
THIS WEBSITE CAN BE DISTURBING TO VICTIMS OF ABUSED OR SURVIVERES OF ABUSE VICTIMS SO IT'S NOT SUITABLE FOR YOUNG OR SENSATIVE VIEWERS!
We are a nonprofitable organazation that is a reachout to abused and neglected children everywhere.
child abuse ,neglect and death from abuse has been around for ages and very little is done to bring full justice to the innocent children that become victims of abuse.
In some states and in most cases the gets away from killing the victims loved one with a slap on the wrist " a slap of reality that proceeds to go on."

DONT BE AFRAID , DONT THINK OF YOUR SELF AS A MEDLER FOR TOMMAROW YOU MIGHT SEE THAT EXSACT CHILD ON THE PAPER UNDER "DEATH NOTICES." THIS CAN REMAIN IN YOUR CONCIOUS FOREVER AND IF THERES SOMETHING YOU CAN DO TO PREVENT SUCH PAIN WHY NOT DO IT?

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/ABUSEKILLNOMORE
Going about in your daily life loving life for what it is and appreciating all that life has given you and your loved ones.
UNTIL!------ you get a visit or in worst case a call that is not to the upmost sensative. Informing you that a loved one had been reported dead ( the fear the anger the sadness) running through all and every part of your being. At if matters wer'nt worse as is you come to now find out it was a child (a angel) who not only suffered but died by neglect and abuse while under the care of a responsible person or official.
I's not till then that you reallize the long lasting affect of child abuse/nrglect and you want to take matters in your own hand, but unfornunatly as you do rsearch you come to realize that you are among the many who lives with a heart breaking situation thats not likely to go away.
So as you watch the video imagine the victims of those who are near or related to you, a hard but a first look at what we as victims of children who suffer and died from abuse and neglect!
VIDEOS NOT SUITABLE FOR YOUNG OR SENSATIVE VIEWERS!

CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT,
any act (or failure to act) that causes a child serious physical or emotional harm or that places a child in imminent danger of such harm. Child abuse is a worldwide phenomenon that encompasses not only the physical, emotional, and sexual abuse of children by parents or others, but also some of the worst forms of
child labor, including slavery, child prostitution, and compulsory recruitment of children for military purposes.
The exact incidence of child abuse and neglect in the U.S. is unknown, but it is recognized as a major social problem. Under state laws requiring physicians—and encouraging other persons—to report incidents of suspected abuse, about 3 million allegations of neglect or physical abuse involving some 5 million children were reported in the year 2000. Approximately 879,000 cases were substantiated, representing about one of every 100 children in the U.S. Some 1200 children died as a result of abuse or neglect; of these, 44 percent were younger than one year old, and only 15 percent were six years of age or older.

Types of Abuse and Neglect.
Maltreatment of children can take the form of physical abuse, emotional abuse, sexual abuse, sexual exploitation, neglect, or abandonment. Physical abuse assumes various forms, including shaking, beating, punching, biting, or burning the child. Emotional or psychological abuse can include persistent and unwarranted efforts to blame or belittle the child, constant parental rejection, or the use of extreme forms of punishment, such as locking the child in a dark closet.
State laws vary concerning the definitions of and the criminal and civil penalties for abusive behavior. For example, although in many circumstances a parental failure to provide appropriate medical care for a sick child might be cited as evidence of neglect, many states make an exception for parents who choose, because of religious conviction, not to bring a child to a doctor. Some states specifically exempt common forms of corporal punishment, such as spanking, from coverage under the child abuse statutes.
The most prevalent forms of maltreatment vary with age. Infants and preschool children are most likely to suffer deliberately inflicted fractures, burns, and bruises. This is known as the battered-child syndrome, first identified during the 1960s.
Historically, reported cases of sexual abuse, ranging from molestation to incest, primarily involve male perpetrators and school-aged or adolescent female victims. More recently, however, a growing number of preschool victims and male victims have been identified. Sexual abusers who victimize prepubescent children are called pedophiles; the syndrome, known as pedophilia, is classified as a mental disorder by the American Psychiatric Association. Child prostitution and child pornography are examples of the sexual exploitation of children. In 2002, cases of sexual abuse of children and adolescents by Roman Catholic priests, and failures by the church hierarchy in reporting such incidents and removing perpetrators from positions of responsibility, received wide attention. However, sexual abuse of children by pedophiles is a broad problem extending to persons in all walks of life who may have contact with children.
The most prevalent type of abuse is neglect—that is, physical or emotional harm resulting from a parent’s failure to provide a child with adequate food, clothing, shelter, medical care, education, and moral training. A common symptom of neglect among young children is underfeeding; an undernourished infant often fails to thrive and may even die. Neglect (including medical neglect) accounted for more than three-fifths of all the substantiated cases of maltreatment in the U.S. in 2000. By the early 2000s, about half of the states specifically recognized abandonment as a form of child abuse.
VIDEOS NOT SUITABLE FOR YOUNG OR SENSATIVE VIEWERS!

SO SMALL, SO DELICATE, SO PRECIOUS AND YET THEY HAVE THE HEART TO
ABUSE AND KILL THEM.

The National Clearinghouse on Child Abuse and Neglect Information reported that 896,000 children suffered from some form of abuse or neglect in the United States in 2002. In addition to the enormous number of children who suffered the effects of child abuse in 2002, the National Child Abuse and Neglect Data System has stated that an estimated 1,400 children died as the result of abuse in that same year. Like many other forms of abuse, it has been suggested that the number of child abuse cases that are reported each year are far less than actual amount of cases of abuse that really take place.

My little girl met a new friend,
just the other day,
on the playground at school
between the tires and the swings
But she came home with tear-filled eyes,
and she said to me "Daddy, Alyssa lies"
Well I just brushed it off at first,
'cause I didn't know how much my little girl had been hurt
or the things she had seen.
I wasn't ready when I said "You can tell me"
and she said...
"Alyssa lies to the classroom,
Alyssa lies everyday at school,
Alyssa lies to the teachers
as she tries to cover every bruise"
My little girl laid her head down that night to go to sleep.
As I stepped out the room, I heard her say a prayer so soft and sweet
"God bless my mom and my Dad
and my new friend, Alyssa
*oh*I know she needs you bad
Because Alyssa lies to the classroom,
Alyssa lies everyday at school,
Alyssa lies to the teachers
as she tries to cover every bruise"
(bridge)
I had the worst night of sleep in years
as I tried to think of a way to calm her fears
I knew just what it was I had to do *I knew exactly what I had to do*
but when we got to school on Monday I heard the news
My little girl asked me why everybody looked so sad
the lump in my throat grew bigger
with every question that she asked.
Until I felt the tears run down my face
and I told her that Alyssa wouldn't be at school today
'Cause she doesn't lie in the classroom
she doesn't lie anymore at school
Alyssa lies with Jesus
because there's nothin' anyone would do
Tears filled my eyes when my little girl asked me why
Alyssa lies
*Oh Daddy, oh* Daddy tell me why
Alyssa lies

More than three-quarters (76.6%) of children who were killed were younger than 4 years of age, 13.4 percent were 4-7 years of age, 4.0 percent were 8-11 years of age, and 6.1 percent were 12-17 years of age (figure 4-1).
The youngest children experienced the highest rates of fatalities Infant boys (younger than 1 year) had a fatality rate of 17.3 deaths per 100,000 boys of the same age.5 Infant girls (younger than 1 year) had a fatality rate of 14.5 deaths per 100,000 girls of the same age. In general, fatality rates for both boys and girls decreased as the children get older.
Nearly one-half (44.3 percent) of all fatalities were White children.One-quarter (26.0%) were African-American children, and nearly one-fifth (19.3 percent) were Hispanic children. Children of American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Pacific Islander, "other," and multiple race categories collectively accounted for 4.5 percent of fatalities.
Three-quarters (76.6%) of child fatalities were caused by one or more parents More than one-quarter (28.5%) of fatalities were perpetrated by the mother acting alone.8 Nonparental perpetrators (e.g., other relative, foster parent, residential facility staff, "other," and legal guardian) were responsible for 13.0 percent of fatalities.
The three main categories of maltreatment related to fatalities were neglect (42.2%), combinations of maltreatments (27.3%), and physical abuse (24.1%) Medical neglect accounted for 2.5 percent of fatalities.
Some children who died from maltreatment were already known to CPS agencies. Children whose families had received family preservation services in the past 5 years accounted for 11.7 percent of child fatalities. Nearly 3 percent (2.7%) of the child fatalities had been in foster care and were reunited with their families in the past 5 years.


