On Jan. 31, 2001, 5-year-old Logan Marr was found dead in the
basement of her foster mother's home in Chelsea, Maine. The foster
mother, Sally Schofield, a highly respected former caseworker for
Maine's Department of Human Services (DHS), would later be tried and
convicted of manslaughter after police determined that Logan had died
from asphyxiation after being bound with duct tape and strapped into a
high chair in the basement.
Sally was the third foster mother to take in Logan since she was
removed from her birth mother, Christy Marr, in August 1998. The
teenaged Christy had moved in with her mother, Kathy Baker, shortly
after Logan's birth, and the two had fought constantly over how to raise
the baby. It was Kathy who initiated Christy's first contact with
Maine's Department of Human Services; in May 1996, she called the
department to report her concerns about Logan's safety. According to DHS
records, Kathy told an intake worker that she had always worried "that
Christy is too immature and troubled to be a good parent to Logan," and
that "Christy can't or won't put Logan's needs before her own. Kathy
said that Christy screams and hollers at the baby all the time and
handles her extremely roughly."
DHS sent caseworker Diane Sanborn to assess Logan's situation.
Despite Kathy's allegations, she did not find anything that immediately
concerned her about Christy's parenting. She did believe that Christy
should work on what DHS considered an unhealthy relationship with her
boyfriend, an admitted drug user.
The department told Christy that in order to maintain custody of Logan, she would have to begin living under a strict set of rules: Any boyfriends or individuals allowed to stay
over in her apartment would have to be cleared with DHS. And she would
have to cut off her troubled relationship with her mother.Kathy had married a man named Mitch, whom DHS had been told, falsely, had been convicted of sexually assaulting a teenage girl years before. As long as Kathy and Mitch stayed
together, DHS warned, Christy would have to stay away or risk losing
custody of Logan.
Christy tried to stay away from her mother, but she had few other
sources of emotional support. Inevitably, she ended up drifting back.
One day, she left Logan with a babysitter at her mother's apartment.
Mitch, who had previously moved out, turned up and was seen by a
neighbor, who called DHS. The department immediately sought custody of
Logan, citing Christy's failure to protect her from potentially unsafe
people.
Hearing of the department's plan to remove Logan, Christy took her
daughter and fled, heading south toward Boston. But she soon realized
her efforts were futile, and turned around and returned to Maine the same
day. By the next morning, two caseworkers had come and removed 2-and-a-half-year-old Logan into state custody. She was soon placed in a foster home.
Now pregnant with her second child, Christy had to prove to DHS that
she could change if she wanted to regain Logan and keep her new baby. A
new agreement was drawn up, requiring her to sever all ties
with her mother and to attend a variety of counseling services,
including one-on-one counseling, parenting skills classes, and job
training. She was to stay in a group home until the birth of her
child, and then locate appropriate housing for herself and the
children.
After the birth of her baby girl, Bailey, Christy moved into a new
apartment. She communicated with her mother only through videotapes that
she made, showing Kathy the new baby and the apartment. Her efforts to
stay away from Kathy and fulfill the requirements of the agreement reassured her DHS caseworker, and after seven months the
department returned Logan.
But Christy had paid a heavy price to regain her daughter -- she
had cut herself off from the only lasting relationship in her life. Now
completely on her own, responsible for two young girls, 21-year-old
Christy set out to reunite with her father, who lived a thousand miles
away in Florida. Her father had become alienated from the family after
an ugly divorce in which Christy had accused him of molesting her, an
accusation her father denied and that she later recanted.
Putting the past behind her, Christy and her girls moved in with her
father and his new family. For a while, things were good. With something
approaching a normal family life, Logan appeared to thrive. But Christy
chafed under her father's rules, and her attempt at reconciliation soon
failed. After nine weeks, she and the girls returned to Maine.
With no job and no home, Christy moved back in with her mother, and
attached herself to another boyfriend of questionable character, a
convicted burglar named Paul. Before long, they were married.
When DHS learned of Christy's trip to Florida -- which in the
department's view put the girls in jeopardy by exposing them to an
accused sex offender -- and her new relationship, they reopened her case
and assigned it to a new caseworker, Allison Peters. Peters soon
received a tip -- never confirmed -- that Paul had hit Christy in
front of Logan. Peters moved quickly, arriving unannounced at Christy's
door with two police officers and a court order to remove the girls.
Logan and Bailey were driven to a foster home two hours away. It would
be the last time Logan would ever live with her mother.
Determined to get her girls back, Christy divorced Paul, worked two
jobs, and attended mandatory classes and therapy sessions, riding for
hours in DHS vans to get to them. Logan and Bailey were living with a
new foster mother, Mary Beth Anderson, and 4-year-old Logan was
beginning to show the effects of separation from her mother. According
to Mary Beth's journal, Logan asked from the beginning when her
mother would "get her back." That month, Logan was seen by a therapist
five times. The therapist listed the themes in Logan's play as "Mommy
and Daddy fighting; Mommy and Daddy losing their baby; Big sisters
taking care of little sisters; and Someone took me away but I don't know
why." According to Mary Beth's journals, Logan began to have raging temper
tantrums. She writes, "Logan's outrage is still bad. The child has anger
by the ton. Logan pushes and pushes and if I don't react, pushes further
with whining and screaming and punching with closed fists and
kicking."
Concerned that Logan might have been abused some time in her past,
Mary Beth brought Logan for an evaluation to the Spurwink Clinic, which
specializes in child abuse. Despite extensive examinations, counselors
found no evidence of any physical or sexual abuse. They did recommend,
however, that Logan receive counseling to cope with the separation from
her mother.
As Christy was struggling with the loss of her girls, and Mary Beth
struggled with Logan's increasing tantrums, DHS caseworker Sally
Schofield had begun to think about adopting a little girl of her
own. She had two boys: Derek, 14, from a previous marriage, and
1-year-old Shaynen. But she had always longed for a girl. DHS
discourages its caseworkers from adopting children from within the
system, but Sally was determined to be an exception. She enrolled with
her husband in a mandatory training program for adoptive parents, and
began the process of getting approved as an adoptive home.
After a physical incident between Mary Beth and Logan -- an
incident both Mary Beth and the department refuse to discuss -- DHS
moved quickly to get the girls into another foster home. Caseworker
Allison Peters called Sally and asked if she would be willing to take
the girls temporarily. According to Sally, it was understood at that
point that DHS would pursue terminating Christy's parental rights,
freeing the girls up for eventual adoption. The girls moved in with
Sally and her husband in early September 2000. Though she was concerned at what she saw as signs of
neglect in Logan -- her need to take care of her younger sister and
her quick attachment to her new caretakers -- Sally says she fell in
love with the girls that first weekend.
As Sally sought to bond with the girls, DHS cut back Christy's visits
with them. She would have to provide her own transportation, though she
didn't have a car. She wasn't allowed to know Sally's last name,
address, or occupation. According to Sally, DHS said this secrecy was
required because of "safety concerns."
Discouraged, Christy began to falter. She missed classes and
counseling appointments. In a fit of pique, she remarried Paul, the man
whose presence had led to the removal of Logan and Bailey. At one point, she stormed out of a meeting with her caseworker
and therapist. Her therapist wrote to Allison Peters:
Christy's
progress the past five months has been slow at best. She has missed
several appointments blaming transportation and oversleeping (our
appointments are at 2 p.m.). Recently when cut off from seeing her
daughters Christy 'fell sick' not leaving the apartment or calling me
for help. Christy has on a regular basis blamed others for her
problems. Can't pay the rent -- no job. Can't get GED -- have to
be available for my girls. Can't get a driver's license -- no one
will lend me a car. The bad guys have changed since [the beginning of
her counseling], but little else has. I hate to think that her
relationshipo with her little girls will be on this yo-yo schedule for
so long.
The girls, meanwhile, were settling in at Sally's. Though not rich
herself, Sally was able to give Logan things that Christy had not:
swimming lessons and dance classes. But Logan didn't seem happy. Her
rages continued, and escalated. According to Sally, they were often
particularly bad after visits with Christy. DHS notes from an October
visit read:
Logan kept telling mom throughout the visit that she was
her favorite person in the whole world. As the visit was ending, Logan
ran to mom and said, 'I want to go home with you.' At one visit, Logan
asked Christy if she knew what Sally looked like. Christy said, 'Yes,
I've seen her,' and Logan responded, 'I don't like her.'
As Logan's behavior deteriorated, Sally found herself at a loss.
Logan would rage out of control, screaming, kicking, and thrashing so
violently that Sally was afraid she would hurt herself. Suddenly, all
the confidence Sally had accumulated as a parent and a DHS caseworker
seemed to vanish. "I was supposed to be trained," she told FRONTLINE. "I
was supposed to be educated. How come I couldn't help her? How come I
didn't know what to do?"
At her supervised visits with the girls Christy could see that Logan
wasn't doing well. She was discouraged by DHS, though, from discussing
what was making Logan unhappy. At their videotaped Christmas visit
on Dec. 18, 2000, while a DHS supervisor sat listening, Logan stopped
opening her gifts and told Christy that Sally had hurt her. She squeezed
her cheeks together with one hand, and said, "She did this to me, and I
cried, and it hurts me. She did it to my sister, too." When Christy
tried to find out more about what happened, she says the DHS supervisor
shook her head, forbidding her from going into detail about the
incident. In early January 2001, during another supervised visit, Logan
again told Christy that Sally had handled her roughly, wrapping her up
in a blanket. Again, Christy was signalled not to pursue the matter.
DHS rules require caseworkers to visit foster homes quarterly, and to
promptly investigate any complaint of physical abuse. Logan's
caseworker, Allison Peters, did neither. Peters declined FRONTLINE's
request for an interview.
By January, Sally had quit her job as a caseworker, and DHS had
decided to pave the way for her adoption of the girls, despite clear and
repeated warnings that she was having a difficult time dealing with
Logan. Discouraged, Christy had begun to believe that she would never
get her children back. She wrote them a letter, which she planned to give
them at their next scheduled visit, on Jan. 31, 2001:
Dear Logan and Bailey, my sweet little ladies. I think of you so
much and often it seems hard to believe you girls have been gone so long
now. In a month or so from now, I stand the chance to lose the both of
you forever. And it's been no picnic, but this is not your fault. It's
mine, and mine alone. I want the both of you to know that no matter what
happens, I love you, and will never stop fighting for you.
The girls never received the letter. The visit was cancelled because
of a snowstorm. And that evening, Logan died in Sally's basement.
According to Sally, Logan had been in one of her rages in the afternoon. "I asked her if she needed to scream and she said yes," Sally said. "I
said, 'OK, well then let's put you some place where you can scream.'"
Sally put Logan in an unfinished portion of her basement in a high
chair. She left her there for over an hour, she says, periodically
checking on her. When she came down to check after starting dinner, she
says she found Logan lying in a heap on the floor, still confined to her
high chair. She wasn't breathing. She was rushed to Maine General
Hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
That night, the police came to interview Sally. She told them she thought Logan must have
knocked herself over in the high chair and hit her head. Although she
claimed that Logan had not been restrained in the high chair, in a
subsequent search of Sally's house, the detectives found evidence that
raised doubts about her story. Strewn amid boxes in the dank basement
were clumps of duct tape, some 40 feet in all. Police tests revealed
that the tape had been looped repeatedly around Logan's body and head,
and across her mouth. Tufts of her hair were stuck to the tape. And an
autopsy revealed that Logan had not died from a blow to the head, but
from asphyxiation.
The police returned and confronted Sally with the new evidence.
At first, she maintained
that Logan had tangled herself in the duct tape, but her story soon
crumbled. Sally was arrested and charged with depraved indifference, murder, and manslaughter. A prosecution affadavit alleged that she had
taped Logan into her high chair, and taped her mouth shut. Sally waived
her right to a jury trial, and a judge concluded that she had not
intentionally killed Logan. But he found her guilty of manslaughter and sentenced her to 20 years in prison.
Caseworker Allison Peters testified at the trial, but was never asked
about her failure to respond to Logan's complaints about Sally. She was
placed on paid administrative leave for a month, and has since left DHS.
No formal disciplinary action was taken against any DHS employees in
connection with Logan's death, although the case prompted the state
legislature to initiate two investigations of the department.
Bailey was moved to a third foster home after her sister's death. For
the next year, Christy battled with DHS to get her back. Finally, in
February 2002, she was returned to Christy for good.