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michele31LIF Adult
 Member since 5/05 3372 total posts Name:Michele
 | :( Russian adopted child killed by mother This women should NEVER have been a mother..this hurts all that want to adopt children. :( These poor babies.
 The Washington Post
 March 2, 2006
 
 Mother Admits Killing Daughter
 Death of Russian Child Could Imperil Future Adoptions
 
 By Theresa Vargas
 Washington Post Staff Writer
 Thursday, March 2, 2006; B02
 
 Peggy Sue Hilt, standing in a Manassas courtroom yesterday, admitted
 killing her adopted Russian daughter, punching and kicking the
 2-year-old so much that the tiny body was bruised all over. Between
 her eyes, on her chin, across her back and stomach.
 
 Hilt had been enraged, she told police, and she had never bonded with
 the child.
 
 Her court appearance was brief -- just long enough for a detective to
 describe the abuse and for Hilt to whisper a guilty plea to
 second-degree murder -- but the child's slaying has caused an
 international uproar.
 
 Few familiar with Russian adoptions talk about Nina Victoria Hilt's
 death without mentioning the others. There was 8-year-old Dennis
 Merryman, who starved to death five years after coming to the United
 States. Before him was 6-year-old Alex Pavlis, beaten to death, and
 Liam Thompson, 3, who died after he was scalded by hot bath water.
 And so on and so on until the first known death in 1996. David
 Polreis was 2 when he was beaten to death with wooden spoons,
 authorities said.
 
 In all, 14 adopted Russian children have been killed in the United
 States, officials say.
 
 "If more and more children are being hurt, I am concerned about the
 future of adoptions with Russia," said Patrick Mason, with the
 International Adoption Center at Inova Hospital for Children. Since
 Nina's death, many Russian officials have shuffled through Mason's
 Fairfax office. "They see these children are coming here and they are
 being abused and they are being killed," he said. "Do you keep
 sending kids if they are being hurt?"
 
 That question has troubled Russian citizens and the U.S. adoption
 community in the months since Nina's death July 2. Russian officials
 initially called for a moratorium on U.S. adoptions, and although
 they have eased back on the threat, many fear that Russia will halt
 adoptions if additional abuse occurs. Romania currently has such a
 ban in place. U.S. and Russian officials have also called for
 reforms, including stricter screening of prospective parents,
 improved pre-adoption training and a reevaluation of independent
 adoptions, those done through agencies not accredited by Russia.
 
 According to the U.S. State Department, Russia is the second most
 popular country for international adoptions, after China. In 2005,
 the United States issued 4,639 immigrant visas to Russian orphans,
 down from 5,865 issued in 2004.
 
 Adoption experts said they could not point to as many deaths among
 children adopted from any other country, including China. They said
 this could be in part because many of the Russian children who are
 adopted have behavioral and developmental problems either passed to
 them from parents with poor prenatal care, including fetal alcohol
 syndrome, or the result of their growing up in orphanages. Adoptive
 parents, they add, are given little preparation for what to expect.
 
 An estimated 600,000 Russian children live in orphanages.
 
 "These children came out of darkness, out of desperate institutions.
 This is all they've known," said Dr. Ronald S. Federici, an
 Alexandria neuropsychologist and expert on inter-country adoptions.
 He has adopted seven children, three from Russia. "Parents try
 traditional parenting, try to treat them as normal kids, and they
 are so far off."
 
 "Anyone can get in over their head," Federici added. "So what
 happens if they are not trained, if they are not prepared? Disasters
 happen like this one."
 
 In a 42-page transcript of her statement to police, Peggy Sue Hilt,
 33, detailed the abuse that erupted July 1 at her home in Wake
 Forest, N.C.
 
 "I hurt Nina," she began. "I choked her and I hit her and hit her."
 
 "She was not behaving and not listening and just crying," Hilt told
 police. "I was so angry so angry. I got up to her bedroom and I said
 stop it, stop it! I dropped her on the floor and I kicked her."
 
 Hilt told police she then put Nina back in bed and continued punching
 her on the back with a closed fist. She could not say how many times
 she hit Nina or if the child cried.
 
 Hilt and her husband, Christopher, had adopted Nina, a curly-haired
 girl from Siberia, 16 months earlier. She told police they
 immediately encountered problems: potty training issues, speech
 delay, a lack of connection. "Since I brought Nina home we never
 bonded," Hilt told police. When asked whether the child favored
 someone else, she replied simply: "Anybody but me."
 
 Nina died a day after the abuse occurred. She had slowly grown paler
 and more feverish during a four-hour drive to Prince William County,
 where the family visited friends. An autopsy determined that the
 cause of death was blunt trauma to the abdomen.
 
 Hilt will remain in jail until her sentencing on May 25. Her
 attorney, William Stephens, said that psychological evaluations
 found Hilt to be sane and competent, but he plans to have another
 evaluation done before sentencing.
 
 "It's sad," Stephens said. "Looking back, I suspect that there was
 easily a way that this would never have happened."
 
 Hilt also had a second adopted child -- Nataliya, 4 -- from the
 Ukraine. Police said she showed no signs of abuse. Officials said
 Nataliya is in social services custody.
 
 Prince William's chief prosecutor, Paul B. Ebert, said after the
 hearing that he believes the maximum sentence of 40 years in prison
 would be appropriate. "We can't justify our actions simply because
 we don't bond with the child," he said. "It's a horrible case when
 an innocent child is beaten to death. It's hard to understand how
 anybody could do that."
 
 Ebert said he has received numerous calls from Russian media
 representatives since the slaying. At the same time, some U.S.
 parents and officials have taken out full-page ads in major Russian
 newspapers.
 
 "The American adoption community spoke very respectfully and very
 passionately to the Russian government saying we are heartbroken over
 these deaths, we are going to enact reforms to continue improving so
 these things don't happen, but please don't shut down adoptions,"
 Thomas Atwood, president of the National Council for Adoptions,
 said. "That's the only way these tragic events could be made more
 tragic."
 
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