Jury awards 600,000 to estate of foster child



The foster father who stabbed the child five times got three years in prison.
NORWALK, Ohio (AP) -- A jury ordered Huron County and its embattled child welfare agency to pay 600,000 to the estate of a young girl stabbed to death by the foster father the agency placed her with.
The decision Friday is another admonition for Huron County Job and Family Services, which was widely criticized for not intervening earlier in the case of two adoptive parents who made some of their 11 special needs children sleep in cages.
The jury found that the county commission and JFS were liable in the 2004 death of 11-year-old Connre Dixon, who was stabbed five times by her foster father, Paul Efaw, and bled to death in a barn on his property in Ridgefield Township.
Efaw was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced in 2005 to three years in prison.
"I'm completely elated," said Jim Martin, an attorney representing the girl's estate. "I think it sends a message to the Huron County commissioners and the Department of Job and Family Services that they need to completely revamp the system from the bottom to the top."
Trial
During the four-day civil trial, witnesses testified that the agency knew of several child abuse allegations against Efaw but still approved him as a foster parent and placed Connre in his home after removing the girl from her mother's care in 2003.
Job and Family Services Director Erich Dumbeck also testified that none of the agency's workers were disciplined as a result. He declined to comment after the jury's decision Friday.
During their deliberations, the jury asked if they could direct the financial award to benefit a school or a park instead of a father who didn't seem to want her, juror Angela Shepherd said. The request was denied.
"We would have given more if we could have specified it went to the siblings," Shepherd said. Two of Connre's brothers live with a relative and the other is an adult. Her mother died two years ago.
Lawyers for the county commission said they were disappointed. Commissioner Mike Adelman said the board would meet Tuesday to discuss whether the county should appeal.
The agency also had come under fire in the case of the caged children after allegations surfaced that county social workers knew about the conditions at a home in rural Wakeman for two years before intervening.
Michael and Sharen Gravelle were convicted on child abuse and child endangering charges. They received two-year sentences but are appealing their convictions, saying the cages were needed to protect the children.
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