Lawsuits Claim South Carolina Kids Underwent Unnecessary Genital Exams During Abuse Investigations
Warning: Some readers may find graphic details in this article to be offensive or disturbing.
CAMDEN, S.C. â Three ongoing federal lawsuits filed in South Carolina accuse the state of forcing boys and girls to undergo traumatic genital exams during child abuse investigations, even when no allegations of sexual abuse have been raised.
One 14-year-old plaintiff â who goes by âJane Doeâ to protect her privacy â was placed into foster care in 2021 after she disclosed to a social services caseworker that her mother had spanked her with a belt and a tree branch.
âI never, ever mentioned sexual abuse,â said Jane, who was 12 when the South Carolina Department of Social Services launched its investigation and scheduled her to undergo a forensic medical exam at a hospital in Columbia. âI felt like I was kind of getting legally abused by someone that had the permission to do it,â she told șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű News during an interview at her attorneyâs office.
During the exam, Jane was instructed to undress and open her legs in front of medical providers sheâd never met before who took photos of her genital area, touched her breasts, and placed âfingers and/or instrumentsâ in her vagina, according to her lawsuit.
âI felt like I had no right to say no,â she told șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű News. âSomething inside me told me that wasnât what they were supposed to do.â
Connelly-Anne Ragley, a spokesperson for the department, would not discuss the ongoing lawsuits. Court filings show the agency denies the allegations and argues that its employees are protected by âqualified immunity,â a type of court-created rule that often shields law enforcement officers and government officials from being sued. The department also asserts that forensic exams are âstandard procedureâ during abuse and neglect cases.
Investigating child abuse is notoriously complex. The investigations usually involve forensic interviews, which are typically recorded and involve a professional asking questions of a child to elicit information. And they sometimes include forensic full-body medical examinations that include a visual check of the childâs private parts and are designed to be noninvasive, meaning medical tools that can break the skin or enter the body are not used.
Together, the interview and the exam are considered effective tools for gathering information and evidence from underage victims, who may be reluctant to describe or disclose how theyâve been hurt. Often, these interviews and exams are conducted at childrenâs advocacy centers by social workers, doctors, and nurses who are specially trained to treat young patients with sensitivity and care â and learn to read between the lines.
Federal guidelines advise that the mere suspicion of child sexual abuse should be sufficient to trigger a forensic medical exam. Even so, thereâs a that genital and pelvic exams can be embarrassing, uncomfortable, and even traumatic.
The South Carolina lawsuits â which involve children who live in different parts of the state and who were assigned to different social services caseworkers â arenât the first to raise red flags about the potentially harmful effects of forensic medical exams on children. Since the 1990s, federal courts from New York to California have ruled that government agencies violate childrenâs and parentsâ civil rights when the exams are conducted without a court order or parental consent.
Claims that the exams are comparable to normal pediatric checkups are âgarbage,â said Donnie Cox, a civil rights attorney in Carlsbad, California.
âAt the time theyâre happening, theyâre scary as hell and it really does traumatize children on top of the trauma of being removed from their homes,â said Cox, who has represented plaintiffs in similar lawsuits. âTheyâre using these kids, basically, as pieces of evidence, and you canât do that.â
âA Fishing Expeditionâ
In one South Carolina lawsuit, a 16-year-old girl claims she was subjected to painful vaginal exams against her will, even after she denied being sexually abused. She felt as if she was âbeing rapedâ during the forensic medical exam, her complaint asserts.
In another lawsuit, a couple living in the north-central part of the state allege their sons were subjected to genital and rectal exams, without the parentsâ knowledge or consent, more than a month after the children had been removed from their home in 2021. Their oldest son bruised his arms on playground equipment, they contend, instigating a child abuse investigation that resulted in all three boys temporarily moving in with their grandparents. Their youngest son was 6 months old at the time.
No one alleged during the investigation that the boys had been sexually abused, the lawsuit states, and yet the boysâ âpenises were held and touched by strangersâ during the forensic exam and âfingers and/or instruments were placed in their anus,â the lawsuit states.
The parents, whose names șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű News chose to withhold to protect the identity of their children, said their middle child suffers from night terrors because of the forensic examination. The oldest doesnât talk about what happened in the exam room, his mother said.
âBecause we didnât knowâ what was going to happen, she said, ânobody could prepare him.â
Attorneys Deborah and Robert Butcher of the Foster Care Abuse Law Firm, who represent plaintiffs in all three South Carolina cases, have likened these forensic medical exams to âa fishing expedition.â One lawsuit they filed against the Department of Social Services argues the agency is financially motivated to find evidence of any form of child abuse so that it qualifies for more money from the federal government.
âTheyâre going to use every means possible to build a case,â Robert Butcher said. He estimated âeasily thousandsâ of children in South Carolina have been forced to get unnecessary exams during child abuse investigations in recent years â an approximation he made based on child protective services .
Ragley, the Department of Social Services spokesperson, said the agency is required by state law to follow the South Carolina Child Abuse Response Protocol to determine when children should be referred for a forensic medical evaluation, which includes âa complete and thorough medical history from the child (if verbal) and caregivers and a head to toe physical examination, including the anogenital area.â
In response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed by șÚÁÏłÔčÏÍű News, the department said it couldnât estimate how many forensic medical exams are conducted on children of any age in South Carolina each year.
âThat is not a question SCDSS can answer,â Kaitlin Stout, the agencyâs manager of policy and practice standards with the Office of Strategic Planning and Innovation, replied via email. âWe do not track or tally how many forensic exams are âordered/conductedâ in open DSS cases and would have no way to know how many are conducted on children who are not involved with the agency.â
But childrenâs advocacy centers, where many of these exams are conducted, do keep track, and national data shows that about 1 in 4 child abuse victims who are served by a childrenâs advocacy center get a forensic medical exam, said Teresa Huizar, chief executive officer of the National Childrenâs Alliance, which represents nearly 1,000 childrenâs advocacy centers in the U.S.
These numbers donât capture all forensic medical exams, though, which may also be conducted in emergency departments and private clinics, Huizar said.
âI would say that they tend to be under-utilized,â she said. âOften, children who would very much benefit from an exam donât get them because there simply isnât enough money in the public pool.â
The cost of these exams varies by location. But in Georgia, for example, a pediatric anogenital exam with a colposcope, a medical tool used for magnification, is about $280, exclusive of lab fees, according to the Georgia Crime Victims Compensation Program.
The Right to Refuse
Child welfare experts agree that forensic medical evaluations can be worthwhile outside the strict scope of child sexual abuse investigations.
South Carolinaâs Child Abuse Response Protocol indicates these exams should be conducted during investigations if children have witnessed violence or been exposed to an environment where drugs are used. An overt allegation or disclosure of child sexual abuse isnât considered a prerequisite for a forensic medical exam, said Thomas Knapp, executive director of the South Carolina Network of Childrenâs Advocacy Centers.
âChildren are often poly-victimized, so the head-to-toe exam is intended to ensure general well-being and pick up on evidence of any form of abuse,â Knapp explained. âThere are also some children where there may be no disclosure, but we have digital images of their abuse. So, disclosure is not the only precipitating reason to request an exam.â
Like Huizar, he agreed that forensic medical exams are under-utilized. In South Carolina, specifically, more than 4,500 children passed through a childrenâs advocacy center with a report of sexual abuse in 2023. Only about half as many had received a forensic medical exam through mid-October, Knapp said.
State rules allow the Department of Social Services to request a forensic medical evaluation without consent from a childâs parent or legal guardian. But the rules donât address the issue of obtaining the childâs permission before proceeding with an exam. Knapp explained that childrenâs advocacy centers allow patients to refuse. published in 2016 explicitly advise that children should be allowed to refuse participation in all or part of the process.
âIf a patient refuses, we donât do it,â said Anne-Marie Amies Oelschlager, a pediatric and adolescent gynecologist in Seattle. Genital exams for girls should be conducted only externally, in most cases, she said, even when sexual abuse is suspected. Internal exams and Pap smears to screen for cervical cancer arenât recommended until age 21, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
âYou really want to teach kids to say no,â Oelschlager said. âThis is an area thatâs private and if they say no, Iâve got to respect that.â
One South Carolina lawsuit contends a 16-year-old girl was visibly âterrified and emotionally upset concerning the forensic medical examâ and that she told the medical examiner to stop. The medical examiner allegedly ignored the request.
Antoinette Laskey, a Utah pediatrician and member of the American Academy of Pediatricsâ Council on Child Abuse and Neglect, had no knowledge of the South Carolina cases but explained that a childâs wishes must be respected in the exam room, where the âinherent power differentialâ between a doctor and patient should be recognized.
âI would never force the issue,â she said.
In 2022, Laskey co-authored for the American Academy of Pediatrics acknowledging that children are âespecially vulnerableâ to being exploited in health care settings because of their age, development level, any disability, race, ethnicity, or English language proficiency. The paper cited flagrant examples of abuse inflicted by doctors like Larry Nassar, who pleaded guilty in 2017 to sexually abusing child gymnasts under the guise of legitimate medical care.
The policy statement explained that pediatricians are responsible for assessing childrenâs health, including their genital health, from birth through puberty. To that end, the academy advises doctors to use sensitivity and care during anogenital exams. Children should be afforded privacy when disrobing, providers should wear gloves, and doctors should obtain permission from the child by discussing the need for the examination and what it will entail.
These exams âshould never be traumatic,â said Megan Lechner, formerly the chief operating officer of the International Association of Forensic Nurses, a group that trains nurses to conduct sexual assault exams on adults and children. More than anything else, they are designed âto tell the child theyâre OK,â she said. âIf theyâre traumatic, youâre doing it wrong.â
âA Needle in a Haystackâ
And yet courts have recognized the potentially traumatic impact of these exams before. In 2019, an that would have required child victims who were raped and abused by adults to undergo court-ordered vaginal examinations. One of the prosecutors successfully argued that the exams would âvictimize the children all over again,â the Montgomery Advertiser reported.
Like many victims, the children in that case had delayed reporting the abuse. Shame and fear often prevent child victims from reporting sexual abuse right away. Some wait years before disclosing they were abused â if they ever disclose the abuse at all.
Childrenâs advocacy centers across the U.S. investigated involving child sexual abuse allegations in 2022, the National Childrenâs Alliance reported, but historical data shows that physical evidence is present in of all reported cases.
Finding proof âis a needle in the haystack,â Laskey said.
Attorney Robert Butcher said the federal lawsuits in South Carolina may eventually be consolidated for the sake of efficiency. He doubted they would be resolved this year, but said cases already decided in favor of children and their parents in other parts of the country bolster his clientsâ arguments.
In 1994, for example, that a kindergartner who had been separated from her parents during a child abuse investigation âalmost certainly did, in fact, experience psychological injuryâ during a forensic medical exam, when she was âsubjected to intrusive bodily examinations by two strangers, in a strange location, in the absence of a parent or other reassuring figure.â
More recently, a panel of federal appeals court judges in California that the County of San Diego violated the constitutional rights of a family by failing to inform the parents that their children would undergo âsignificantly intrusiveâ and âpotentially painfulâ forensic medical exams.
âThis is as traumatic for the parents as it is for the children,â said Cox, the California attorney who represented the family in that case.
Jane Doe, who filed the first of the three South Carolina lawsuits, doesnât know what the outcome of her case will be, and she doesnât talk about it at middle school.
âI have a couple of close friends,â she said. âI donât tell anybody about what happened. I just want this to be an example so that never happens to another person.â