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Re: Homosexual accused of child abuse now charged with murder after adopted newborn son dies

From FFP <fredfuckedpatti@gmail.com>
Message-ID <905111a527aaa8baf60584d448dc44b5@dizum.com> (permalink)
Newsgroups alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.usa, talk.politics.guns, rec.scouting.misc, az.general
References <rbcajp$1qpn$2@esteban.tulanet.com> <rcgoq7$ldu$2@esteban.tulanet.com> <e65815a7-17f9-4b01-a963-372bd2ec8b6bo@googlegroups.com> <MPG.39e4fa97a75670d59896c7@news.aioe.org>
Subject Re: Homosexual accused of child abuse now charged with murder after adopted newborn son dies
Date 2022-05-17 22:23 +0200

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On 18 Jun 2020, Rich Keebler <rkeebler@afe.net> posted some
news:<MPG.39e4fa97a75670d59896c7@news.aioe.org>:

EDITOR’S NOTE: An earlier version of this report incorrectly 
stated that an organization named Adoption Advice and Guidance 
served as the adoption agency in this case. That is incorrect, 
and we apologize for the error.

A professor has been arrested and charged with first-degree 
murder and felony child abuse for allegedly abusing a baby boy 
he adopted just weeks ago, leaving the newborn with a fractured 
skull, broken rib, and other injuries.

Gaston County Bureau Reporter Ken Lemon was in court Thursday 
afternoon, where Van Erick Custodio, 42, faced a judge on the 
upgraded charge. The charges against Custodio were upgraded 
after the baby died from the injuries he sustained from the 
alleged abuse, according to investigators. He was given no bond.

Lemon also learned the biological mother who gave up her newborn 
son, believing he would have a better life with another family, 
arrived from out of state Thursday. She was able to be with her 
son just before he died.

Channel 9 obtained warrants against Custodio, a now-suspended 
Belmont Abbey College professor, that say he admitted to 
physically abusing the baby boy “multiple” times. The baby was 
just six weeks old.

On Wednesday, Lemon discovered Custodio and his wife, who 
already adopted a girl, held fundraising efforts to pay for the 
adoption. They were even part of a video for it.

“We just felt like God put that desire in our hearts,” they said 
in the video. “We’ve always wanted to have a family. At the end 
of the day, it’s a calling, right, it’s also a scriptural thing, 
right?”

ALSO READ: Gaston County mother accused of intentionally 
starving 3-year-old son, prosecutors say

The organization Both Hands helped the couple raise money for 
the adoption.

“Our team is incredibly devastated about this news,” the agency 
said in a statement. “We find these actions atrocious and pray 
for healing for this child. We strive for all children to be 
placed in safe and loving homes, so our hearts are broken.”

The child was six weeks old but had already been through trauma. 
Custodio is in the Gaston County Jail and, according to arrest 
warrants, admitted to causing serious harm to the adopted 
newborn.

(VIDEO: 11 p.m. update -- Adoptive father arrested, accused of 
physically abusing 6-week-old, warrants say)

On Wednesday, investigators were at his Gastonia home, a place 
police were first called to on April 1 for a child in cardiac 
arrest.

Arrest warrants reveal the child had a “skull fracture, broken 
rib, and multiple fractures in each leg.” Another warrant says 
friends of Custodio went to police saying he had told them, 
“...he threw the child on the sofa and also squeezed the child, 
hearing a pop in the rib area” and while changing the baby’s 
diaper, “...he jerked the legs of the child back and felt a pop 
in the child’s legs.”

Two days later, police charged Custodio with felony child abuse 
with serious bodily injury -- but he wasn’t around.

Three days after those charges were filed, York County deputies 
swarmed a Lake Wylie home. They had gotten information from the 
State Law Enforcement Division that Custodio was hiding out 
there. Custodio was arrested and Wednesday afternoon, he was 
brought back to Gastonia.

ALSO READ: Police: Man charged with shooting, killing another 
man in Gaston County neighborhood

The man who pled publicly for money to adopt a child is behind 
bars, charged with horrible abuse of that child, who died in a 
hospital Thursday.

Custodio’s personal website says he once volunteered for a 
family ministry.

His wife was also part of that fundraising effort and she 
adopted the child with him. The warrant says she told him to 
leave the house when the abuse came to light.

Custodio faced a judge Thursday, but the investigation is still 
active.

UNC Charlotte said Custodio was working as an adjunct professor 
there but is now on administrative leave.

UNC Charlotte statement:

“UNC Charlotte hired Van Erick Custodio on a limited, temporary 
contract to teach one class this semester in an adjunct 
capacity. He has been placed on administrative leave, and 
another faculty member will cover this class for the remainder 
of the semester.”

ALSO READ: Taylorsville man arrested for felony child abuse, 
sheriff says

Adoption process Custodios would have had to complete
Genie Miller Gillespie, the president of the Academy of Adoption 
and Assisted Reproduction Attorneys, spoke to Lemon from Chicago 
Thursday.

She said that, like any family, the Custodios would have had to 
complete a vetting process before bringing a child into their 
home.

“A thorough home study process, which usually requires 
references, criminal background checks, state, federal, and 
child abuse registry,” said Gillespie.

The couple had already gone through that process with their 
older child.

Gillespie said the process can take six months and is helpful, 
but not foolproof.

“It’s impossible to know. I truly wish I had a crystal ball,” 
she said.

Heather Kauffman, the program director of Lighthouse -- the 
Gaston County agency that helps abused children -- said the case 
is frustrating, but not uncommon.

“I don’t know if there’s really ever that situation that truly 
surprises you,” said Kauffman.

April is National Child Abuse Prevention Month. If you know of a 
child who is being neglected or abused, please call police. If 
you just have a bad feeling about something, or are concerned 
about a child’s well-being, there is help. 1-800-CHILDREN will 
connect you to resources in North Carolina, and 1-800-4-A-CHILD 
is the national child abuse hotline.

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Re: Homosexual accused of child abuse now charged with murder after adopted newborn son dies FFP <fredfuckedpatti@gmail.com> - 2022-05-17 22:23 +0200

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