Without Prejudice
Lives ruined in secret
Thousands of children may have been
snatched from families because of evidence given in camera
Nick Cohen
Sunday January 25, 2004
The Observer
The story of a couple I had better just call Mr and Mrs A is just one of
thousands in the greatest miscarriage of justice of our times. The As
lived in the West Country and had four children. The first died. The
second was fine. The third died. By the time the mother was pregnant with
the fourth, the local social services had decided to act. It's easy to
write: 'The baby was taken from her at birth.'
It's harder to
imagine feeling a child grow inside you, going through the agonies of
labour and then - at a click of a bureaucrat's fingers - seeing your baby
snatched away. The expert opinion of Professor Sir Roy Meadow and his
disciples had been sought, and they had concluded that the mother was
killing her babies.
There was no trial;
she didn't have the opportunity to demand that the terrible accusations
against her be proved beyond reasonable doubt. Instead, a judge sitting in
his chambers decided that, 'on the balance of probabilities', she was a
killer. The interests of her surviving children must come first, and they
must be taken into care. Unsurprisingly, given the loss of all her
children, the mother's mind and marriage fell apart. She and her husband
divorced, and he became the obvious candidate to bring up the children.
But there was a catch
that the organisers of the Salem witch trials would have applauded. His
solicitor, David Sterrett, explained that it wasn't enough for the witch
to be condemned without trial. Her husband had to join the denigration of
his ex-wife and say that she was a murderer. He didn't believe that for a
moment and refused to go along with Meadow. His failure to accept the
omniscience of the great man was intolerable. He was deemed unfit to look
after his own children and has spent so many years in courts fighting for
the right to visit them that his lawyer says he is broke and suffering
from 'litigation fatigue'.
The couple might have
gone to their local paper for help. They had a sensational story. Their
children were to be taken because a professor was claiming the mother was
suffering from an exotic condition, Munchausen's syndrome by proxy, which
propelled her to kill her children as a means of gaining attention.
Perhaps one reporter
in the West Country wouldn't have got very far, but the cumulative effect
of reporters on papers around Britain covering the Munchausen mania would
have warned the authorities that something akin to a medieval witch craze
was sweeping the country. Pressure groups and politicians would have had
some hard facts to get their teeth into and the few doctors prepared to
break the omertą of the medical profession and dish the dirt on colleagues
would have been mobilised.
As it was, Prof
Meadow was deferred to for years. The scale of the injustice he
contributed to makes the false convictions of the Birmingham Six and
Guildford Four look like trivial technical problems. Lord Goldsmith, the
Attorney-General, said last week that 258 convictions for murder,
infanticide and manslaughter will be reviewed as a matter of urgency.
They are merely an
appetiser. Beyond the homicide convictions are the people such as Mr and
Mrs A, who have had their children taken into care because they are
presumed on the 'balance of probabilities' to be murderers or the aiders
and abetters of murder, but have never had the chance to clear their names
in court.
Margaret Hodge, the
Children's Minister, said that 'thousands or even tens of thousands' of
children may have been taken from their parents over the past 15 years
because of Meadow's theories. Neither she nor anyone else could be certain
because the mass seizure of children took place in camera. There was never
a hope of the public being alerted and Meadow being stopped before he
caused too much misery. The grotesque snatching of thousands of children
was an operation conducted under conditions of the strictest secrecy.
Anyone who blew the whistle on the proceedings of the family courts faced
prosecution for contempt.
The maxim 'the
interests of the child come first' is seductive. Who but a brute could
disagree with it? Who would want the interests of the child to come second
or third, or not be considered at all? But like many other sweet
platitudes, it can lead to monstrous consequences. The supposed interests
of the child dictate that mothers can be treated as murderers on 'the
balance of probabilities' rather than because they have been found guilty
beyond reasonable doubt. If Meadow or one of his clique said that
Munchausen's by proxy was probable, then that was enough. The supposed
interests of the child also dictated that the courts must destroy families
without public scrutiny because publicity would lead to the child being
'stigmatised'.
Yet its clearly not
in the interests of the child for the courts to allow him or her to be
taken from a loving and innocent mother. The interests being placed first
here were the interests of Meadow and Family Court judges who have got
away with destroying the lives of largely working-class women for more
than a decade, secure in the knowledge that their crackpot theories would
never be exposed or tested.
During the years of
Meadow's ascendancy, the family courts resembled a secret society. Because
there were no outside checks, Munchausen's by proxy became a theory that
explained all inexplicable infant deaths. If a baby was fighting fit
before dying, then Meadow would say that was proof that a Munchausen
mother had smothered the child to attract attention. If a baby was ill
before dying, then Meadow would say that was also proof that a Munchausen
mother had smothered the child to attract attention.
Munchausen's was an
incredible concept in crime fighting: whatever the circumstances, it could
damn the guilty woman. It was only when the Court of Appeal spoilt
everything by deciding that, while there was no evidence of smothering,
there was plenty of evidence that the children were suffering from genetic
disorders to such an extent that the universal efficacy of Munchausen's
was questioned.
Secrecy allowed
incompetence and mania to flourish, as it has done for 20 years. It is not
too great an exaggeration to say that families have been forced into a
legal world whose practices and assumptions are closer to those of a
tyranny than a democracy.
It is a modern
phenomenon. In the late 1980s, Iain Walker, a journalist on the Daily
Mail, noticed that there was an explosion in the number of injunctions
banning inquires about the state's treatment of children. In most cases,
no one in his newsroom had the faintest idea who the children were or why
the authorities thought reporters might be interested in them. But the
injunctions kept dropping out of the fax machine. Disquieted by the
assault on freedom of speech,
Walker
took a sabbatical at Oxford University and published an investigation into
the closed world of the Family Courts. As ever, the interests of children
came a poor second to the interests in covering up the rank failures of
the bureaucracy.
The popularity of
gagging orders began after the murder in 1987 of Jasmine Beckford, the
Victoria Climbié of her day. Her brutal stepfather was free to kill her in
the most revolting manner, even though she was on the at-risk register of
Brent council in north
London.
The council faced
intense media criticism as journalists talked to Jasmine's brothers and
sisters about its many failings. The courts agreed to a request from a
desperate council that Jasmine's siblings should not be identified, and
killed the story.
Brent's success in
stopping unwelcome questions encouraged others to go further. Until the
exposure of Meadow, the most shocking abuse of state power in family law
had been perpetrated by social workers, who had fallen for the theories of
American born-again Christians that rings of Satanists routinely abused
then ritually sacrificed children in the covens of devil-worshippers. When
Rochdale council was caught up in the witch craze, the courts happily
granted an injunction that not only prevented the identification of the
children involved, but also 'the solicitation or publication of any
information about the circumstances of or the reason for those
proceedings'.
Nothing could be done
to investigate the actions of the social workers, who were eventually
proved to be the dupes of hysterics. Even councillors were banned from
speaking up for their constituents. As
Walker
said, Britain was coming perilously close to the 'pre-censorship of
totalitarian regimes'.
Margaret Hodge and
Helena Kennedy QC are investigating what can be done to clear up the
wrecked lives that Meadow has left behind him. A modest first step would
be that blundering theorists should not be protected by legal secrecy. If
the authorities believe there is evidence to justify taking a child into
care, they should present it in open court. If the judge thinks the child
should not be named, that would be up to him or her, but the evidence
should be tested in public.
After the Meadow
disaster, it is time to return to the basic principle that justice is done
in the light.
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