Why We Can’t Save These Kids: The Closed File That Should Have Stayed Open
Imagine this scenario: A police officer investigates a report of a man hiding a body in his basement. The officer looks around, sees nothing suspicious, and writes a note: "No crime found." He closes the file. Six months later, that same man is arrested for a murder. The police find the body. Now, the public wants to know: Why didn’t the first officer see the clues? Was he lazy? Was he bribed? Did he miss something obvious? But the police department says: "We can’t tell you. We already investigated. The file is closed. We can’t look at it again." You would call that insane. You would call it a cover-up. You would demand the officer be fired and the law changed. This is exactly what is happening to children in New York. The "Unfounded" Trap In New York City, when a neighbor calls about a child who looks hungry or bruised, the Administration for Children’s Services (ACS) sends a worker to check. If the worker decides the child is fine, they mark the case ...