bill passed the Legislature with near unanimous support. Due process in CPS cases had gotten the Legislature’s attention.
In the years following, due process reforms in Texas sped up. In 2020, the Texas Supreme Court ended a practice whereby a jury could terminate parental rights even when jurors could not agree on what the parent had done wrong — a rule change specifically set in motion by HB 7.
In 2021, HB 567 dramatically reformed the definition of child neglect. In 2023, HB 730 required CPS caseworkers to inform parents of their rights before questioning them, like police officers do with criminal suspects. Both bills included numerous other reforms as well, and they were accompanied by a slew of other bills each making additional “pro-family” reforms to the system — reforms ranging from narrowly targeted due process changes to broad new standards of training for CPS caseworkers. Almost all of the bills passed with broad bipartisan support.
In 2021, Rep. Wu put clear words to the problem when describing how HB 567 changed the definition of neglect to prohibit the removal of a child unless there was an immediate danger. “We’ve always looked at what we’re doing for kids, but we don’t consider often what we’re doing to kids. … We guarantee you, if you strip them from their family, they will be traumatized. The question that we’ve never asked is this: Is it worth it?”
Because fewer children are being removed from their homes, the total number of children sitting in foster care has also plummeted, according to Texas Department of Family and Protective Services data. Altogether, the shift in the system since the 2018 reforms began has been dramatic:
- Children removed by CPS each year: down 55%
- Child deaths from abuse and neglect: down 53%
- Number of children sitting in foster care: down 47%
- Number of children waiting for adoption: down 43%
- Six-month and one-year recidivism rates: both at the lowest levels ever recorded (five-year rates have been essentially flat since 2015).
The Texas Legislature is now well into the 2025 legislative session. More reforms to the system are already being proposed. There are many holes left to be filled. In his State of the Judiciary speech before the Texas House and Senate, Supreme Court Chief Justice Jimmy Blacklock spoke for several minutes about the critical importance of ensuring due process for families in the CPS system. At the state’s highest court, due process for families is now a point of critical focus.
Doubtless, not all of the positive changes in the system are attributable to the due process reforms of the last seven years, but many of them clearly are.
One thing is apparent: Texas is embracing the theory of due process in the child welfare system, and seven years in, outcomes for families and children have dramatically improved.
Jeremy Newman is vice president of Family Freedom Project.
-
News7 days ago
Trump Is Trying to Gain More Power Over Elections. Is His Effort Legal?
-
News1 week ago
Washington Bends to RFK Jr.’s ‘MAHA’ Agenda on Measles, Baby Formula and French Fries
-
News1 week ago
Companies Pull Back From Pride Events as Trump Targets D.E.I.
-
Technology1 week ago
Trump officials planned a military strike over Signal – with a magazine editor on the line
-
World1 week ago
At least six people killed in Israeli attacks on southern Syria
-
News1 week ago
Murphy, Eagle Who Became a Foster Dad, Found Dead After Storm
-
Technology1 week ago
The FBI launched a task force to investigate Tesla attacks
-
World1 week ago
No, Norway and Sweden haven't banned digital transactions