Thursday, May 21, 2009

Where Is Daniel Hauser?


The Minnesota teenager who ran away to avoid chemotherapy may have been seen in the Los Angeles area along with his mother, and the pair may be headed to San Diego and the Mexican border, the sheriff's office in Brown County, Minn. said on Wednesday.

Earlier Wednesday, authorities believed a Massachusetts man who ran away to avoid chemotherapy treatments may be traveling with the boy. But Billy Best said in a phone interview he’s in Boston and hasn’t talked to 13-year-old Daniel Hauser and his mother since they fled. The Hausers allegedly fled New Ulm, Minn., after a court-ordered medical exam showed his Hodgkin’s lymphoma had worsened.

An alert issued to police departments around the country had said the Hausers might be traveling with Best, who as a teenager in 1994 ran away from home to Houston to escape chemotherapy for cancer similar to Daniel’s.

Best has said he was cured by natural remedies.

He says he last saw the Hausers when he was in Minnesota nearly two weeks ago for court hearings. He says he’d help them if they called him.

Daniel Hauser and his mother, Colleen Hauser, apparently left their southern Minnesota home sometime after a doctor’s appointment and court-ordered X-ray on Monday showed his tumor had grown.

Brown County District Judge John Rodenberg, who had ruled last week that Daniel’s parents were medically neglecting him, issued an arrest warrant Tuesday for Colleen Hauser and ruled her in contempt of court. Rodenberg also ordered that Daniel be placed in foster care and immediately evaluated by a cancer specialist for treatment. (How do you just let your child die when treatment will almost certainly work? And the courts wouldn't let you shake your child to death, or beat them to death. And this is no different than any other form of child abuse.)

The family belongs to a religious group that believes in “natural” healing methods. Daniel has testified he believed chemotherapy would kill him and told the judge that if anyone tried to force him to take it, “I’d fight it. I’d punch them and I’d kick them.”

The boy’s father, Anthony Hauser, testified he didn’t know where his wife and son were but had made no attempt to find them. He testified he last saw his son Monday morning, and he saw his wife only briefly that evening when she said she was leaving “for a time.”

Officials distributed the arrest warrant nationwide. Brown County Sheriff Rich Hoffman said Tuesday that investigators were following some leads locally, but declined to elaborate. A crime alert said the Hausers might be with Susan Daya, also known as Susan Hamwi, a California attorney who accompanied them to a medical appointment Monday, or with a man named Billy Joe Best. (It is never good when your attorney has an alias.)

Best appeared at a news conference held by the family in early May to say he supported the Hausers. Best, who said he was from Boston, told The Journal of New Ulm then that he had also been diagnosed with Hodgkins lymphoma as a teenager but was cured by natural remedies.

In an interview Wednesday at his family farm in Sleepy Eye, Anthony Hauser said he hadn’t heard from his wife or Daniel since they left. He said he has some ideas where they might have gone, and he’s shared them with authorities. (At least he seems to be coming to his senses and isn't just going to let his son die.)

He said he thinks his wife just got scared when they got the results of the X-ray on Monday, and thought Brown County authorities would use it to try to get custody of Daniel. (Somebody needs to take him if she really thinks that herbs will cure cancer.)

“It’s just my opinion, but I think she figured that because of that X-ray she feared they were going to take him,” he said.

He said he doesn’t oppose chemotherapy “if it’s a necessary thing,” but thinks doctors use it too much.

He wonders why Brown County authorities got involved.

“I don’t know why they started this situation in the first place,” he said. “Why does someone believe they have the right over your child?” (Because the child protective service agencies are there to prevent parents from harming their own children. They weren't doing anything constructive to save Daniel's life.)

Daniel’s Hodgkin’s lymphoma, diagnosed in January, is considered highly curable with chemotherapy and radiation, but the boy quit chemo after a single treatment.

The judge has said Daniel, who has a learning disability and cannot read, did not understand the risks and benefits of chemotherapy and didn’t believe he was ill. (Children shouldn't get to decide whether or not they see the doctor. Of course he believes that he doesn't need treatment if he doesn't think that he is sick.)

The Hausers are Roman Catholic and also believe in the “do no harm” philosophy of the Nemenhah Band, a Missouri-based religious group that believes in natural healing methods advocated by some American Indians. (I bet the Native Americans would be there getting chemo with their herbs. I bet they wouldn't just stand by and let their children die.)Colleen Hauser testified earlier that she had been treating his cancer with herbal supplements, vitamins, ionized water and other natural alternatives.

The founder of Nemenhah, Philip Cloudpiler Landis, said it was a bad idea for Colleen Hauser to flee with her son. “You don’t solve anything by disregarding the order of the judge,” Landis said.

The family’s doctor, James Joyce, testified by telephone that he examined Daniel on Monday, and that an X-ray showed his tumor had grown to the size it was when he was first diagnosed.

“He had basically gotten back all the trouble he had in January,” the doctor said.

Joyce testified that he offered to make appointments for Daniel with oncologists, but the Hausers declined, then left in a rush with Daya, the California lawyer. “Under Susan Daya’s urging, they indicated they had other places to go,” Joyce said.

Daya did not immediately respond to a call Tuesday from The Associated Press.

Minnesota statutes require parents to provide necessary medical care for a child, Rodenberg wrote. The statutes say alternative and complementary health care methods aren’t enough.

source

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