『Child Protection Files: Real Cases, Real System Failures』のカバーアート

Child Protection Files: Real Cases, Real System Failures

Child Protection Files: Real Cases, Real System Failures

著者: Jay Gill
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Child Protection Files covers real child protection cases in depth, cases that have already gone through the courts, inquests, and public inquiries, so nothing discussed here is speculation about an ongoing matter.

Each episode goes beyond the headlines: the full timeline, the trial, the judge's own words, and the public inquiry that followed. But the real focus is the profession itself, the caseworkers, police officers, and doctors involved, the caseloads and supervision failures behind the individual decisions, and what, if anything, actually changed in child protection practice afterward.

This isn't true crime for shock value. It's a closer look at how these systems work, where they break down, and what the people doing this work today can actually learn from cases that came before.

New episodes are posted [insert your schedule once you've settled on one]. Episodes contain detailed descriptions of child abuse and neglect, listener discretion is strongly advised throughout.

If any of this content affects you personally, the NSPCC helpline (0808 800 5000) and Childline (0800 1111) are both available in the UK.

Jay Gill 2026
ノンフィクション犯罪 社会科学
エピソード
  • Episode 3: Phoenix Sinclair: The Case File That Took Nine Months to Discover
    2026/07/13

    In this episode: the case of Phoenix Sinclair, a five-year-old girl killed in Manitoba, Canada, in June 2005. Her death went unreported for nine months. She had been known to child welfare services since birth, with her file opened and closed six separate times, and the man she was living with in her final year was never identified by name.

    We cover:

    • Phoenix's early years and the recurring pattern of CFS involvement from birth through 2004
    • The critical failure to record Karl McKay's identity or run a background check once he moved into the home
    • The final home visit in March 2005, where Phoenix was never seen
    • Her death, the nine-month concealment, and the discovery of her body in 2006
    • The trial and conviction of Samantha Kematch and Karl McKay for first-degree murder
    • The Hughes Inquiry , 91 days of hearings, 126 witnesses, $14 million, and 62 recommendations, including a 20-case caseload limit
    • The context of Indigenous child welfare in Manitoba, and how jurisdictional change intersected with this case
    • What this case means for frontline practice today — identity verification, direct observation of children, caseload as a safety issue, and the risk of files closing on "quiet" rather than resolved

    Content warning: this episode contains detailed descriptions of the sustained abuse and neglect of a young child. Listener discretion is advised.

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    27 分
  • Episode 2: Baby P — The Full Case File
    2026/07/06

    Peter Connelly, known publicly as "Baby P," was seen sixty times in eight months by social workers, doctors, and police, in the same London borough that had already been through the Victoria Climbié case seven years earlier. He died in August 2007, aged 17 months, from sustained abuse that was actively concealed from every professional monitoring his case.

    This episode goes deep on two things: the full Old Bailey trial, why the murder charges were reduced to "causing or allowing," Judge Stephen Kramer's sentencing remarks in full, and the parallel case where Steven Barker was convicted of raping a separate child also on Haringey's child protection register, and the child protection practice side that rarely gets covered properly: the GP excluded from the case conference, Steven Barker's presence in the household going completely unvetted, and the sharp contrast between two social workers with very different outcomes. Maria Ward and her manager Gillie Christou admitted real, documented casework failures. Sylvia Henry, a separate social worker who had actually argued for the safer option and was overruled, was falsely accused of negligence by The Sun newspaper and later won a libel case against them.

    We also cover the political and media firestorm this case triggered, including a heated Prime Minister's Questions clash between Gordon Brown and David Cameron, the Ofsted and Healthcare Commission reviews, and Lord Laming's second national child protection review, brought back by the same man who led the Climbié inquiry.

    Content warning: this episode contains detailed descriptions of the sustained physical abuse of a young child. Listener discretion is strongly advised.

    What's covered: – Peter's background and the household that formed around him – The sixty professional contacts, and what specifically went wrong with each – The case conference gap and the unvetted household member – The Old Bailey trial, the murder-to-manslaughter-equivalent legal mechanism, and the parallel rape conviction – Judge Stephen Kramer's sentencing remarks – The Sun's "Justice for Baby P" campaign and the Cameron/Brown PMQs clash – Maria Ward, Gillie Christou, and Sylvia Henry: two very different kinds of accountability – The Ofsted and Healthcare Commission reviews, and Lord Laming's second national review – Where the three people convicted are now

    Sources referenced: R v Owen, Barker, and Connelly (Old Bailey, 2008–2009); the second Haringey Serious Case Review; the 2008 Ofsted joint area review; the May 2009 Healthcare Commission report; Lord Laming's 2009 national review; contemporaneous UK press and legal reporting on the Ward/Christou tribunal and Sylvia Henry's libel case against The Sun; GMC records on Dr Al-Zayyat and Dr Ikwueke.

    If you haven't heard it yet, Episode 1 covers the Victoria Climbié case, the direct predecessor to this one.

    If any of this content affects you personally, the NSPCC helpline (0808 800 5000) and Childline (0800 1111) are both available in the UK.

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    41 分
  • Episode 1: Victoria Climbié — The Full Case File
    2026/07/06

    Episode 1: Victoria Climbié — The Full Case File

    In eleven months, Victoria Climbié had twelve separate, documented contacts with social services, police, and hospitals across three London boroughs. She died in February 2000, aged 8, with 128 injuries on her body. This episode goes well beyond the headlines: her full timeline, the Old Bailey trial and the judge's own sentencing remarks, the year-long public inquiry, and the story of Lisa Arthurworrey, the 19-month-qualified social worker who was sacked in the aftermath and later cleared by two separate tribunals.

    We also cover what doesn't usually make it into shorter retellings of this case: the private fostering law that never applied because the whole arrangement was built on a lie, the contested question of whether fear of being seen as racially insensitive slowed intervention, and the honest, uncomfortable fact that ContactPoint, the flagship database built in response to Victoria's death, was scrapped just a decade later.

    This episode runs long and goes deep, closer to a full case study than a quick recap, and it's aimed as much at people working in child protection as anyone following the case out of general interest.

    Content warning: this episode contains detailed descriptions of the sustained physical abuse of a child. Listener discretion is strongly advised.

    What's covered: – Who Victoria was, and how she came to England – The twelve missed opportunities, professional by professional – The private fostering question – The contested race and cultural-assumption debate around the case – The Old Bailey trial and the judge's sentencing remarks – The year-long public inquiry, and Lisa Arthurworrey's testimony – The legacy: the Children Act 2004, Every Child Matters, and ContactPoint's later cancellation – Where the two people convicted are now

    Sources referenced: the Laming Inquiry Report (2003); Community Care's reporting on Lisa Arthurworrey's tribunal hearings; BASW's reporting on her re-registration; R v Kouao and Manning (Old Bailey, 2001); GOV.UK's Working Together to Safeguard Children guidance; contemporaneous reporting on ContactPoint's 2010 shutdown.

    If any of this content affects you personally, the NSPCC helpline (0808 800 5000) and Childline (0800 1111) are both available in the UK.

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    46 分
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