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Mother and Boyfriend Charged With Murder in Death of 3-Year-Old Columbia Child

COLUMBIA, MD — Howard County law enforcement has charged a mother and her boyfriend with second-degree murder and other felonies in connection with the March 2025 death of her 3-year-old child. Kathleen Amesbury, 28, of Columbia, and Dale Brown Jr., 25, of Hanover, Pennsylvania, were arrested after a yearlong investigation. The case highlights the vital role that hospital staff and mandated reporters play in identifying signs of abuse and neglect.

Read more …Mother and Boyfriend Charged With Murder in Death of 3-Year-Old Columbia Child

After Teen’s Death in Hotel Placement, Maryland Pushes Sweeping Foster Care Reforms

ANNAPOLIS, Md. — Following the death of 16-year-old Kanaiyah Ward while placed in a Baltimore hotel under state foster care supervision, Maryland lawmakers are advancing bipartisan legislation aimed at overhauling how the state cares for its most vulnerable children. The proposed bill, known as "Kanaiyah's Law," would ban the placement of foster children in unlicensed settings such as hotels and require background checks for all court-appointed guardianship homes. The measure reflects growing urgency to address systemic failures identified by a state audit and a subsequent investigation into Ward's death.

Read more …After Teen’s Death in Hotel Placement, Maryland Pushes Sweeping Foster Care Reforms

Former School Employee Indicted in Child Sex Abuse Case

A federal grand jury has indicted Shawn Livingston, a 38-year-old former information technology employee at the Key School in Annapolis, Maryland, on 14 counts related to the coercion and enticement of minors and receipt of child sexual abuse material. The case, announced by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Maryland, involves at least five minor victims across the United States and carries a potential sentence of life in federal prison.

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The Harsh Reality of Aging Out: What the Numbers Tell Us About Foster Youth Left Behind

Every year, approximately 20,000 young people in the United States "age out" of the foster care system—transitioning from state care into legal adulthood, often without a family, a safety net, or the life skills needed to survive on their own. For many of these young people, their eighteenth birthday does not mark a celebration. It marks the beginning of a crisis. The statistics surrounding youth who age out of foster care reveal deeply troubling patterns of homelessness, unemployment, incarceration, untreated mental health challenges, substance use, and early parenthood. Understanding these outcomes is the first step toward changing them.

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Ending the Wait: Why Maryland Foster Youth Are Stuck in Hospitals — and What 2026 Reform Bills Promise

In Maryland, some children and youth connected to the foster care system are spending days, weeks, or even months in hospitals after doctors say they are ready to leave. Advocates call these “pediatric hospital overstays,” and a federal lawsuit alleges the practice amounts to unlawful warehousing of children with disabilities when the state cannot find appropriate placements. As lawmakers debate new bills in 2026 aimed at ending unlicensed placements and accelerating discharge planning, the central question remains: will reforms create real capacity and accountability—or will children continue to wait in settings never meant to be their homes?

Read more …Ending the Wait: Why Maryland Foster Youth Are Stuck in Hospitals — and What 2026 Reform Bills...

National Social Work Month 2026: Uplift. Defend. Transform.

March is National Social Work Month, an annual observance honoring the more than 810,000 social workers across the United States who serve on the front lines of child welfare, healthcare, mental health, education, crisis response, and community advocacy. This year's theme, "Social Workers: Uplift. Defend. Transform," calls attention to the profession's enduring mission of enhancing human well-being and meeting the needs of those who are most vulnerable. Across the country, communities are recognizing social workers through proclamations, public events, and renewed commitments to supporting the profession, including in St. Mary's County, Maryland, where county commissioners formally proclaimed the observance during their March 3 meeting.

Read more …National Social Work Month 2026: Uplift. Defend. Transform.

Maryland Lawmakers Consider Mandatory Child Abuse Training for Childcare Providers After Daycare Abuse Case Shakes Baltimore County

A new bill before the Maryland General Assembly would require all childcare providers in the state to complete specialized, recurring training focused on recognizing, preventing, and reporting child abuse. House Bill 1034, introduced by Delegate Sean Stinnett and co-sponsors in February 2026, was born from one of the most disturbing childcare abuse cases in recent Maryland history — a case that led a daycare owner to shoot her own husband after discovering he had been sexually abusing children in her care. The legislation aims to close a critical gap in Maryland's child protection framework by ensuring that the adults entrusted with the care of children are equipped to identify warning signs and take action.

Read more …Maryland Lawmakers Consider Mandatory Child Abuse Training for Childcare Providers After Daycare...

Anne Arundel County Police say Severn Baseball Trainer Charged After ICAC CyberTip Investigation

(Anne Arundel County, Maryland | March 2026) Anne Arundel County Police say a 55-year-old Severn man described as a local baseball trainer has been arrested and charged after an Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) investigation that began with a CyberTip to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) in August 2025. Police allege the case involved illicit online communication with a juvenile and that images were allegedly exchanged. Authorities are asking anyone with information to contact the Anne Arundel County Police tipline.

Read more …Anne Arundel County Police say Severn Baseball Trainer Charged After ICAC CyberTip Investigation

A Child in State Care, a System Under Scrutiny: The Story of Kanaiyah Ward and the Law That Bears Her Name

In September 2025, a 16-year-old girl named Kanaiyah Ward died in a Baltimore City hotel room while under the supervision of the Maryland Department of Human Services — a tragedy that quickly revealed deep, systemic failures within the state's child welfare system. A scathing legislative audit, a secretary's resignation, sweeping legislative action, and a bipartisan push for reform have followed. This is the full story of what happened, what was discovered, and what Maryland is doing to make sure it never happens again.

Read more …A Child in State Care, a System Under Scrutiny: The Story of Kanaiyah Ward and the Law That Bears...

West Virginia Department of Human Services Secretary Alex Mayer testifies before state lawmakers in December.  West Virginia Legislative Photography

West Virginia Child Abuse Prevention Efforts Show Gains Amid Child Welfare Reforms

West Virginia's Department of Human Services is reporting measurable progress in child abuse prevention, with community-based programs now operating in all 55 counties. The developments come as the state works to overhaul a child welfare system that a 2025 federal audit found was noncompliant with key intake, screening, and investigation requirements in an estimated 91 percent of reviewed cases. State officials say expanded early-intervention services are strengthening families and reducing risk factors associated with child abuse and neglect.

Read more …West Virginia Child Abuse Prevention Efforts Show Gains Amid Child Welfare Reforms

Maryland Lawmakers Demand Answers on Foster Children Stranded in Hospital Overstays

ANNAPOLIS, MD — January 30, 2026 — Maryland lawmakers pressed Department of Human Services officials during a Senate Finance Committee hearing on January 28 about the troubling practice of "hospital overstays," in which foster children remain stranded in medical facilities for weeks or months after being medically cleared for discharge simply because the state cannot find appropriate placements for them.

Read more …Maryland Lawmakers Demand Answers on Foster Children Stranded in Hospital Overstays

Photo credit; WBAL-TV 11

Maryland Foster Care System Reforms Advance Following Teen's Death in Hotel

A 16-year-old girl's death by suicide in a Baltimore hotel while under state foster care supervision in September 2025 has prompted Maryland lawmakers to advance comprehensive legislation designed to address systemic failures in the Department of Human Services. The Maryland Department of Human Services investigation released in early January 2026 confirmed that contracted supervisors were negligent in their duties, sparking calls for sweeping reforms including independent oversight, mandatory background checks, and prohibitions on placing vulnerable children in unlicensed facilities.

Read more …Maryland Foster Care System Reforms Advance Following Teen's Death in Hotel

Justice for the Vulnerable: Maximum Sentencing of Mustafa Pitts and the Systemic Reckoning of Child Welfare in Maryland

BALTIMORE, MD — In a definitive ruling that punctuates a five-year nightmare for a local family, Mustafa Pitts, a former teacher at The Reach! Partnership School, was sentenced on Wednesday, December 17, 2025, to the maximum penalty of 55 years in prison. The sentencing, handed down in Baltimore City Circuit Court, follows Pitts’ July conviction on two counts of sexual abuse of a minor.

Read more …Justice for the Vulnerable: Maximum Sentencing of Mustafa Pitts and the Systemic Reckoning of...

Medical Examiner Rules Teen’s Death a Suicide; Case Highlights Ongoing Concerns for Youth in State Care

Update: The Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner has ruled the death of 16-year-old Kanaiyah Ward a suicide due to diphenhydramine intoxication. Ward was found on September 22 at a Baltimore hotel while in the care of the Maryland Department of Human Services (DHS). This update follows our earlier coverage and confirms the official cause and manner of death.

Read more …Medical Examiner Rules Teen’s Death a Suicide; Case Highlights Ongoing Concerns for Youth in State...

Gambrills Man Found Guilty in Rape of 12-Year-Old Girl

 

Annapolis, MD – This week in Anne Arundel County Circuit Court, Christopher Steven McGee, age 35 of Gambrills was found guilty of 2nd degree rape with a 12-year-old victim, with whom he had cultivated an ongoing sexual relationship. The Honorable Judge Pamela K. Alban reached her verdict following a three-day bench trial that began on Tuesday, July 29. Judge Alban scheduled sentencing for September 19, 2025.  

Read more … Gambrills Man Found Guilty in Rape of 12-Year-Old Girl