Mother gets day in court over 'House of Horrors'

It is a good chance that Mom has a mental illness. Sad.

I read an article somewhere about hoarding and how it is a form of mentall illness. I believe it was in last week's People magazine issue. This case seems like it fits.

If my house ever got that messy, I would be extremely stressed out and have high anxiety levels. I am practically OCD about being neat but I have gotten better since having kids cuz I cant have the house looking like a model home all times. It was a hard change so maybe the mother is the total opposite. Who knows?
 
The mother was abused by the father, never abused the girls. The father havent see the girls for 4 yrs. Now the girls are taking care of by Children Service right now. The judge ordered the parents go seeking the counseling, and the girls seeking psychoglist (sp??). I was watching 11pm news tonight.
 
that not good for mom because she is crazy and she not caring but her ex-husband took three girls to raise.

this pictures is totally TRASHY!

that totally sicko about urine with bottle! im going vomit (puke)
 
that not good for mom because she is crazy and she not caring but her ex-husband took three girls to raise.

this pictures is totally TRASHY!

that totally sicko about urine with bottle! im going vomit (puke)
The father doesnt have the girls YET!!! The children services have them right now. Till the parents are going to see the counselors. The judge ordered.
 
UPDATE!!


Mother loses custody of daughters over 'House of Horrors'


A Suffolk county judge stripped a woman of custody of her children Friday, two days after authorities discovered that her home in Lindenhurst was littered with feces, garbage and bottles of urine.

Suffolk County Supreme Court Judge Mark Cohen also ordered Deborah Young, her estranged husband, Ray Young Jr., and their three daughters, to undergo psychological evaluations.

The judge's decision to place the Young children together in a therapeutic county-supervised foster home effectively denied a request made by Ray Young Jr., that he be given custody of the children. "It is very much the court's intention to keep the children together," Cohen said.

Deborah Young, 46, appeared calm as the judge announced his decision.

She and her daughters -- ages 10, 12 and 14 -- had been visiting her parents in upstate Windham, N.Y., when authorities showed up at her home Wednesday afternoon and made the disturbing discovery after her ex-husband alerted them. Deborah Young was ordered back to Long Island on Thursday for a meeting with Suffolk County's Child Protective Service officers, and to attend Friday's emergency hearing.

In court, she seemed composed between several rounds of private negotiations before the brief hearing in Central Islip. But Deborah Young cried and hid her face behind a multi-colored scarf as she left the court building, where she was surrounded by television cameras and reporters shouting questions at her.

Deborah Young's mother, Jean Lucania, 71, trailed several feet behind her daughter. "She's a good person and a good mother," she said, clutching the arm of her husband, John Lucania.

"They drove her off her head, those miserable -- -- ," she shouted, adding that she was referring to Ray Young Jr. and his family. She did not elaborate.

Later Friday, Deborah Young was permitted to remove some personal items from the house and tearfully sent a brief message to her daughters: "Your mommy loves you. We'll be together soon."

Ray Young Jr., who is in divorce proceedings with Deborah, says he went earlier this week to the white two-story home he and his father own and found a scene of horror: the house interior filled with feces, bottles of urine, and piles of used toilet tissue.

Among the refuse were touches of normalcy -- a doll collection, pictures of the Young children hanging in the kitchen, a stack of kids' books -- but little else to suggest a healthy household.

The condition of the Deborah Young's home, and its possible effect on the children, were referred to only obliquely in court. Citing health concerns, Cohen ordered Deborah Young and the children out of the house. Ray Young Jr. agreed through his attorney to "take all necessary steps" to clean up the property.

"I was hopeful that I was going to get chance to see the kids today ... but I'm thankful the kids are in a safe environment," Ray Young Jr. said after the hearing. Young has not lived with his children since 2001 when he moved out of the Nevada Street house and has said that they were reluctant to live with him.

One of Ray Young's attorneys, Joseph Quatela of Westbury, called the judge's decision to have the family undergo psychological evaluations appropriate. "There can be no doubt that the children have been severely traumatized. Professional intervention is first and foremost what these kids need," Quatela said.

Quatela said that he has repeatedly raised concerns to Joy Jorgensen, a court-appointed attorney who represents the Young children, and others about Deborah Young's mental health over the course of the divorce but does not know if a Jorgensen or another official ever entered the home. "But obviously if someone had done that ... we wouldn't be where we are today," he said. Jorgensen and Deborah Young's attorney, Maureen Glass of Babylon, did not return calls Friday.

Ray Young Jr. called Jean Lucania's suggestion that he and his family held some responsibility for his wife's mental state "incredible."

"I have a lot of sadness on my part too. I went through the divorce too, and ... I don't subject children to this," he said. "The way the children were living, let's be real, was inexcusable."

The Youngs are scheduled to appear in court again on March 6 for a status meeting with the judge and a child protective services representative.

Dennis Nowak, spokesman for Suffolk Child Protective Services, said it was common for judges to order psychological evaluations for both parents and children in cases where alarms are raised about the safety of a family's home, or when a non-guardian parent seeks custody.

Nowak said that such evaluations are typically done by a mental health care provider under contract with the Department of Social Services and can take as long as several weeks. In 2006 there were 872 children in foster care in Suffolk County, with an average stay lasting just under 21 months. "Foster care is always temporary. The goal is always to reunite children with their parents if at all possible," he said.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.



I will keep posting the news and information abt the parents and the girls.
 
:wtf:

I've gotta wonder, what was her housekeeping like when they were married? Was she always like this? Or did something happen (like the water being shut off) that caused her to snap? Have the girls teachers noticed anything out of the norm? Dirty clothes? Dirty bodies? That house didn't get like that overnight.

Anyway, I feel so horrible for these kids. Not only must their minds be distorted from their wacko mother but now the whole world knows about it. I hope that they find the father to be a fit parent and they can live with him so their at least with immediate family in a stable environment and not with that animal that calls herself a mother. I don't see that he did it as a possibility. Don't they think the neighbors would have seen him bringing all that shit in the house, and also, HE OWNS THE HOUSE! Why the hell would he do that to his own property??? Please enlighten me! Christ...
 
:wtf:

I've gotta wonder, what was her housekeeping like when they were married? Was she always like this? Or did something happen (like the water being shut off) that caused her to snap? Have the girls teachers noticed anything out of the norm? Dirty clothes? Dirty bodies? That house didn't get like that overnight.

Anyway, I feel so horrible for these kids. Not only must their minds be distorted from their wacko mother but now the whole world knows about it. I hope that they find the father to be a fit parent and they can live with him so their at least with immediate family in a stable environment and not with that animal that calls herself a mother. I don't see that he did it as a possibility. Don't they think the neighbors would have seen him bringing all that shit in the house, and also, HE OWNS THE HOUSE! Why the hell would he do that to his own property??? Please enlighten me! Christ...
I know!!! Like you said if the neighbor see it then they would say something but they hadnt see or noticed anything. Plus the kids had school recess for a week. The mother took the kids to see the grandparents. It will take more than a week to drop all the junks in the house. I hope the father will take the kids too.

Like I said in the post abt if the kids have plm at home and couldnt or afraid of tell the teachers or friends abt the conditions. Maybe they are abusing from the mother. Why didnt the neighbors smell the rotton odor? Alot of questions that couldnt answer. We will know more when I find out soon.
 
I'm just glad to hear that the daughters no longer will have to live in this flirty house, and I hope that their father will raise them right and give them all the love they need.....I do feel sorry for the mother, but I wish she would have gotten help sooner ...It does saddness me when it comes to fighting in court for child custody, when both parents want the children but one of will lose at the end....I'm glad the judge made the right choice for those girls....
 
UPDATE!!


Mother faces neglect charges for filthy home
BY ANDREW STRICKLER


The Lindenhurst woman found living with her daughters in a filthy home littered with bottles of urine will have to answer allegations of child neglect, a Suffolk County judge said Tuesday.

Suffolk County Supreme Court Judge Mark Cohen said the neglect petition filed yesterday by Suffolk County child protective services officials would be referred to Family Court Judge John Kelly.

Neither Deborah Young, 46, nor her estranged husband, Ray Young Jr., 42, spoke during the hearing in Central Islip. Cohen's announcement came less than two weeks after he stripped Deborah Young of custody of her daughters, ages 10, 12, and 14, and placed them temporarily in a therapeutic foster home on Feb. 23.

Ray Young's attorney, Joseph Quatela of Westbury, said that the neglect petition backed up their claim that Deborah Young and the children were living in dangerous and unhealthy conditions.

"Obviously found no wrongdoing with Ray Young because they didn't charge him," Quatela said. Quatela said Kelly denied a request made by Deborah Young's parents, John and Jean Lucania of Windham, to be able to visit their grandchildren.

Ray Young Jr., who is in divorce proceedings with his wife, has said that he found the interior of the house filled with feces and bottles of urine on Feb 20.

Family law attorney Robert Mangi of Westbury said that a parent charged with neglect can deny the charge and have a fact-finding hearing. If the parent is found to have committed neglect, a judge is likely to order the parent to change their living situation and undergo counseling, as well as keep the children in foster care.

In extreme cases, Mangi said, officials can begin proceedings to terminate parental rights if the parent does little or nothing to comply with the judge's orders.

Deborah Young's attorney, Maureen Glass, declined to comment, as did attorney Joy Jorgensen of Babylon, who represents the Young children. Deborah Young attended the hearing with her parents but did not speak to reporters.
 
OH my god. I can't believe this.

*sick to my tummy*

sorry, i have to say this is really sick and im glad these kids are in a better place for now.
 
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