Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Masha’s Story

Tomorrow night an extraordinary and unprecedented story will air on ABC Primetime about my client, a Russian orphan girl who was adopted by an American pedophile.



When millionaire Matthew A. Mancuso adopted five year old Masha from a Russian orphanage, she had already lived a tragic life. Stabbed by her drunken mother at age three, Masha hoped for a better life in the United States. Instead she was sent to live near Pittsburgh with a pedophile who had a long history of abusing young girls. During the next five years, Mancuso sexually assaulted Masha almost daily while slowly starving her to keep her body thin and childlike. Some of the abuse was photographed, both at their home in Plum Borough and at Disney World. Mancuso traded many of these hard core images on the internet which is how the FBI caught him and rescued Masha.



The ABC Primetime report chronicles Masha’s adoption from a small industrial city in the south of Russia to her new home in the outskirts of Pittsburgh and questions many events that could have stopped the depraved abuse, including why no one from the adoption agency ever visited Masha in her new home and why Mancuso’s ex-wife and grown daughter were never interviewed about his past. The later could have exposed the claims of his biological daughter that she, too, was sexually abused as a child.



Masha, who was adopted by another family, says she is speaking out now at the age of 13 “because I think that it’s wrong what he did. And this is happening so often now. And a lot of times nobody ever tells anybody. Some kids just give up. And they don’t have any faith.”



Recently Mancuso was sentenced to a minimum of 35 years in prison on top of 15 years from a federal conviction. He could face more time in Florida, including the death penalty, for the crimes he committed in a Disney World hotel room.



During the past month there was an organized effort by the international adoption phalanx to silence this story, and to deny and cover up the actions of the agencies which facilitated this adoption and Masha’s abuse. These “Cowards in Adoption” despise the truth, dismiss the victim and defend their entrenched pecuniary interests. Tomorrow they will start answering, both in the court of public opinion and ultimately in a court of law, for their reprobate acts, careless omissions and willful ignorance.



Tomorrow night’s shocking account is simply the first chapter of Masha’s unimaginable story.



Thursday, November 10, 2005

Child Trafficking and International Adoption

Following the recent devastating earthquake, and concerned about the potential for child trafficking, Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz ordered that all earthquake orphans be registered and taken into government care. None of them would be put up for adoption.



In a grotesque way, international child trafficking and international adoption seem to have much in common, but one is an evil disease and the other is a welcome cure. The legitimate international adoption system may, in rare instances, be the vehicle through which trafficking takes place. Despite our best efforts to safeguard the system, the child traffickers, like criminals everywhere, will use legitimate channels to accomplish their ends. Because they are sometimes successful, does this mean we should shut down international adoptions? Certainly not.



Child trafficking is an affront to any definition of human rights. According to UNICEF, approximately 1.2 million children are trafficked every year. The International Labor Organization believes that 12.3 million people are enslaved in forced labor, bonded labor, forced child labor, sexual servitude, and involuntary servitude at any given time.



A recent UNICEF report catalogs trafficking information from 53 African countries. It analyzes “the patterns, root causes, and existing national and regional policy responses and effective practices.” It concludes that trafficking occurs when “a child's protective environment collapses from such things as conflict, economic hardship, and discrimination.” These same explanations justify why international adoptions are so necessary!



When an unwanted child anywhere in the world is spared a devastating, neglected life, the well intentioned adoptive parents, no matter where they reside, are doing an act of great love and kindness. Let’s continue to do our part in helping legitimate adoptive parents and agencies provide a loving home to a lonely child.



Guest commentary by

Daniel Pollack, MSW, JD

Professor at Yeshiva University’s School of Social Work in NYC

Senior Fellow, Center for Adoption Research,

University of Massachusetts Medical School

Dan can be contacted at (212) 960-0836