Friday, June 15, 2018

76 Missing Children From Flint Under Michigan Child Welfare, More Expected To Be Missing

These missing children were from the City of Flint, the same city that is still dealing with the water crisis, which led to property tax foreclosures, which is the county for ground zero of land banks in Michigan under Dan Kildee.

These are the children under the auspices of the State of Michigan where there are no educational records, no medical records, no services that actually do anything for the children who have fallen victim to the culture of poverty promulgated by "The Elected Ones".

This is another example of the Emergency Manager Law.

This is the result of privatization.

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services continued to bill for these missing children while doing nothing about this.

These children chose a life on the streets because that is all there is for them to survive once they age out the Michigan child welfare system.

Each and every privately contracted agency that has a hand in the Medicaid billing till needs to be held accountable by answering some questions as to how, not just children being missing and billed for, but how these individuals allowed the socioeconomic structures of society to generate this model of survival for children of "The Poors" (always said with clinched teeth) and did not interject a single whisper in any of their child abuse propaganda campaigns they so diligently fundraise.

Yes, Michigan is that bad when it comes to children.

You know it is bad when children do not want to go into the child welfare system.

Actually, they are much worse because it is a multi-billion dollar industry where no one cares.

More children to be added to the missing rolls.

Authorities find 51 of 76 missing children during Genesee County sweep

GENESEE COUNTY (WJRT) (6/14/2018) - A collaborative effort across Genesee County brought 51 of 76 children reported missing back into safe hands.

About 70 police officers from most agencies in the county targeted specific homes, rescuing children from human trafficking.

The kids, all under the age of 17, were reported missing after failing to show up for court hearings, missing school or were foster children the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services hadn't heard from for a while.

Police say four to six of the children were being trafficked. One of them was taking part in a forensic interviewer Thursday afternoon, talking about alleged sex crimes in which they were the victim.
All of the remaining children subjected to sex trafficking will receive forensic interviews in the near future.

Authorities placed 15 children in juvenile custody -- 12 of them in Genesee County facilities and three others in facilities outside the county.

"We're gonna protect these kids and we're gonna find them, locate them and get them some help," said Genesee County Sheriff Robert Pickell.

Agencies chipped in to help meet basic needs of food, shelter and clothing throughout the day as children were rescued. Nyse Holloman, executive director of the Weiss Child Advocacy Center, said they will continue helping the children long-term with things like counseling.

Weiss saw more than 600 children come through the doors last year who had been victims of sexual abuse, child pornography or human trafficking.

Holloman was thrilled with the results of Thursday's effort to rescue children who couldn't get out of their situation alone.

She warned parents that many children who fall prey to human trafficking and sexual crimes start with popular social media platforms like Snapchat and Instagram.

"The kids typically have multiple social media accounts, so finding just one doesn't mean that you found -- like, you know your kid has an Instagram. You really need to investigate and see if they have more than one and Snapchat," Holloman said. "You've gotta learn how to use these new social media apps."

Police say large-scale sweeps like Thursday's effort will become more commonplace as the number of human trafficking victims continues to grow and law enforcement learns more about the issue.
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