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National Child Abuse Hotline (1-800-4-A-Child) |
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Our company conducts "FREE" Investigations for Child Abuse & Neglect Cases. We assign a certain amount of time allocated for Pro Bono Work. Read more below! |
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"Investigations Network" |
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Our company takes Child Abuse cases very serious and to heart. Our company not only conducts investigations on child abuse cases but also does Pro Bono work when allowed. This is a complex case. Your dealing with child neglect and infidelity! Call us today with your case. No matter how complex it is, we can handle your case. We see cases like this over and over again. Women that don't know what to do the next day. They don't know whether to go to work or to leave, or to just not bring up the topic because they might suffer abuse! (domestic violence) Women and their children fall victim to domestic violence, rape, sodomy, child abuse all before their eyes and the mothers do nothing!!! Thinking if they speak that they will be deported. They are willing to live an abusive life instead of being deported. WE CAN HELP! Contact us today! |
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Private Investigator |
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http://endabuse.org/programs/printable/display.php3?DocID=320 http://www.womenslaw.org/immigrantsBasicQs.htm
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Copyright 2006. All rights reserved by www.InvestigatorPrivate.net |
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Child abuse is the physical or psychological maltreatment of a child by an adult often synonymous with the term child maltreatment or the term child abuse and neglect. There are many forms of abuse and neglect and many governments have developed their own legal definition of what constitutes child maltreatment for the purposes of removing a child and/or prosecuting a criminal charge. In the United States, the Federal Government puts out a full definition of child abuse and neglect and creates a summary of each State definition. To view, go to Definitions of Child Abuse and Neglect: Summary of State Laws [1] that is part of the 2005 State Statute series by the National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect Information. By perpetrator characteristicsThe majority (78%) of maltreated children were maltreated by their birth parents. Birth parents were responsible for 62% of the abuse cases and 91% of the neglect cases. Birth parents were the most closely related perpetrators for 72% of physically abused children and 81% of emotionally abused children. Of the children who were abused by their birth parents the majority (75%) were abused by their mothers and a sizable minority (46%) were abused by their father (some children were abused by both parents). By contrast, children who were abused by other parents or parent-substitutes were more likely to be mistreated by a male (80-85%) than by females (14-41%) The pattern was distinctly different for child sexual abuse. Almost-one half of sexually abused children were sexually abused by someone other than a parent or a parent-substitute. Just over one-fourth were sexually abused by a birth parent and one-fourth were sexually abused by parent-substitute (corrected NIS-3 typo). A sexually abused child was most likely to sustain serious injury or impairment when a birth parent was the perpetrator (see incest). Male perpetrators committed 89% of known child sexual abuse versus only 12% by females but this statistic fails to include non-contact forms of child sexual abuse that females often prefer (see covert incest) which causes serious psychological injury and impairment. It also fails to mention social double standards, lack of research, reporting biases and other serious obstacles that hinder the gathering of credible data on overt (contact) female sexual abuse of children. Neglected children were more often neglected by female perpeprators (87%) than by male perpetrators 43%. Since the vast majority (91%) of neglected children were neglected by their birth parents, this means that birth mothers committed the majority of neglect cases as opposed to birth fathers. This finding is congruent with the fact that mothers tend to be the primary caretakers and are the primary parents held accountable for any ommissions and/or failings in caretaking. This knowledge was summarized from the NIS-3 Executive Summary which was written by two women and which makes no mention of commissions, ommissions, and/or failings in parental daretaking which is no a less essential criteria for child health. By family characteristicsChildren of single parents were at higher risk of physical abuse and all types of neglect and were over-represented among seriously injured, moderately injured and endangered children. Compared with their counterparts living with both parents, children in single-parent families had:
Among children in single parent households, those living with only their father were approximately one and two-thirds more likely to be sexually abused than those living only with their mothers. Based on the data above, children living only with their mother were far more likely to be neglected than those living only with their fathers. Children in families with income below $15,000 dollars a year were 14-56 times more likely to suffer specific forms of serious child abuse vs children from families with incomes of $30,000 per year or more. Family income was significantly related to incidence rate of nearly every category of maltreatment. Children from families with income below $15,000 are over 31 times more likely to be considered endangered, although not yet injured, by some type of abusive or neglectful treatment than those from families with incomes of $30,000 per year or more. Family size was connected with a huge increases in the levels of educational and physical neglect. Children in the largest families (those with four or more children) were almost three times more likely to be educationally neglected and nearly two and two fifths more likely to be physically neglected. Surprisingly 'only' children suffered more neglect than children in families of two-three children. However, children in the largest families were physically neglected at nearly three times the rate of those who came from 'only' child households. |
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