The Colorado Springs Gazette final

Child death reviews change

Colorado office to examine cases independently from state, starting with Colorado Springs boy

BY HANNAH METZGER hannah.metzger@gazette.com

The state Office of Child Protection Ombudsman has launched an independent process for reviewing child deaths caused by abuse and neglect and its first probe will examine the death of a boy from Colorado Springs, the office announced Thursday.

This new review will bring a multidisciplinary approach and increase engagement with families and the public, officials said. After each review, recommendations will be submitted to agencies on how to prevent similar deaths.

“Despite existing processes, our communities still can’t answer why so many children continue to die from abuse and neglect in Colorado,” Stephanie Villafuerte with the Office of Child Protection Ombudsman said in a statement.

“We’re intent on using the authority and independence of our office and this new program to ensure that all agencies that touch a child’s life have the opportunity to learn how their systems are serving Colorado’s children and, in some circumstanc

es, how those systems may be improved.”

The office’s first independent review will be of the death of 12-year-old Timothy Montoya-kloepfel from Colorado Springs.

In June 2020, Montoya-kloepfel ran away from the Tennyson Center for Children in Denver and was fatally hit by a car shortly after, police said.

Before his death, Montoya-kloepfel had frequently been involved in Colorado’s behavioral health systems. He had autism and suffered from severe depression.

“Regretfully, state law does not currently require the public receive information regarding system failures in his case,” the office said in a statement. “The (office) believes that a study of his life and death will reveal ways behavioral health systems may be improved.”

A report on Montoya-kloepfel’s

death is expected to be released this year, officials said.

Under Colorado’s review process for child deaths, 39% of reviews do not result in public reports or recommendations, according to the office. The state also does not provide full access to findings for families or stakeholders and does not include previous service providers/agencies that served the child in the review.

The new independent review process stems from passage of House Bill 1272 in June, which authorized the Office of Child Protection Ombudsman to receive information, records and documents related to incidents of egregious abuse, neglect, near fatality or death of a child.

The majority of child protection ombudsman offices in the U.S. use similar independent review processes, according to the office.

LOCAL & STATE

en-us

2021-07-30T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-30T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://daily.gazette.com/article/281711207687887

The Gazette, Colorado Springs