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Offender sues hospital that won’t let him visit son
MILWAUKEE (AP) — A registered sex offender forbidden from visiting his severely ill 9-year-old son filed a lawsuit Friday against Wisconsin Children’s Hospital, arguing its visitation policy is “cruel and causes unnecessary harm to families and innocent children.”
Security guards escorted Stuart Yates from the building Tuesday, five days after his son was hospitalized with a blood infection caused by e-coli, according to the lawsuit filed in Milwaukee County. Yates’ son has had several serious medical conditions since birth, requiring surgical transplants of his pancreas, liver and bowels, the lawsuit said.
It wasn’t immediately clear how long the hospital’s policy of barring registered sex offenders from visiting patients has been in place, but Yates said his son was born there and there have been no problems in the past.
Yates, 49, was convicted of second-degree sexual assault of a child in 1998 and was sentenced to six months’ time served under a deal with prosecutors. Yates said he didn’t know the age of the victim in the case and that the incident happened at a house party where there were strippers.
“They’re using my past record, 20 years ago, against me,” he said. “I served my time for it. I’ve been transparent about it.”
Hospital spokesman Andy Brodzeller said he’s unable to comment on individual cases because of potential privacy violations. Speaking generally, he said “the hospital does have visitation policies in order to ensure the safety of our patients, visitors and staff and those practices do allow us to take steps that would limit an individual’s access to our hospital.”
Yates said his son was having surgery Friday.
“He called me this morning and he was crying on the phone,” Yates said, “telling me how much he needed me and how scared he was and where am I at? ‘Dad where are you? How come you won’t come? I miss you, I need you.'”….
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Offender sues hospital that won’t let him visit son
Arizona MVD a Bit Unusual
Make sure you know current requirements. You can go to your Sheriff's Office website to see if there is new information there. If so, we suggest you do a screen print and save it. Call your registry office to get clarification on any questions you might have. Document the date, time, who you spoke with and their instructions regarding any address change, vehicle, employment, travel dates if required, etc.
Keep in mind if you are required to update your drivers license annually through the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) you should contact them for their status.
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In conclusion, the registry is supposed to protect children except for the registrants’ children. Nobody cares about them. Just the pictures of children that were put on the Internet by the feds to entrap people using pictures from other countries and from as far back as the 1950s. Now those children they care about.