Where is Lincoln? Oklahoma Child Welfare Push for Same-Sex Adoption Placed Little Boy with Twice Arrested Molester
Bio Parents Threatened with Loss of Future Children Now Desperate to Find Their Firstborn
For decades, Americans have been told Child Protective Services are in place to ensure the safety of children, only stepping in when families cannot protect their own. The story of Lincoln Lochman exposes a starkly different reality.
Where government agencies and courts meet, parents are powerless and decisions are increasingly guided not by law but the latest progressive trends. Accountability is nonexistent leaving the system incapable of fixing its own mistakes.
Cruise Ship Child Molestation Arrest of Oklahoma Teacher and Same-Sex Adoptive Father Exposes Government Failure to Protect in Two States
In July of 2024, V1SUT reported that Solan Genesis Harrison, a Moore, Oklahoma, 6th-grade teacher, and his same-sex spouse Ryan Marcus (McManigal) Harrison were removed from a Carnival cruise ship and flown back to the US by federal authorities following the reported molestation of a male child during a spring break voyage.
Moore ES Teacher & Adoptive Father Takes Own Life After Indictment for Molesting Child on Cruise Ship
This story has no winners, only damage. One family has lost a son and brother. Another took a vacation and ended up reporting the sexual abuse of their child. Dozens of elementary students may have been put at risk for similar abuse while at school, and their parents may still be unaware. A small child was adopted by two men, one of whom has since been …
A subsequent investigation by the FBI produced sufficient evidence to charge Solan Harrison with “Abusive Sexual Contact With a Child Under 12 Years” (June 17, 2024). If convicted, Harrison faced up to life imprisonment and $250,000 in fines.
Harrison was removed from his teaching position and committed suicide nine (9) days after the indictment. V1SUT also revealed the Harrisons were adoptive parents of a male child named Lincoln.
Prior to publishing, V1SUT reached out to the Oklahoma Department of Human Services Child Welfare Services (OKDHS), specifically contacting then Director Dr. Deborah Shropshire and Communications Director Debra Martin, to ask if Lincoln had been placed and/or adopted through their agency and if steps had been taken to ensure the child’s safety since Harrison’s indictment for a child sex crime and suicide.
In a written statement, after citing confidentiality restrictions involving specific cases, OKDHS failed to either deny or confirm the agency’s previous involvement with the child or the Harrisons.
In October of 2024, V1SUT published a second article revealing new evidence that Solan Harrison, prior to becoming a teacher and adoptive parent, had been arrested for child sex crimes near his hometown in Labette County, Kansas.
Kansas Fails to Prosecute, Puts OK's K-12 Students and Adopted Child in Hands of Child Sex Abuser
·On July 17, 2024, V1SUT exposed a tragic story involving a Moore Public Schools (OK) elementary teacher and adoptive father who was arrested aboard a 2024 spring break cruise for molesting a male child.
According to an April 2010 post in the Parsons Sun, Solan Harrison (then 22) was arrested in Dennis (KS) and charged with two counts of sodomizing a child, two counts of taking indecent liberties with a child and two counts of furnishing alcohol to a minor.
Those charges have been erased from public access, and despite a records request to Labette County Sheriff Darren Eichinger and a subsequent complaint issued to Kansas Attorney General Kris W. Kobach (R), all related documents continue to be unlawfully withheld.
It has been reported but not confirmed that Ryan McManigal (now Harrison), then 16, may have been Solan Harrison’s victim as described in a local newspaper article at the time of Harrison’s 2010 arrest.
Screenshot from the Parsons Sun (April 2010):
According to Solan Harrison’s obituary, he and McManigal married on March 26, 2013, when McManigal was still a teen, just three (3) years after Harrison’s arrest .

Solan and Ryan Harrison spent several years in Texas, then in 2019, relocated to Oklahoma where they were quickly approved by OKDHS as foster parents and adopted Lincoln Lochman.
Lincoln’s biological parents, Andrew and Gardenia Lochman have since reached out to this publication in search of their endangered child. The Lochmans confirm OKDHS is responsible for Lincoln’s foster placement and adoption as well as the foster placement of at least two other boys (ages 5 and 7) with the Harrisons.
Adoptive Dad Takes Lincoln to Kansas: OKDHS Lies About Notifying Kansas, Both States Screen Out Multiple Reports of Concern
After learning about Solan Harrison’s second child molestation arrest and suicide from V1SUT reporting, Lincoln’s biological parents Andrew and Gardenia Lochman began searching for him. They found a GoFundMe set up by Ryan Harrison listing his “overwhelming financial difficulties”, mental health issues and need for funds to relocate outside of Oklahoma with their child.

Gardenia Lochman reached out to Ryan Harrison on social media to ensure Lincoln’s safety. According to Gardenia, Harrison did not respond and blocked her from further communicating. The Lochmans also unsuccessfully attempted to contact the mother of Solan Harrison.
A recommendation for an Oklahoma childcare provider on Ryan Harrison’s Facebook page suggests he had already left the state with Lincoln.

V1SUT reached out to Ryan Harrison on social media but no response has been received.
The child welfare systems in two states are now refusing to locate Lincoln, assess his current well-being or investigate potential abuse related to any of the children placed with the Harrisons. It appears the system only investigates abuse it didn’t foster.
Beginning on May 20, 2025, this journalist (referral #2491001) and the Lochmans (referral #2490843) each made separate reports to the Oklahoma Abuse and Neglect Hotline and provided details of the documented risk of harm to Lincoln in the Harrisons’ care as well as potential locations for the child in Kansas.

A hotline supervisor informed OKDHS had access to Lincoln’s current location since Ryan Harrison continues to receive monthly adoptive payments and insurance through Soonercare for Lincoln.
Upon learning on June 10th both referrals were “screened out because the family now resides out of state”, OKDHS informed this journalist the report was forwarded to Kansas for investigation. That was not true.
Also on June 10th, the Kansas Protection Report Center searched by both names and birthdate but found no record of any report associated with Lincoln. A subsequent report (Intake ID #2574705) was made to that entity, and after prodding the Kansas Department for Children and Families (KDCF) for an update, the following notice was received by email on June 17th stating the report “was not assigned for further investigation” for unspecified reasons.
The Lochmans are dismayed by OKDHS and KDCF’s lack of concern for Lincoln following the indictment of his adopted father for child molestation and suicide.
“As soon as he (Solan Harrison) got federally indicted, DHS should have been notified to go to that house and make sure that my son was okay,” states Gardenia.
Government is quick to overreach into families concerning child endangerment, but when government endangers a child, investigation is discouraged and the free press is largely shut out. Under laws intended to protect the privacy of minors and families, child welfare agency and court documents are unattainable through open records requests.
Just how did Lincoln Lochman end up in this unaccountable system?
Dangerous Government Overreach: Lincoln Removed From Bio-Parents Despite Support Services Already in Place & Negative Drug Testing
Gardenia Lochman is very honest about the addiction issues both she and her now husband Andrew were battling when she became pregnant with Lincoln as Covid lockdowns were being implemented across the country.
Addicted to methamphetamine and worried for the health of her unborn baby, Gardenia states, “It was really hard for me to stop using on my own.”
She sought care from a physician who referred her to the Substance Use Treatment and Recovery (STAR) Prenatal Clinic at the OU Health Science Center, a program publicly funded through the currently embattled Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (ODMHSAS) that treats and supports pregnant women with a history of addiction. The program’s goal is to keep families intact.
Gardenia says the STAR Clinic helped her become drug free, provided her needed prenatal care and put a plan in place to support the family during and after Lincoln’s birth.

In partnership with OKDHS Child Welfare Services, the STAR Clinic is supposed to assist in preventing children from coming into state custody after birth.
Tragically, on the night Gardenia’s water broke and her labor began, she was told by phone there was no available birthing room at OU Medical Center where the STAR Clinic had arranged for her to give birth.
The Lochmans instead went to Norman Regional Hospital as advised. From that point, supports from the STAR Clinic were pulled out from under the family and the system turned against them.
Gardenia Lochman’s (then Gardenia Sarver) medical records confirm she tested negative for all illicit substances including methamphetamines on the day of Lincoln’s birth.

Gardenia was honest with Norman Regional’s intake and provider staff about her previous drug use and explained she was referred to and had been receiving maternal-fetal medicine (MFM) care from high risk experts within the STAR Clinic for months.

Medical records show Lincoln Carter Lochman was born at full gestation (39 weeks and 1 day) after a typical labor with no concerns. He was 20.25 inches long and weighed a healthy 8 pounds and 7.2 ounces.
Medical notes confirm Lincoln remained in room with his mother and father, experienced skin-to-skin bonding and was successfully breastfeeding shortly after birth. For a few precious hours, Andrew, Gardenia and Lincoln relished being a family.
“I wanted to be the best dad I could be,” says Andrew.
The parents report a Child Protective Services (CPS) worker named Jessica (last name unknown) from the Cleveland County office of OKDHS showed up at the hospital when Lincoln was just 13 hours old and informed she would soon be taking Lincoln away from them.
“The DHS worker who came in that day was so adamant about getting the judge to sign for them to take him when they didn’t have any proof of anything,” states Gardenia.
Gardenia attempted to engage the STAR Clinic, and while they reportedly expressed regret that she had been misinformed about not being able to deliver at OU Medical as planned, the situation was out of their hands because another county now had control of her case.
According to Gardenia, “They (STAR Clinic) would have had me deliver at OU and sent Lincoln home with us and kept monitoring.”
The following day, OKDHS removed newborn Lincoln from his parents and immediately placed him with Solan and Ryan Harrison as foster parents. Both Norman Regional and OKDHS knew Gardenia was no longer using drugs and was a STAR Clinic patient at the time of removal.
“It was really traumatic,” expresses Gardenia. “I don’t even remember what he weighed or how long he was or anything because it was just so, you know, traumatic.”
Unable to watch and overcome with sadness, Andrew left the hospital room as Jessica (OKDHS) was packing his son into a car seat the couple had ready to take their child home. Sitting in his truck in the hospital parking lot, Andrew watched as Lincoln was loaded into the car parked next to him and driven away.
“It was devastating,” says Andrew. “I sat in the parking lot for 20 minutes and couldn’t even drive.”
According to the Lochmans, a few months into the case, OKDHS worker Jessica informed the couple even Lincoln’s umbilical cord, which provides a much longer window for detection of drug use, had tested negative for all substances. Still, their child was not returned to them.
With no evidence of drug use, the agency focused on the couple’s housing situation which Gardenia now sees as an excuse to keep her son.
“When they first took him, we ended up moving to a house in Yukon. A nice house. Andrew was building steel buildings. Then we got our own apartment for 6 or 7 months,” says Gardenia. OKDHS still refused to return Lincoln to their care even under agency supervision.
OKDHS Concealed Same-Sex Placement, Ignored Family’s Religious Objections: Foster Dads Refused to Support Case Goal of Reunification
OKDHS would not give the Lochmans any information about Lincoln’s foster family.
”She did not tell me it was two men,” says Gardenia. “They just said they found a placement for him.”
Gardenia pumped breast milk for the first few weeks and sent it to Lincoln through OKDHS. She has no idea if it was ever given to Lincoln. The couple also sent a large duffle bag full of new clothing, bottles, a car seat and “everything you could ever need for our baby” to the Harrisons. Months later, the items were returned unused with tags still hanging on the clothing.
Despite an OKDHS mandate that foster parents understand and support the case goal of reunifying children with their biological families, the Harrison’s refused to meet or engage with the Lochmans during court ordered visitations with Lincoln.
“They didn’t want us to come to their house for visits. They didn’t want to meet us at a public place,” says Gardenia. For months, the Lochmans knew nothing about the people caring for their child.
The court order allowed the Lochmans only a single 2-hour visit per week with their baby. “We never missed a visit,” says Gardenia. Even four (4) years later, Andrew recalls “every Tuesday at 10 am” as precious time.
They cherished every moment spent with Lincoln, eventually under the supervision of their OKDHS permanency worker Akeatha Washington who Gardenia reports did everything she could to provide them with additional visits, even leaving her own family on Christmas to sit at a Waffle House for four (4) hours so the Lochmans could bond with their newborn son.
During a supervised visit when Lincoln was approximately six (6) months old and beginning to babble his first words, Gardenia expressed concern about her son potentially referring to his foster caregiver as “Mama”. That’s when Washington informed her Lincoln was in the care of two men.
“That floored us. I mean like how could you not tell us? That’s something someone needs to know. My little boy being with two men,” states Gardenia.
The couple immediately expressed their religious objection to the placement. “They tell you, well do you have any religious preferences?” says Gardenia. “It’s against our religious beliefs that two men should be together.” No change was made concerning Lincoln’s placement.
Despite the Harrisons’ objections, Washington then arranged for the Lochmans to have their one-and-only interaction with the Harrisons at an OKDHS foster sibling event at the Oklahoma City Zoo.
During the visit, the Lochmans report Solan and Ryan Harrison expressed excitement about attending an adults-only, drinking event at the zoo advertised as ‘sip and stroll pride night’. The Lochmans left with greater concerns about the Harrisons’ lifestyle and Lincoln’s safety.
Former OKDHS Worker Speaks Out: OKDHS/Court Should Never Have Taken Child, Favored Progressive Placements
The Lochmans describe former child welfare worker Akeatha Washington as “all about reunifying” children with their families as state law requires and the only person they trusted within the OKDHS system. Washington spent more than a dozen years working with families through OKDHS and agreed to talk with this publication about the Lochman case.
As the result of both the court’s (Judicial District 21) and OKDHS’s handling of the Lochman case and one other, Washington left both the agency and the profession. She now resides outside of Oklahoma.
Washington believes OKDHS violated their own policies in taking custody of Lincoln Lochman and later broke the law by not returning him to his parents.
“From the beginning, someone wanted to give the Harrisons a baby,” former OKDHS Child Welfare worker Akeatha Washington.
Washington was assigned as the permanency worker on the Lochman case after Lincoln was placed in the Harrison home by CPS. From the beginning, she openly questioned her superiors, based upon OKDHS policy, about why the child ever came into custody.
“The CPS report said for substance abuse, that the parents admitted to it but it wasn’t stated that parents or baby tested positive”, says Washington. “I had to go look for testing to find out mom tested negative.”
Washington states she contacted the STAR Clinic and confirmed Gardenia Lochman was successfully treated there for several months prior to delivery. According to Washington, the clinic informed they felt the Lochmans would’ve been successful taking their baby home with support but said the program was forced to step back when OKDHS became involved.
“I was very vocal about this case,” says Washington, “From my understanding from reading the report from investigations when I got it was the baby was not in our care because mom or baby tested positive but because mom had admitted that she had, at some point during her pregnancy, used drugs. Generally, up to that point, that would’ve been an in-home based case where baby would’ve gone home with mom and would’ve had a social worker assigned to her and baby to make sure that things were going smoothly.”
“I let it be known to everybody, I don’t know why this baby is in permanency,” asserts Washington.
The only answer Washington reports receiving from her superiors was “that’s the decision CPS made.”
Washington also had significant concerns about Lincoln’s care with the Harrisons. During her initial visit, the Harrisons shared they had previously fostered two other male children (ages 5 and 7), elected not to retain those children because of their ages and behavioral issues, and wanted a child that had never been in any other home.
“To be honest with you, I was fighting from the first visit for Lincoln to be removed from their (Harrison’s) home,” says Washington.
Despite OKDHS’s mandate that foster parents support the goal of reunifying children with their biological families, Washington states, “They (Harrisons) did not want the parents to know anything about them. They let it be known, their intention from the start was to adopt, and I let them know this is not an adoption case at this point. This case is just getting started. These parents have time.”
According to Washington, the physical environment at the home appeared safe but the Harrisons were observably not capable of providing age appropriate care for an infant and appeared to lack the ability to nurture such a young child.
“There was no coddling, holding or talking to the baby,” states Washington. “There was not a family feeling in the home, even between the Solan and Ryan.”
In contrast, Washington describes the Lochmans during visitations with Lincoln as “both equally involved, playing, talking to him, interacted like a family”. According to Washington, “From the time I would pulled up, they would run out and do everything for the baby.”
Washington discovered the Harrisons were inappropriately feeding Lincoln for his age and failing to change him often enough. While changing a diaper during a supervised parental visitation with Washington, Gardenia Lochman discovered Lincoln had a serious rash.
“It was a very bad rash,” said Washington. “It looked like he had been sitting in his urine for quite some time.”
Washington reports calling the Harrisons who said they were aware of the rash and “it was nothing”. Washington required the Harrisons to seek medical treatment for Lincoln on that day and provide OKDHS with a doctor’s report.
Despite expressing her mounting concerns to her supervisor Jennifer Baker, Washington was not allowed to remove Lincoln from the Harrison home.
“Higher ups, and I mean higher than my supervisor and myself, were completely enamored with them (Harrisons),” states Washington. “If I said something and they said something, they were sided with.”
“At that time, the department was doing this shift and parents like the Harrisons were being looked at more favorably. And parents like the biological parents who had admitted to a history of substance abuse were not looked at as favorably,” states Washington. “In my opinion, what went down was they (OKDHS) wanted the Harrisons to have that baby. There was no real concern for biological parents. The Harrisons wanted a baby, and this was their way to get it and the department was fully aware.”
According to Washington, the push toward more progressive placements at the expense of child safety and well-being was coming from OKDHS’s state office and David A. Johnson, District Director for the Norman OKDHS office at the time of Lincoln’s removal.
In June of 2021, Johnson was promoted to the agency’s state office as the head administrator responsible for statewide, post adoption services.

When asked if same-sex foster parents were trendy with DHS and got preferential treatment during that time, Washington responded, “Yes.”
Washington believes that trend worked to the detriment of children on multiple cases in Cleveland County.
“It proved itself later on in this situation…they (Harrisons) were not in it for the best interest of the child, they were only concerned with what they wanted. They were not even able to adequately care for the child. I was screaming it from the rooftops but no one was listening,” lamented Washington with discernable emotion in her voice.
OKDHS/County Court Unlawfully Delayed Hearings: Biological Parents Never Provided Lawyer, Punished for Asserting State Law
According to Washington, OKDHS and the Cleveland County Juvenile Deprived Court broke state law and dragged out the Lochman case, while she continued to inform and advocate for the family.
“The other thing about this case is that they kept continuing it,” reports Washington. “They kept changing the court date for adjudication.”
State law under Title 10A only allows law enforcement to take a child directly into emergency custody.
For OKDHS to take a child into state custody:
The area’s district attorney (DA) must request an emergency court order from a district judge to place a child in temporary emergency custody.
Within 7 (seven) days of removal, the DA must file a “petition for a deprived child proceeding”. That filing can only be delayed, with court permission, “for a period not to exceed 15 calendar days from the assumption of custody” (10A O.S. § 1-4-205).
OKDHS must present a report to that jurisdiction’s district attorney within 30 days justifying the removal as necessary (10A O.S. § 1-2-102 and 10A O.S. § 1-4-101).
An adjudication hearing must be held “not more than ninety (90) calendar days following the filing of the petition”. At adjudication, the state “must prove the allegations of the deprived petition are supported by a preponderance of the evidence” for the child to be made a “ward of the court”.
If adjudication is delayed beyond the (90) days as specified, “the child shall be released from emergency custody” unless the court:
issues a written order with facts showing the child would be in “imminent danger” if returned to parents/guardians or;
grants a “continuance of the child in emergency custody” based upon “an exceptional circumstance” or all parties involved, including the parents/guardians, “agree to such continuance”.
“If the adjudicatory hearing is delayed pursuant to this subsection, the emergency custody order shall expire unless the hearing on the merits of the petition is held within one hundred eighty (180) days after the actual removal of the child.” (§10A-1-4-601)
After adjudication, if the child is adjudicated deprived, OKDHS is required to attend a permanency hearing every 90 days to update the court on case progress and child well being.
According to both Washington and the Lochman’s, the parents were never provided an attorney because adjudication hadn’t happened.
“We continued to get continuances, not from us (OKDHS), from the court. So, I never attended a permanency court hearing for the case,” states Washington.
In November of 2020, just weeks before Lincoln’s birth, Associate District Judge Bethany Stanley was appointed by Governor Kevin Stitt (R) to take over the juvenile deprived docket in Norman after longtime Associate District Judge Stephen Bonner retired.
After the Lochman’s case passed the 180-day mark, during a visitation with both Lincoln and his parents, Washington informed them of the law and OKDHS policy.
“Adjudication kept getting continued out and out. We never actually had it,” reports Washington. “That’s why I told them when we got to that 6-month mark, hey, we should not have your kid. Your case has not been adjudicated. The state does not legally have the ability to have your kid. I pulled out my laptop. I pulled up the policy and I gave it to them.”
The Lochmans now understood they were no longer legally required to return Lincoln to the Harrisons following the visit and pressed the issue with OKDHS.
Washington’s superiors and the Harrisons engaged law enforcement, and after consultation between Moore Police and OKDHS’s state office, the agency somehow reportedly obtained another emergency order to retain state custody of Lincoln. “It was shady as crap,” says Washington.
When Washington left OKDHS in August of 2021, eight (8) months after Lincoln was taken from the Lochmans, the case had still not been adjudicated.
Following her departure, Washington believes OKDHS punished the Lochmans for exerting their legal rights by making them start from the beginning of their permanency plan with a worker who would not question the agency’s actions.
Given Solan Harrison’s now two known arrests involving child sexual abuse, Washington has continuing concern for Lincoln’s safety in the care of Ryan Harrison.
“There are not many times that the non-offending parent does not know what is happening,” says Washington.
Government Agency Bullying Causes Precise Problems It Claims to Fix: Lincoln’s Parents Pressured to Relinquish Rights, Threatened With Loss of Future Babies
The more the Lochmans fought for their son and attempted to assert their legal rights, the more the system unofficially pushed back.
Nine (9) months into the case, they were assigned a new caseworker named Rosemary (last name unknown) who made them start from the beginning.
“Everything we did for the first nine months was like it didn’t exist. We started from square one,” says Gardenia. Their court-ordered visitation time with Lincoln was reduced from two (2) hours to one-half hour per week.
Gardenia recalls a sense of powerlessness, hopelessness, anxiety and grief overtaking the couple as they ran out of ways to fight the unaccountable government agency that had taken their child. “I feel like someone in DHS knew this couple , and they were looking for a baby,” states Gardenia. “The process was tearing us both apart.”
In March of 2022, at a Cleveland County juvenile deprived hearing regarding Lincoln’s custody, the judge arranged for Gardenia to be taken into custody related to unpaid fines and costs of less than $1,000 from a 2016 Jackson County case. Her bond was set at $50,000. Unable to pay, Gardenia spent 20 days in jail.
It was then, after more than a year of sobriety, Gardenia says both she and Andrew returned to drug use and a pattern of criminal activity to support their addiction. While neither Andrew nor Gardenia have any record of violent offenses, both were arrested in June of 2022 for receiving/concealing stolen property.
OKDHS immediately moved to terminate the Lochmans’ parental rights, and their lawyer’s request to postpone the October 4, 2022, hearing on the matter was denied. The Lochmans say they were then threatened with the loss of their future children to the state if they didn’t relinquish their rights to Lincoln.
“Our lawyer said don’t let them terminate but they were going to do it anyway. They said you’ll never be able to have another baby in Oklahoma if you don’t relinquish,” shared Gardenia.
Broken and under the full weight of an unbeatable government system, the Lochmans relinquished their rights to Lincoln. Both Andrew and Gardenia spent time in prison during 2023.
“By the time I got to prison and was able to get someone to get some pictures of him, they (Harrisons) had already adopted him. They were in a hurry to adopt him, for sure. It breaks my heart. It was horrible. I’m still going to therapy for it,” says Gardenia. “And now knowing what my son could’ve been going through God knows what for his whole life and nobody caring and nobody stopping it. It’s just heart wrenching.”
The Miracle of Resilience: Biological Family is Now Thriving, Caring for Second Child, Searching for Lincoln
The Lochmans report being drug free since June of 2022. They were released within the same two weeks, lived in sober living programs, Andrew found steady employment in the heat and air business, and they now have their own home.
Andrew and Gardenia were married in August of last year and recently welcomed their second son, Lane Carter Lochman, into the world. Lincoln and Lane have the same middle name.
“We named our son Lane Carter Lochman for when they get bigger and Lincoln’s wondering, hey, who’s my family,” shares Gardenia. “Thank God that I have this baby… he’s my world.”
Little Lane is thriving, Gardenia is pursuing a business certification and the couple has connected with legal representation to continue their search for Lincoln, now age 4.
In the absence of action by either OKDHS or KDCF, the Lochmans have also notified the FBI concerning the ongoing risk to Lincoln and Ryan Harrison’s removal of the child from Oklahoma.
Please assist the Lochmans by putting public pressure on both states involved to locate Lincoln and investigate suspected child abuse as required by law.
Links are provided below for all concerned readers to make a report involving Lincoln (Lochman) Harrison (DOB 12/15/2020) to both the Oklahoma and Kansas abuse hotlines:
Kansas Protection Report Center Child Abuse Hotline - Call 1-800-922-5330
Oklahoma Child Abuse Hotline - Call 1-800-522-3511
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This was an excellent article. Thank you so much for continuing to dig deep and verify information. I’m looking forward to your discussion on the ROPE Report.
Wondering out-loud if there are other story's with STAR that have similarities.
Great reporting!