Ayson Sweaney
Review of circumstance
Statistical evidences brought forward
Fact: Most accidents' and or accidental deaths occur in the home environment, without implications of weaponry involvements'.
A young boy died while in action of play, by climbing onto household units', in this case, a selection of bookshelves'.
Fact: No, suspicious markings of identifiable natures could be found.
Fact: Most children subjected to internal and or external abuses', receive known solid markings' that can be identified by extreme bruising', blood clots', broken bones', cigarettes' and or other, solid markings to correlate the abusive under-takings that are being out forward by the prosecutions'.
Fact: The evidence in this case, in regards to frequent abusive systems' and or other, can not be identified and or verified as a plight to continuations of under-takings in a abusive programmed of situation.
Fact: Usually abusive violence is continuations of the subject/ child and or other involved, over a long period of time and duration, whereby doctors are involved and other, with markings recorded and other.
In this case, no such detection and or record of injuries' of extensive situations have been recorded.
Step father, without experience in child care and or home protective regimes' of environments of furniture safety, temperature gaging of water and or other, can be a direct factor of infant death, association by accidental determination, of inappropriate settings', due to lack of experience of child maintenance and other.
After a certified accusation of murder, the accusation to unbearable to live with, ultimately led to his death in association of undefined and legal representations of good lawyer managements.
The death means nothing in light of the evaluations of circumstance.
release into protective care programming should be granted , on the grounds that insufficient evidences concluded a direct result of death by murder and all of the above tailoring information of corrective natures, put forward.
A young mother, in the prime of her youth, needing support and help.
Should be allocated a social worker and or other team member later on, in life, if she decides to re-settle and try again for another family.
No comments:
Post a Comment