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Foster family wants justice for Khalil Wimes Featured

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As Alicia and LaReine Nixon spoke of the events that led to the death of 6-year-old Khalil Wimes, allegedly at the hands of his parents, the anger and pain was clearly evident in their voices and etched into their faces.

No, that’s not an adequate description of what they’re living with. A better description would be to call it rage, a smoldering rage not just for Tina Cuffie and Floyd Wimes, the parents who allegedly beat and starved their child to death, but rage towards the Department of Human Services and the courts – the system that was supposed to protect Khalil but that, in their opinion, failed.

Now they want answers.

Alicia Nixon was Khalil’s foster mother, in effect the only woman he knew as his mother, who cared for and loved the little boy for the first three years of his life from the time he was born. LaReine Nixon is Alicia Nixon’s mother, an artist, whom Khalil knew as “Mimi” his grandmother. Both of them expressed their concern over allegations that the DHS worker assigned to Khalil’s case failed to report and act upon clearly visible signs of physical abuse.

At the preliminary hearing for Wimes and Cuffie, Assistant Medical Examiner Aaron Rosen stated that Khalil, who was pronounced dead on March 19, had 15 visible scars on his face.

“During the preliminary hearing the medical examine took over an hour to describe the scars and bruises that covered Khalil’s body,” Alicia Nixon said, on the verge of tears. “How could someone, especially a trained social worker, see signs of that kind of abuse and do nothing? I can’t get my mind around that. It came out in court that he was sleeping on a filthy mattress and they locked his bedroom. I want everyone who laid eyes on him and did nothing to pay for this. I want the people who are in charge of them to pay.”

According to investigators, during the last eight weeks of his life, while the child was still under DHS supervision, Khalil slept on a soiled mattress on the floor of an empty bedroom.

The worker, who has since been placed on desk duty pending the investigation, allegedly visited the apartment and saw Khalil just two weeks before his death. Investigators said Cuffie allegedly physically punished Khalil everyday. Sometimes she used a belt, other times she allegedly made him stand in a corner and threw books or shoes at him.

“I can’t get out of my mind that Khalil suffered for a thousand days in one form or another,” Larine Nixon said. “Based on the decisions that the judges made to allow his parents to have Khalil – knowing their history of neglect and abuse with their other children, their history of drug abuse, there’s no rhyme or reason. Judges have a lot of discretion in these cases and we pleaded with them not to allow the parents to have custody. We did everything legally possible and they still did it and look what happened.”

Cuffie, 44, and her husband, Wimes, 48, are being held on charges of first-degree murder, aggravated assault, conspiracy to commit murder, endangering the welfare of a child and related offenses.

According to investigators, the defendants drove Khalil to Children’s Hospital because he was ill. Hospital attendants immediately saw the boy’s physical condition and called police. He weighed 25 pounds when he died from blunt force trauma and malnutrition.

“I can’t get out of my mind that Khalil was with people who hurt him and all the while he knew that somewhere out there were people who loved him,” Larine Nixon said. “From the time he was born we raised him and loved him. The courts gave him back to his parents and they killed him.”

Because of confidentiality laws and the ongoing investigation, DHS officials are unable to comment on Khalil’s case.

However, the independent Child Welfare Review panel has already reviewed the case and the agency is awaiting its recommendations.

“Whenever there’s an open case of a child dying under DHS care we immediately pull all of the records associated with the case,” said DHS spokesperson Alicia Taylor. “All of the records are reviewed from the case worker to the supervisor.”

During her testimony before the Task Force on Child Protection Hearing held at the University of Pennsylvania on April 18, DHS Commissioner Anne Marie Ambrose voiced her concerns regarding clarity in the Child Protective Services Law and that it is difficult to determine whether all of the reforms implemented by DHS over the last four years have made a difference.

“Are children really safer? The lack of data on GPS (general protective services) cases and the inability to compare us to other jurisdictions makes this most important question difficult to answer,” Ambrose said. “Another area of concern involves Act 33 and its requirement for review of all fatalities and near fatalities caused as a result of child abuse. DHS has embraced the new requirement regarding fatalities and near fatalities and I am proud to report that the DHS Act 33 Child Fatality/Near Fatality Review Team has served as a state model for effective interdisciplinary and interagency coordination in examining child fatalities and near fatalities and for identifying and monitoring the implementation of recommendations to improve child safety.”

LaReine Nixon said her family has been devastated by Khalil’s killing and they are awaiting the parent’s trial.

“It was his biological father and mother who murdered him,” Nixon said. “Khalil didn’t know anything about the term foster parents. To him, Alicia was his mother; he really didn’t know his biological parents. I was his ‘Mimi,’ my family were his uncles and aunts and cousins. We were not just outsiders, we were related to him. Our little boy was tortured and murdered.”

 

Contact Larry Miller at (215) 893-5782 or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

Larry Miller

Larry Miller is a Crime Reporter for The Philadelphia Tribune.  Contact Larry at lmiller@phillytrib.com

3 comments

  • Carmine

    This is one of those stories that lends itself to multiple levels of blame. From a government and culture that seems to nurture a society that eats its young, to a permanant underclass of individuals who are so perpetually impoverished and unprepared both educationally, spiritually and financially. As for DHS, like any government agency, it's only as good as the people who are in the field, the boots on the ground and their immediate supervisors. I wonder how easy it is to become desensitized to the suffering one has to se every day in that position and maybe miss warning signs. I'm not excusing that, I'm just saying. Judges, again, they're only as good as they are. How many of us, when bombarded by the worst in human nature, day, after day, might miss the obvious and overlook the obvious.
    There were a lot of checks and balances that should have save Khalil's life and, like the God only knows how many thousands of other children who have died from physical abuse - trained eyes and ears should have known something was wrong. This is just another indictment against our culture and another indication of how far we have to go before something like this can never happen again.

    Carmine Sunday, 13 May 2012 16:48 Comment Link
  • richard

    i have no connection to this poor boy but this story haunts me with the pain this innocent toddler endured, it took over a year of daily beatings for him to succumb and end his life and although it was his parents who did the actual abuse, the judges who allowed him to be forcibly taken, imagine the horror just in moving this child from what he knew as his family to strangers!!!!!! and the social worker who visited and did nothing, both are as guilty and responsible for this happening.

    richard Saturday, 12 May 2012 16:55 Comment Link
  • Charles J Stecker Jr

    Unfortunately I can relate to this story all to well...

    Please read the Link I've attached below and you'll understand why...

    http://www.philadelphiaweekly.com/news-and-opinion/Man-Seeks-Answers-44-Years-After-Witnessing-Brothers-Death.html

    Charles J Stecker Jr Saturday, 12 May 2012 08:13 Comment Link

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