From Yahoo:
“Grandmother Allegedly Killed
Disabled Grandson Out of Fear for His Future Care”
A grandmother allegedly killed
her 30-year-old grandson with disabilities because she was afraid no one would
take of him after she died, according to WFLA. While the grandmother’s fears
about care for her grandchild are common in the disability parenting community,
murder is never a viable option. Lillian Parks, an 87-year-old Florida
resident, was arrested for the alleged murder of her adult grandson,
30-year-old Joel Parks, who lived with a disability. According to Bradenton,
Florida, police, Parks killed her grandson because she was afraid she would die
soon and no one would take care of Joel. Joel needs assistance and lived in a
group home during the week and with his grandmother on the weekends. Since her
arrest, police are holding Parks in a secure medical facility under a doctor
clears her. WFLA said she will likely be charged with second-degree murder. “She
was concerned about her medical condition and was worried about who would be
carrying for him in the event that she passed away,” said Bradenton Police
Department Captain Brian Theirs. “This is a process where it was thought out,
planned. And she took a human life.” Murdering a person with disabilities —
legally referred to as filicide — is not rare. Between 2011 and 2015, 219
people with disabilities were killed by either their parent or a caregiver, a
white paper from the Ruderman Family Foundation reported. These figures
translate to about one murder per week, a rate which David Perry, the white
paper’s author, said is conservative and likely underreported. Other groups
tracking the murders of disabled people, Perry said, have broader parameters
than the Ruderman white paper, with estimates of 400 to 600 murders for the
same period of time. “To be disabled in America is to be at higher risk for
violence in basically all ways,” Perry previously told The Mighty in an
interview about the white paper. “We belong to a society that too often
associates disability with tragedy and disability with suffering as just a kind
of default position. We have to call these things murder. Murderers are
murderers, killing is killing, and they need to be responded to with all of the
appropriate condemnation and legal response as we would in any other crime.” There
is little hope of improving these rates unless we change the way society views
people living with disabilities. The murders of disabled people are not “mercy”
killings, as they are often painted in the news or during trial. They are
murders, and the people killed deserve justice just like everyone else. “Everyone
should be concerned about the fact that our society often takes a permissive
attitude towards violence against people with disabilities,” Zoe Gross, the
director of operations at the Autistic Self Advocacy Network and founder of the
Disability Day of Mourning, told The Mighty. “The belief that disability is a
justification for violence is pervasive in our culture in ways that many people
are not consciously aware of.” The language you use is important. If you react
to a murder differently, ask yourself if it is because the person is disabled,
Gross said. Acknowledge the humanity of the person who was killed. “Center the
victim, not the perpetrator. Say that murder is wrong, and don’t qualify that
by saying that you ‘don’t condone, but understand’ a perpetrator’s decision to
murder their child,” she said. “Do not normalize abuse and murder of people
with disabilities.” For aging parents or loved ones of adult children with
disabilities, it’s common to worry about what will happen to an adult child
after their caregiver dies. One of Aretha Franklin’s handwritten wills
highlighted this concern after she died. Franklin left explicit instructions
for the care of her son Clarence, who has a disability. As parent and Mighty
contributor Charlie Beswick wrote: Worrying about what will happen to my son
after I die clings to my soul and rears its head when I least expect it. A
constant reminder the relationship I have with motherhood is a world apart from
that of my friends. Even between my boys, my responsibilities differ more than
I ever imagined or wanted them to. If your family is concerned about the future
of an adult loved one with disabilities, there are many early planning options
that can help. However, a 2018 study found that less than half of parents of
children with intellectual or developmental disabilities have long-term plans
in place for their care. Planning can include estate planning, setting up a
special needs trust, finding a second-to-die insurance policy, opening an
Achieving a Better Life Experience (ABLE) account through your state or
creating what the company Special Needs Financial Planning calls a letter of
intent that outlines what you want to happen for your child or loved one. “It
is so important to begin planning early and review it often. Things change,”
Cynthia Haddad, co-founder and partner of Special Needs Financial Planning,
told The Mighty via email, adding: The vision that a parent has for their child
when young will change as they grow and mature — and their needs and abilities
grow and mature as well. Parents’ personal financial situation changes, their
health and marital situations may change, their own goals for their family,
their retirement, their estate plan also change as do their own needs and
abilities to continue to support and care for their child with special needs as
they too age. Adult protective services (APS) can also help. The agency is not
just for reporting neglect or abuse of disabled adults, it can help you
identify resources or supports available to your loved ones. “Community
resources vary greatly across the country and even within geographic areas. But
APS, the local office on aging and the state’s protection and advocacy agency
will all have lists of the local resources available to help,” Lori
Delagrammatikas, executive director of the National Adult Protective Services
Association, told The Mighty via email. “If the first agency you contact can’t
provide you with services, ask them who else you should contact. No one agency
is going to know all the available resources. Keep asking.” So while preparing
for a disabled child’s future may be a significant worry for many families,
there are many resources and steps you can take proactively. “The old saying
that ‘people don’t plan to fail, they fail to plan’ is key in this situation,”
Haddad said. “Start early, review often, and communicate, communicate,
communicate so everyone will know what the expectations and the plan will be
when something happens to Mom and/or Dad.”
^ There is no excuse to kill an
innocent person much less a disabled person simply because of not knowing what
will happen to them in the future. This Grandmother is a murderer and deserves
to be punished for her crime. I can completely understand Parents, Grandparents
and caregivers worrying about who will take care of their charge (for lack of a
better term) once they are no longer able to, but that does not justify killing
them. If you are no longer able to take care of someone disabled then there are
different local, State and Federal Government programs as well as different
charities, disability-related organizations, etc. to turn to for help. I’m not
saying it is always easy to find the help, but the help is out there and is a
much better option than murdering the person you are taking care of. I took
care of a disabled person with no real outside out and I know how difficult and
challenging it can be. While I didn’t have to worry about what would happen to
that person when I was no longer able to care for them it still was not always
easy to deal with, but I managed just like all the other caregivers manage to
do. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/grandmother-allegedly-killed-disabled-grandson-224607503.html
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