MADISON, Wis. --
[....]
Among the allegations the parents face is an attempt to inhibit the recent state Department of Human Services investigation and even cover up their alleged crimes.
But records show that, years earlier, the girl's father, Chad G. Chritton, and stepmother, Melinda J. Drabek-Chritton, stood in the way of another investigation -- and did so legally.
The criminal complaint said that in 2007, Chad Chritton refused to sign releases to help out a Dane County Human Services investigation, barring officials from interviewing his now 15-year-old daughter.
"People have a right to privacy in regards to parenting. That's a protected right under the law," said Julie Ahnen, who manages Child Protective Service for Dane County. "The parent or the owner of the private property has the right to say we cannot, to bar us access to the child."
Ahnen said usually there is a way around the parents for investigators.
"If a child is attending a public school, we can go to the school and interview the child without the parent's permission," Ahnen said.
But if a child isn't school-age yet, class is out for the summer, or, like in the Drabek-Chritton case, the child is homeschooled, a knock on the door from Child Protective Services officials may legally go unanswered, making an investigation harder.
"Those cases can be more complicated as far as gaining access," Ahnen said.
Lynn Green, director of Dane County Human Services, said she doesn't feel current laws restrict investigators from uncovering child abuse.
"I'm not sure that the law prevents us from unearthing some abuse and neglect that occurs, so much as human dynamics," Green said.
Green said that children frequently won't reveal they've been abused. Green said she's confident that in this case, her staff did all they could. "I believe that we appropriately screened out and did not have the grounds to intervene any more fully," Green said.
"Screened out" refers to cases where a report has been made but the information it contains does not rise to a legal level that allows an investigation.
And when parent's don't cooperate, Child Protective Services can involve the police and does have other means, when necessary, to compel people to speak.
The agency has latitude to talk to others but without releases from parents, no information is required to be given to officials, with the exception of some medical information. A school or day care provider could decide to give up that information if they felt there was good reason to do so.
Dating to 1997, Child Protective Services had received seven reports of possible abuse or neglect in the Drabek-Chritton home, and only two of those were substantiated -- the most recent and another in 1997, before the girl came to live in Wisconsin, according to records.
[...]
Bookmarks