Pubdate: Wed, 23 Apr 2008 Source: Okotoks Western Wheel (CN AB) Copyright: 2008, Okotoks Western Wheel Contact: http://www.westernwheel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1638 Author: Darlene Casten CIVIL RIGHTS PROTECTING TROUBLED TEEN, SAYS MOTHER Following is part one of a two-part series on youth crime, its impact on parents and the internet as a tool for criminal activity. The mother of an Okotoks teen, who claims her daughter is addicted to drugs and out of control, said a lack of parental rights has left her powerless to help her child. The mother of the teen and and another 11-year-old daughter said over the past year she has caught her oldest daughter with drugs and attempting to buy drugs over the internet on the social networking website Nexopia. In December the girl, a student at a local junior high school, turned a small amount of marijuana over to her mother before police arrived at the home to investigate a break-and-enter. The distraught mother has since been monitoring the girl's Nexopia profile and found one conversation that included the teen looking for prices of marijuana, ecstasy and special K, a tranquilizer. Since then the girl has moved out to live with relatives, but her mother continues to go online and check what she is doing. "I do it in the middle of the night so her friends won't see me online," she said. "After I get the information it is pretty hard to sleep because she is doing things like buying drugs and meeting guys she doesn't know." The mother also alleges the girl has vandalized both her and her father's homes. Police are looking into the case, but the mother said she is concerned nothing will be done. "They told me they are not there to solve family crises." Sgt. Wade Sparks of the Okotoks RCMP said police are investigating, but are restricted when it comes to using online conversations in a criminal investigation. The Privacy Act protects Internet discussions. Before an officer could intercept an online conversation they must have a judge's approval. The ability to get such an approval is also dependent on what type of crime is being investigated. If parents bring in incriminating information from web conversations, police still need to follow the proper channels in order to use it as evidence in court. "We can look at the information and take the appropriate steps, but we have to be very careful what we do with that information because it might damage our case down the road because we came into it in an improper manner," explained Sparks. Sparks said police are one resource for parents with troubled children, but said they aren't always the ones who will deal with the situation in the long run. "We are going to do the best we can to direct them to an agency that can help them and that is not always us," he said. "We are involved in criminal investigations so sometimes we can help and put it to the court who can deal with it." In this case, the teen's mom said she is beginning to feel the only way her daughter will get any help is if she is arrested and ordered by the court to go to drug rehabilitation. After hours on the phone to different drug programs for youth, she said it is unlikely her daughter will be receiving help for her addictions in the near future. "The gist I am getting right now is that in Canada (drug rehabilitation) is voluntary," the mother explained. "She has the right to refuse service whether it is seeing a psychologist or a medical exam. We have no way of enforcing it." The Alberta Alcohol and Drug Commission has a provision that parents can use to force their children into rehab for five days, but after that time lapses, treatment is again voluntary. "To do a detox with no long-term plan is like a drunk drying out for a few days, but the underlying problem is still there," she said. Following the five days a teen still has the right to refuse treatment, she added. In addition, her daughter has gone to child services with complaints that her mother said are fabricated. Since then social services has been involved, even interviewing their younger daughter at her school. Again on Nexopia, the mother said she saw conversations that revealed her daughter hoped to be placed in a Calgary group home, where she believed it would be a non-stop party. The mother said the information will be passed on to the investigator of their case. Dawn Delaney, a spokesperson for the Calgary and area Child and Family Services Authority, said that parents involved in any kind of investigation are interviewed and would have the opportunity to hand over any proof that the child is not being honest. "All calls to the crisis centre are assessed and investigated," Delaney said. "You don't just get a free pass to a group home." Dealing with local family resource authorities has been difficult, the girl's mother said. "There certainly is a higher degree of accountability on my head than someone we have evidence is lying and deceitful," she said. "The bend is going to the rights of the children. Parents have no resources to protect their own children." She has been speaking to the Premier's office and the Alberta Solicitor's General's office on the issue. "Our aim is to attempt to change the laws in Alberta for concerned caring parents," she said. "To give them rights under Section 43 of the Criminal Code; to enable them, with the necessary force, to prevent the children from inappropriate behavior." In the meantime, every day her concern for her daughter grows, she said. "I see prostitution, rape, her being beaten in a back alley - all the things a mother would worry about." All she wants is her sweet little girl back. "She was a little angel. A studious student, a mommy's girl a model child with a big heart. She loved animals and other people. It is those memories that hurt the most." The mother said she hopes to encourage other parents to lobby the provincial government to make legislative changes giving more rights to parents to ensure the safety of their own children. Part II of this series will appear in next week's Western Wheel. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek