zesabisoqy
New Member
Ok I am looking fo advice for my friend. She has custody of her twin grandsons for the last 11 1/2 months (Since boys were born). Dcfs had removed the babies from the hospital to neglect of the mother's previous children and had given to the grandmother and grandfather. Well within the past two weeks DCFS camein and removed the twins from the home saying that the grandfather had a slight hint of drug use in a pee sample. The person who took the urine sample took a medical leave right after the twins got removed from the home. Now he has a new counselor has been assigned to the possible drug case and they said that there was not enough of a trace to consider it anything. She told the grandparents that he could have gotten it from walking in a place or home as he is a maintenane worker for a mobile home park. The grandparents have said that they would do anything to get the twins back as they were getting ready to adopt the boys within the next couple months as the parents were ready to sign direct rights over to the grandparents. Now DCFS is telling the grandparents that the only way they can get the twins back is if the grandfaterh moves out of the house. If he does this, it means that he will have to move away from his wife and young daughter he loves very much. But last week the dcfs caseworker told them that if they both took a urine test and it came back negative they would get twins back and then grand father would have to complete any reccommended treatment that was ordered. What can they do about getting the twins back as they are the only ones the boys have been around except the last couple weeks. The foster home they are in right now does not know anything about their health problems or anything. My husband and I even tried to step and take the boys till everything got straighhtened out as I have been approved by DCFS to keep the twins at my house and plus I babysit them everyday. So they also know me very well. But DCFS won't let us have them because we are close friends with grandparents.