Illinois mum who watched her 3 kids drown fights for new family
In horrifying detail, prosecutors described how three
children, trapped in the back seat of their mother's car, screamed for help
before they drowned in 4 1/2 feet of water in an Illinois lake while their
mother and her boyfriend escaped unharmed.
Amanda Hamm was convicted of child endangerment and served
five years in prison for watching her boyfriend carry out a plot to drown her
6-year-old, 3-year-old and 23-month-old children in 2003 because they
interfered with the couple's relationship and his sex-and-drugs lifestyle.
He was convicted of
first-degree murder and is serving a life sentence.
Now in a bizarre twist, Amanda Ware and her new husband are
fighting to gain custody of three children -- ages 5, 3 and 1 1/2 she had after
leaving prison. They were taken away by child protection authorities last year
after a doctor recognized Ware as the former Hamm.
A Cook County judge on Friday will decide whether the
children of Amanda and Leo Ware were abused and neglected, even without
evidence that they were physically harmed.
"This is a scary problem for all the people involved
... but most of all for the judge who has to decide whether to send these
children home," said Bruce Boyer, director of the Loyola University child
law clinic in Chicago, who's not involved in the case.
"What's so difficult is that the likelihood of
something going wrong may be low, but if it does, the consequences are so
high."
Under a legal concept called "anticipatory
neglect," the court is not required to wait until a child is harmed before
intervening if someone has harmed or endangered a child in the past, Boyer said,
adding that such findings aren't unusual in child welfare cases. On the other
hand, parents cannot be disqualified for custody solely because of their past
if they prove that they're a capable parent.
But prosecutors and child protection authorities told Judge
Demetrius Kottaras last week that, although none of the three living children
has been physically harmed, there is direct evidence of current abuse and
neglect. That includes domestic violence by Leo Ware against his wife and
others, substance abuse and Amanda Ware's failure to follow treatment for
mental illness, which created an injurious environment for the children.
In 2012, Chicago police responded to a domestic abuse call
at the Ware's house after Leo Ware struck his wife. The next year, while she
was pregnant, Amanda Ware sought an order of protection, saying she feared for
herself and her children because Leo Ware was using crack cocaine and might
become violent. Two weeks later, she had the order dropped.
Combined with the parents' histories, "this freight
train of evidence is bearing down on three current children who must be
protected," Assistant State's Attorney Joan Pernecke told the judge,
according to transcripts of the hearing.
Attorneys for Amanda, 39, and Leo Ware, 49, said the children
showed no signs of abuse and were healthy, even crying and taking off their
shoes and socks to try to prevent child protection workers from taking them
from their home last year. They also said no problems had ever been reported to
the state Department of Children and Family Services until a doctor at a
hospital where Ware gave birth recognized her.
Amanda Ware has a long history of depression and abusing
drugs and alcohol, and 20 years ago told a mental health worker that she wanted
to kill herself by driving into a lake, prosecutors said.
During her 2006 trial, witnesses said she was abused and manipulated
by boyfriend Maurice LaGrone Jr., who also terrorized her children, none of
them his, including by putting one child's head in an oven and chasing a child
with a knife. While he couldn't keep a job and didn't want to watch the
children while Ware worked, she bought him expensive clothes and jewelry,
according to testimony.
Prosecutors at that time said she couldn't live without a
man so was willing to sacrifice her children.
When the couple wanted to move from Clinton, Illinois to St.
Louis, Ware asked her mother to take custody of two of the children, but she
said she could take only one.
Months later, the couple drove to nearby Clinton Lake, about
150 miles south of Chicago, where on Sept. 2, 2003, LaGrone drove the 1997
Oldsmobile Cutlass down a boat ramp, at some point jumping out with Ware.
Both claimed the deaths were an accident and that they tried
but could not get the kids out. Rescuers eventually called by Ware said it took
just two minutes to remove the bodies.
Amanda Ware would not discuss the case before Friday's
hearing, but last year told the Pantagraph newspaper in Bloomington, Illinois,
that she would never get over the deaths, "but I have to try to move
forward and having a home, a husband and a family is the biggest part of that."
Leo Ware said in a telephone interview that the couple is
being targeted unfairly.
"They want to compare me to Maurice LaGrone, but I take
that as an insult; these are MY kids," he said. "We raised my kids
for three years before they decided it was a problem."
Leo Ware admits to a criminal past as a gang member and drug
dealer, but insists he's put that all behind him. He also said his wife
deserves a chance to move on.
"We all make bad decisions in life," he said.
"This is about moving on."
Source: FNC