BY CAROL MARBIN MILLER
Breaking new ground for Florida courts in cases involving the welfare of American Indian children, an appeals court ruled Wednesday that the ''best interests'' of a seriously ill half-Seminole child outweigh the Seminoles' desire to raise him within the tribe's culture and traditions.
The Fourth District Court of Appeal in West Palm Beach ruled that the 4-year-old boy, identified only as K.D., must remain with a non-Indian family that has cared for him since birth in a medical foster home. The eight-page decision affirmed a 2006 ruling by Broward Circuit Judge Hope Bristol.
The ruling allows Bristol to set aside provisions of the Indian Child Welfare Act, a federal law that gives American Indians great preference over non-Indians when deciding who should raise a Native American child taken into custody by state child-welfare administrators.
In K.D.'s case judges had to weigh two competing interests: the state's desire to protect a child whose medical needs are so great that child-protection workers said he needs to live with a family specially trained and equipped to care for him, versus the Seminoles' desire -- and right -- to raise him as a member of their tribe.
Read more here: http://www.nativebiz.com/community/News,op=visit,nid=15559.html
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
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