Giving Compass' Take:
- Eli Hager and Anna Flagg report on incarcerated people being stripped of parental rights while in prison, which is “the family separation crisis that no one knows about,” according to one advocate.
- How might funders help address this issue? With bipartisan criminal reform passed in Washington, is this the time to work with policymakers on fixing the system?
- This former prisoner pays forward the gift of being heard.
What is Giving Compass?
We connect donors to learning resources and ways to support community-led solutions. Learn more about us.
Lori Lynn Adams was a mother of four living in poverty when Hurricane Floyd struck eastern North Carolina in 1999, flooding her trailer home and destroying her children’s pageant trophies and baby pictures. No stranger to money-making scams, Adams was convicted of filing a fraudulent disaster-relief claim with FEMA for a property she did not own. She also passed dozens of worthless checks to get by.
Adams served two year-long prison stints for these “blue-collar white-collar crimes,” as she calls them. Halfway through her second sentence, with her children — three toddlers and a 14-year-old — temporarily under county supervision, Adams said she got a phone call from a family court attorney. Her parental rights, he informed her, were being irrevocably terminated.
Before going to prison, Adams had sometimes drifted from one boyfriend to another, leaving her kids with a babysitter, and she didn’t always have enough food in the house. But she was not charged with any kind of child abuse, neglect or endangerment. Still, at a hearing that took place 300 miles from the prison, which she couldn’t attend because officials wouldn’t transport her there, she lost her children. Adams’s oldest daughter went to live with her father, and her other three kids were put up for adoption. She was banned from seeing them again.
Read the full article about how incarcerated parents are losing their children by Eli Hager and Anna Flagg at The Marshall Project.