MAINE -
By DAVID SHARP
Associated Press
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) -
Maine's child welfare agency and a mother whose baby was allegedly
killed by a 10-year-old girl agree - the girl's mother also is to blame.
The mother, who was baby
sitting the infant when she died July 8 and whose daughter was charged
this week with manslaughter, has not said if she plans to appeal the
state agency's finding.
Three-month-old Brooklyn
Foss-Greenaway ingested medication and was suffocated, her mother Nicole
"Nicki" Greenaway of Clinton has said. The baby was staying overnight
with the sitter in Fairfield, and Greenaway has said the sitter also
should be held responsible.
The 10-year-old was charged
in juvenile court and placed in the custody of the Department of Health
and Human Services. The girl will not be tried in the state's adult
court system, said Deputy Attorney General Bill Stokes. He said she is
the youngest homicide suspect in his 35 years as a state prosecutor.
In a letter obtained Friday
by The Associated Press, department caseworker Christopher Filteau
wrote the sitter that she made mistakes by leaving the baby in her
daughter's bedroom. The caseworker said the 10-year-old has behavior
disorders and was not suitable for caring for the infant.
"You neglected to provide
the proper level of supervision by allowing Brooklyn to remain in (the
girl's) care," the caseworker wrote Aug. 10. "Brooklyn Foss-Greenaway
has died as a result of your neglect."
The letter said the
10-year-old girl has "attention deficit hyperactivity disorder,"
''oppositional defiant disorder" and "attachment disorder."
The letter was first
reported by the Kennebec Journal. The Associated Press is not naming the
sitter because it could make known the juvenile suspect's identity.
The baby sitter, who has
not been charged, declined to speak to the AP on Friday. She referred
questions to her lawyer. No one answered her lawyer's office phone
during business hours.
The sitter has a right to
appeal the state agency's findings, but it is unclear if she intends to
do so. A DHHS spokeswoman declined comment.
A roommate who was in the
Fairfield house when Brooklyn died told the AP that the baby was
sleeping in the girl's room and that she heard occasional crying from
the bedroom before chaos erupted.
Ashley Tenney said she was
awakened by a commotion and went upstairs to see a terrified look on the
girl's face as the mother performed CPR on the baby.
"I was unsure what was
going on because I was half asleep. I heard a lot of crying and
screaming, and I heard the word 'dead,'" said Tenney, who has since
moved out.
For now, the criminal
investigation is focused on the girl, not her mother, said Stephen
McCausland, spokesman for the Maine Department of Public Safety. A
lawyer representing the girl declined to comment Friday.
More information will be
filed in conjunction with the girl's first appearance in October in
juvenile court, where the maximum penalty for a conviction is
incarceration until age 21.
"The juvenile justice
system is designed to hold people accountable but to deal with young
offenders in a way that prevents future occurrences and gets them the
help they need. That's the focus we'll be driving at," Stokes said.
In Fairfield, 70 miles
north of Portland, neighbors had nothing bad to say about the baby
sitter or her children, who live in a tidy white house.
"She's very pleasant, not a
neighborhood disruptor or anything like that," said neighbor Jon
Cochran, who lives across the street. He called them "a regular family."