A father lost custody of his 7-year-old son and didn’t
get to see him for a week after mistakenly buying the boy
an alcoholic lemonade at a baseball game.
Christopher Ratte, a professor of archaeology at the University
of Michigan, bought his son Leo a drink called Mike’s
Hard Lemonade at a Detroit Tigers game, not knowing it was
an alcoholic drink.
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A stadium guard approached Mr. Ratte during the ninth inning,
and asked Ratte if he knew he was serving his son liquor.
"You've got to be kidding," he replied, trying to
read the bottle. But the guard "snatched it before Ratte
could examine the label," the Detroit Free Press reported.
Leo Ratte was rushed to the hospital in an ambulance after
complaining of minor nausea. Blood tests found no trace of
alcohol in his system.
The police and social workers agreed the father had made
a mistake, but said there was nothing they could do. They
had to follow protocol.
Michigan’s Child Protective Services (CPS) took Leo
into custody and didn’t let him speak to any member
of his family for three days. He spent his first night crying
in front of a television set while his parents waited outside
the building where he was being held.
After three days he was allowed to go home to be with his
mother. Finally, after a week the father was able to join
his family.
According to the lawyer representing the Ratte family, the
Michigan standard for the emergency removal of children from
their parents does not reflect current federal constitutional
law, which requires proof of immediate danger to a child.
Ratte later stated, "I feel that this was a massive
overreaction to our case, and I think that everyone would
have to conclude that." He and his wife, who is also
a university professor, have filed a formal complaint with
the CPS ombudsman’s office.
This case should give all citizens pause. The right to have
and raise children, Judge Andrew Napolitano has averred, is
akin to the right to free speech, yet the state increasingly
intervenes and takes children from their parents for the slightest
mistake or apparent infraction made by the parent. It does
so even when the instigating event is itself a fraud, as in
the case of the raid on the Yearning for Zion ranch in Texas.
There, hundreds of children, including a new born baby, were
forcibly removed from their mothers and placed in state custody
in a raid that was wildly unconstitutional. Said Houston lawyer
Dick DeGuerin, the Texas raid is "like Alice in Wonderland,
off with their heads! And then we'll have a trial." According
to DeGuerin who was interviewed on the subject by the Houston
Chronicle, "It's the classic case of arrest first and
investigate later. They took 500 people away from their homes
to a makeshift prison without any evidence they've done anything
wrong."
If we are to remain a free people, citizens of a great republic
where the rule of law governs, then we must insist that the
state respect the entire Bill of Rights, including the Fourth
Amendment, so that people will again be "secure in their
persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable
searches and seizures...."