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View Full Version : Texas Sheriff Blasts CPS for Allowing Man Accused of Sexual Abuse to Foster 180 Girls




Created4
10-19-2017, 12:58 PM
http://medicalkidnap.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2017/10/Sheriff-Randy-Brown.jpg

Medina County Texas Sheriff Randy Brown had some harsh criticisms of Texas Child Protection Services (CPS) this past week after they arrested a 58-year old man for sexually abusing 5 former foster care children.

The man, Miguel Briseno, had at various times taken care of up to 12 girls at one time, and a total of 180 girls had passed through his care according to a report by San Antonio Express-News (http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/local/crime/article/Sheriff-Not-a-question-there-are-more-victims-12273207.php#photo-14335145).

http://medicalkidnap.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/7/2017/10/Miguel-Briseno.jpg

This was not the first time foster parent Miguel Briseno allegedly ran into trouble with the law and was arrested on child sex abuse charges, according to Sheriff Brown.

Sheriff Brown told the San Antonio Express:


“It’s not a question about whether there are more, it’s just about how many.”

“Those girls were taken from some environment and then you have some jackass like him abusing these girls that already have troubles,” Brown said.

“I’m aggravated at the whole system. I’m aggravated at the company that placed these girls. It was a money-making deal, the way they were running those girls through there like livestock. It wasn’t about making a better world for them. They were making a profit off them.”
In April 2013, the Medina County Sheriff’s Office arrested him on a charge of solicitation to commit sexual assault of a child. The arrest came after one of Briseno’s foster children said he had sexually assaulted her in August 2012, when he no longer had a foster license.

The San Antonio Express reports:


Briseno pleaded guilty in September 2015 to a reduced charge of attempted assault, a Class B misdemeanor. Brown said investigators and prosecutors had difficulty securing testimony against Briseno. He was sentenced to 180 days in jail, though county officials couldn’t confirm how much time he was actually incarcerated.

All of Briseno’s reported victims were teenagers at the time of the alleged abuse. They’re now in their 20s. For investigators, the next step is to identify the dozens of remaining girls who were ever in Briseno’s care.

“We don’t know where they’re at,” Brown said.

“If you’ve stayed at that house, if you were a foster child [in Briseno’s care], please contact us,” he said. “Whether you feel something inappropriate happened or not, we’d still like to talk to you.”

Victims are asked to call 210-335-8477 if they have any information on Briseno’s alleged abuse.

Texas CPS Worst in the U.S.?

In December of 2014 Health Impact News reported on the class action lawsuit filed against the State of Texas and their foster care program brought by the group Children’s Rights, a New York-based advocacy group. The group was representing 12,000 foster care children as the plaintiffs. See the original story here:

12,000 Children from Foster Care Sue State of Texas over Abuses (http://medicalkidnap.com/2014/12/10/12000-children-from-foster-care-sue-state-of-texas-over-abuses/)

This lawsuit was an amended complaint of the original lawsuit filed against the State of Texas in 2011, which alleged “violations of the plaintiff children’s constitutional rights, including their right not to be harmed while in state custody and their right to familial association.” (Source.)

After legal proceedings that lasted about one year, where the State of Texas tried to get the case dismissed, U.S. District Judge Janis Graham Jack ruled against the State of Texas (http://www.childrensrights.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/2015-12-17-Memo-opinion-and-verdict-of-the-court-2.pdf) in December of 2015 stating that the foster care system named in the lawsuit was unconstitutional. In her 255 page ruling, Judge Jack stated:


Texas’ PMC (Permanent Managing Conservatorship) children have been shuttled throughout a system where rape, abuse, psychotropic medication, and instability are the norm.

Has anything changed in Texas?

Full Article (http://medicalkidnap.com/2017/10/18/texas-sheriff-blasts-cps-for-allowing-man-accused-of-sexual-abuse-to-foster-180-girls/)

TheTexan
10-19-2017, 01:41 PM
Note: he's hispanic.

Reason #6843 we should build a wall.

Danke
10-19-2017, 01:55 PM
Note: he's hispanic.

Reason #6843 we should build a wall.


Around Texas?

TheTexan
10-19-2017, 04:01 PM
Around Texas?

-rep

Pericles
10-20-2017, 11:23 AM
Around Texas?

Also keeps out kooks from California, New York, and Chicago.

Jamesiv1
10-20-2017, 11:53 AM
Note: he's hispanic.

Reason #6843 we should build a wall.Texit 2018

devil21
10-20-2017, 12:40 PM
Clearly we need a federal law to prevent this from happening again. Can't worry about state's rights when there's crazy people out there.


It just so happens, here's one introduced in MARCH that just happened to hit the Senate floor for passage on Monday:

S.705 Child Protection Improvements Act

Funny that, eh?

Created4
10-20-2017, 01:01 PM
Clearly we need a federal law to prevent this from happening again. Can't worry about state's rights when there's crazy people out there.


It just so happens, here's one introduced in MARCH that just happened to hit the Senate floor for passage on Monday:

S.705 Child Protection Improvements Act

Funny that, eh?

No, we need to REPEAL all federal laws that poor BILLIONS of dollars into states' budgets for taking children out of homes and placing them into foster care/adoption.

That is the only way this problem will be solved. Cut off the head. But it would also put hundreds of thousands of government employees out of work, so it won't be easy.

brushfire
10-20-2017, 06:11 PM
Also keeps out kooks from California, New York, and Chicago.

Its what socialist do. They run out of other people's money, then they move on to the next town.

donnay
10-20-2017, 06:18 PM
No, we need to REPEAL all federal laws that poor BILLIONS of dollars into states' budgets for taking children out of homes and placing them into foster care/adoption.

That is the only way this problem will be solved. Cut off the head. But it would also put hundreds of thousands of government employees out of work, so it won't be easy.

Exactly!!

Weston White
10-20-2017, 09:39 PM
Around Texas?

Nope, just around your keyboard, router, CPU, and monitor.

Weston White
10-20-2017, 09:45 PM
No, we need to REPEAL all federal laws that poor BILLIONS of dollars into states' budgets for taking children out of homes and placing them into foster care/adoption.

That is the only way this problem will be solved. Cut off the head. But it would also put hundreds of thousands of government employees out of work, so it won't be easy.

Also, terminate these programs that bring immigrants into the USA or encourage them to stay so long that they earn a degree to then work for the state, such as a bachelors degree in social work or homeland security, while enjoying a free ride along the way.

devil21
10-21-2017, 12:35 PM
No, we need to REPEAL all federal laws that poor BILLIONS of dollars into states' budgets for taking children out of homes and placing them into foster care/adoption.

That is the only way this problem will be solved. Cut off the head. But it would also put hundreds of thousands of government employees out of work, so it won't be easy.

I guess my sarcasm didn't show through enough in the post. My point was that it's scripted. This story just happened to be released for wide consumption at the exact same time as a Congressional bill is being taken up that attempts to further federalize what is traditionally a state controlled issue. This is a prime example of how the sheep are herded. "OMG Messican kiddie rapist had foster kids and no one knew about his past? Texas CPS failed! Captain Federale, come save us!!!"

Weston White
10-21-2017, 01:07 PM
An Open Secret, now for free, for now:



https://vimeo.com/142444429