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cubby

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https://www.yahoo.com/news/ny-foster-parent-charged-sexually-abusing-boys-dog-183044251.html

Cesar Gonzalez-Mugaburu, 59, of Ridge, New York, on Long Island, was ordered held on $1 million bond Friday after being charged in a 17-count indictment with child endangerment and sexual misconduct. He is accused of victimizing children as young as 8. He is also accused of sexually abusing a female dog in front of a child last September.

His attorney did not immediately return a telephone message seeking comment.

Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota told The Associated Press that Gonzalez-Mugaburu earned as much as $18,000 a month as a foster parent for the children. He cared for between six and eight children at a time since at least 1996, the prosecutor said.

Some of the foster children, some of whom were developmentally disabled, were subsequently adopted by Gonzalez-Mugaburu, although Spota said he did not immediately have details on how many.

He said prosecutors were only able to charge Gonzalez-Mugaburu with abusing seven children in the indictment unsealed Friday, because statute of limitations laws prevent filing charges involving other victims. He said two boys came forward in January and reported the alleged abuse to a caseworker, who contacted police. Detectives then launched a wider investigation.

"We know there were other victims," Spota said.

He said that when Gonzalez-Mugaburu was brought in for questioning, he called a 28-year-old adoptee. When that adoptee went to a police station, detectives told him about the allegations and that man began cooperating with investigators.

"That opened the floodgates," the prosecutor said.

Spota said it appears the boys were sheltered from the community, and were not permitted to participate in extracurricular activities at school, nor any athletics programs. He said he children were fed twice a day and were made to eat on the floor.

"He's trying to devise every way he can to keep these kids contained," Spota said.

Authorities the foster children were placed in his care by Brentwood, New York, non-profit St. Christopher Ottilie and the New York City Administration for Children Services. Rose Anello, a spokeswoman for St. Christopher Ottilie, says the organization placed 71 children with Gonzalez-Mugaburu over the past 19 years.

"This investigation should expand well beyond the offender to those who helped to enable this offender to access potential victims," said Laura Ahearn, a victims' rights advocate and executive director of Parents for Megan's Law, which tracks alleged sex offenders.

Spota said the investigation is ongoing, and will include how the alleged abuse went undetected for so long.

Gonzalez-Mugaburu had no prior arrests, prosecutors said; Spota said investigators also are trying to determine how the suspect was permitted to be a foster parent, because he said the man has no employment record.

"He claims to be self-employed," Spota said.

He didn't need a job, he made $18,000 a month off these poor boys
 
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Hey, Cesar Gonzalez-Mugaburu. Just in case you ever google your name:

Here's one bullet for every foster child you ever touched.

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And these are for the rest of us who not only survived you sick fuckers, but thrived despite your best efforts. May every night in your cell be filled with terror and may every waking moment of your fetid life lead you to put a sheet around your neck and save NY taxpayers an extra $40K/yr.

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:mad::rage::punch::mad::(
This sick piece of shit!!! Made 18,000 a month imprisoning foster kids, for his sick sexual perversions. I am so enraged by this! Not only were they kids, but they were kids already coming from shitty situations. Kids who desperately needed (DESERVED) love and stability. Kids, who were vulnerable, scared, and afraid prior to coming into his "home." Kids who have already been removed from one type of hell, to be placed into a new one. This takes heartless and evil, to a whole new level.

As if this initial info alone isn't enough to make one rage the fuck out, as the investigation continues, and new deails emerge, it will undoubtedly get worse.

I have so many questions... Was there a wife or anyone else in the home? If not, how was a single foster parent given responsibility of between six and eight children at a time? How the fuck is one person supposed to care for and accommodate that many kids- especially kids with developmental disabilities, or kids that may require special attention? How was this not all sorts of red flags? How do 6-8 kids AT A TIME not raise eyebrows or concerns being he was "self employed?" Wasn't there any question, as to who would be caring for, or supervising the kids while he worked? If no, then why the fuck not?!? Isn't there some sort of screening process? There a screening process to foster a dog. How does this even happen to children?!? Seriously. And what the fuck, isn't there follow ups, home visits, therapy, or support for these kids after they are placed in a foster home? For fucks sake, do they just drop them off and not follow up? These are children, not pet rocks!

This is only a few questions.. I have so many more, this is just the start. But holy shit, I only want to foster one or two- in hopes of one day making my family grow. I had no idea the process was that uninvolved. My heart is sad, for the number of children that must get failed by the foster care system every single day. Heartbreaking to say the very least.
 
$18,000/month yet he only fed the children twice a day and on the floor like dogs. Smh... What kind of father lets their little ones go hungry? When it is his duty to provide for his dependents. I cannot comprehend how a human being can be so cruel.


A fucking predatory baby and dog raping bastard fuck.
 
He is self employed, at what I call "Foster Farming". Kids with disabilities are almost preferred. More easily neglected, and they have the potential of being a lifetime income. Simultaneously, disabled kids are very difficult to place, and the agency wants to believe they've found a saint.
 
THe state did a good job making sure he was a safe placement for these children and following up.

A politician should lose their job over this one.
 
It's true, you do have to spend a few hours a day keeping them alive, but the money is great:grumpy:

Does anyone remember a case where a couple were "caring" for a number of profoundly disabled kids that were actually kept in cages? It amazes me when cases like this come up, but if you're basically a sociopath, it's a great living.

Where I give the side-eye to the agency is when multiple high needs kids are placed in the same home. Their own parents couldn't handle the job 24/7/365, yet a single person is given several at a time.

Another thing I've noticed here in the West, is people given to procreating beyond their means often demonstrate their commitment to children and family values by adopting a few handicapped kids.:shifty:
 
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NY foster parent accused of sex abuse could have been stopped years earlier, report says

HAUPPAUGE, N.Y. -- A foster parent accused of sexually abusing boys in his care could have been stopped years earlier if not for “abysmal” communication among the child-welfare agencies involved, according to a special grand jury report obtained by The Associated Press.

In the 83-page report, the Suffolk County Supreme Court jury outlined a remarkable series of failures that allowed Cesar Gonzales-Mugaburu to take in more than 100 children over 20 years, despite being the subject of 18 separate child-abuse investigations.

Rules intended to protect the reputations of falsely accused foster parents were partly to blame, the report said. Substandard abuse investigations were another issue. But the biggest problem, the report said, was the simple failure of the four governmental and one nonprofit child-welfare agencies to share information.

One agency, the Suffolk County Department of Social Services, became so concerned with the number of suspected abuse reports against Gonzales-Mugaburu in 2002 that it asked a contractor to stop placing children with him.

Yet, the agency did not document the reasoning behind that decision or communicate it to anyone in writing, including other agencies that were also sending children to the home, the grand jury report said. It identifies Gonzales-Mugaburu only by the letter “A,” but its description of the allegations against him are identical to facts that have been made public in his criminal proceeding.

“The foster care system in the state of New York is a bureaucratic nightmare,” said Suffolk District Attorney Thomas Spota, who empaneled the grand jury. “There has to be some corrections that are made, especially with respect to how these agencies interact with each other.”

The report recommended a number of reforms. Among them: The state should get rid of the statute of limitations for prosecuting child sex abuse, create a central registry of foster homes and widen access to reports of abuse, even if they have been determined to be unfounded.

The break that led to Gonzales-Mugaburu’s arrest came early last year after detectives say two brothers came forward with credible stories of abuse. Others credible accusers followed.

Gonzales-Mugaburu, 60, now faces trial next month on charges he sexually abused eight children as young as 8 years old inside his home in Ridge, on eastern Long Island. Prosecutors said statute of limitations laws precluded them from bringing even more charges.

Gonzales-Mugaburu has pleaded not guilty. His attorney says he denies ever abusing children and contends the accusers are lying.

Prosecutors say Gonzales-Mugaburu earned more than $1.5 million in tax-free income caring for foster children between 1996 and his arrest in January 2016. All of them were boys, including many deemed to require special treatment because of emotional or physical challenges.

New York’s clearinghouse for suspected child abuse complaints received 18 reports regarding Gonzales-Mugaburu as far back as 1998, each of which was investigated by Suffolk County child welfare officials.

Some were for less serious issues, including failing to fill a child’s eyeglasses prescription. There was also at least one allegation of sexual abuse. One complaint, involving a child with bruises, went as far as a formal hearing before officials decided the allegations were false.

All the complaints were ultimately deemed by investigators to be unfounded.

Still, in 2001 or 2002, Suffolk County’s Department of Social Services “verbally requested” that SCO Family of Services, one of the state’s largest foster home providers, stop placing children with Gonzales-Mugaburu, according to the grand jury report. But that request was apparently never communicated in writing and no one could explain how the notification occurred.

“One witness, in fact, testified that this notification could have potentially have been made in passing during a conversation in a hallway,” the report said.

“For some reason, and with tragic results,” the grand jury wrote, the decision was never communicated to other agencies, including New York City’s massive child welfare agency, the Administration for Children’s Services, which continued to place dozens of children with Gonzales-Mugaburu.

The grand jury specifically criticized an arrangement under which the New York City agency ceded responsibility for overseeing case management to SCO Family of Services because of a special state waiver.

“There was virtually no contact by ACS with these children or the foster parent,” Spota said. “They basically delegated every single responsibility they had to these nonprofit agencies and said to them, ‘They’re yours. Goodbye.’ And that is so wrong.”

SCO Family of Services said it never uncovered evidence of sexual abuse or improper sexual behavior in the home. But the organization’s chief strategy officer, Rose Anello, said last summer there were other issues, “and in retrospect and knowing what we know now, a decision to close the home should have been made at that time.”

SCO said it has worked with the state, ACS and Suffolk County “to diligently address each and every concern about the quality of care provided in this home.” Spokeswoman Leslie Johnson’s statement added the agency has “undertaken a rigorous corrective action plan to ensure complete transparency and significantly strengthen our foster care program. We are hopeful the findings included in this report will advance meaningful and systemic foster care reform in New York.”

ACS and Suffolk County child welfare department representatives did not immediately respond to requests for comment. :banghead::banghead::banghead::banghead::banghead::banghead::banghead::banghead::banghead:

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/new-york-foster-parent-sex-abuse-stopped-years-earlier-report/
 
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/03/29/new-york-foster-father-faces-trial-in-sex-abuse-case.html
RIVERHEAD, N.Y. – A foster father who took in more than 100 troubled boys over 20 years is set to go on trial on charges he sexually abused eight of the children. In addition to the alleged abuse of the boys, prosecutors also said the man sexually abused a dog in front of a child.

The case against Cesar Gonzales-Mugaburu sparked an investigation into New York's foster care system that found "abysmal" communication among the child welfare agencies involved. The suspect's lawyer disputes that any abuse took place at his client's suburban Long Island home. Opening arguments are scheduled to begin Wednesday.

Gonzales-Mugaburu, 60, of Ridge, New York, was arrested in January 2016, after authorities said two boys in his care reported alleged abuse to a caseworker. Prosecutors said that prompted a wider investigation, which led to additional charges involving other alleged victims. Gonzales-Mugaburu has pleaded not guilty to child endangerment, sexual misconduct and other charges, and remains jailed on $1 million bond.
[....]
An 83-page report released by Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas Spota last month outlined a remarkable series of failures that allowed Gonzales-Mugaburu to take in more than 100 children over 20 years, despite being the subject of 18 separate child abuse investigations. None of those investigations led to criminal charges.

The report said rules intended to protect the reputations of falsely accused foster parents were partly to blame. Substandard abuse investigations were another issue. But the biggest problem, the report said, was the simple failure of four governmental and one nonprofit child welfare agencies to share information.
[....]
A spokeswoman for SCO Family of Services, one of the state's largest foster home providers which placed dozens of children with Gonzales-Mugaburu, has said it never uncovered any evidence of abuse prior to his arrest.

SCO said since the scandal erupted, it has worked with the state, the Administration for Children's Services and Suffolk County "to diligently address each and every concern about the quality of care provided in this home."
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A foster father who took in more than 100 troubled boys over 20 years is set to go on trial on charges he sexually abused eight of the children. In addition to the alleged abuse of the boys, prosecutors also said the man sexually abused a dog in front of a child.

Oh, there's more. A LOT more. :mad::(
 
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