Fountaindale Public Library

We were once a family, a story of love, death, and child removal in America, Roxanna Asgarian

Label
We were once a family, a story of love, death, and child removal in America, Roxanna Asgarian
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 283-294)
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
We were once a family
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1356620793
Responsibility statement
Roxanna Asgarian
Sub title
a story of love, death, and child removal in America
Summary
On March 26, 2018, rescue workers discovered a crumpled SUV and the bodies of two women and multiple children at the bottom of a cliff along the Pacific Coast Highway. Investigators soon concluded that the crash was a murder-suicide, but there was more to the story: Jennifer and Sarah Hart, it turned out, were a white married couple who had adopted six Black children from two different Texas families in 2006 and 2008. Behind the family's loving facade was an alleged pattern of abuse and neglect that been ignored as the couple withdrew the children from school and moved west. It soon became apparent that the State of Texas knew all too little about the two individuals to whom it had given custody of six children. Immersive journalism of the highest order, this book is a revelation of precarious lives; it is also a shattering expose of the foster care and adoption systems that produced this tragedy. As a journalist in Houston, Asgarian sought out the children's birth families and put them at the center of the story. We follow the lives of the Harts' adopted children and their birth parents, and the machinations of the state agency that sent the children far away. Asgarian's reporting uncovers persistent racial biases and corruption as young people of color are separated from birth parents without proper cause. The result is a riveting narrative and a deeply reported indictment of a system that continues to fail America's most vulnerable children while upending the lives of their families
Target audience
adult
Classification
Content
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