Maggots in her nappy, sores on her skin—a toddler sat in her own filth for days

Child protection services are meant to safeguard the most vulnerable, ensuring their safety and well-being.

But what happens when warning signs are overlooked, and a system designed to intervene fails to act?

A recent case in South Australia has sparked serious concerns about child welfare oversight, revealing distressing details of neglect and the response—or lack thereof—from authorities.


A social worker from South Australia’s Department for Child Protection (DCP) witnessed two young children living in dire conditions but did not intervene, a judge stated during sentencing.

The Whyalla mother, 26, was sentenced in South Australia’s District Court in Port Augusta on 26 February after pleading guilty to criminal neglect of her one-year-old daughter in 2023.

Just weeks after the social worker’s visit, authorities charged the mother with neglect when her daughter was found with severe nappy rash and maggots in her nappy.


image1.png
Toddler found with maggots in nappy. Image source: Pexel/Photo By: Kaboompics.com


Judge Michelle Sutcliffe said the mother first came to the department’s attention when a caregiver noticed the children wearing soiled nappies.

In early July 2023, a social worker visited the woman’s home and saw the children in ‘urine-soaked’ pyjamas, with her daughter suffering from a nappy rash.

‘No action was taken to remove the children from your care at that time,’ Judge Sutcliffe said.

The woman agreed to take her daughter to a doctor, acknowledging the child needed treatment and was likely in discomfort.

Days later, on 13 July 2023, the woman’s uncle removed the children from the home, bathed them, and cared for them until returning them on 17 July.

Four days after that, the mother contacted her uncle and said: ‘you better come and get these f****** kids because I can't be f***** getting up for them’.


‘Your words sounded cold and uncaring, but I consider that call to [your uncle] was a call for help for your children,’ Judge Sutcliffe said.

The judge noted that had the woman not reached out when she did, her daughter’s condition could have worsened.

However, she stated that it should have been clear to the mother much earlier that the child was in pain and needed help.

The uncle found the children sitting on a dirty couch with a strong stench of urine and faeces, and the daughter appeared ‘numb and emotionless’.

‘Your daughter…appeared to be wearing the same nappy she was in four days earlier,’ Judge Sutcliffe said.


The uncle removed the child’s pants, which were full of faeces, and saw maggots in the nappy.

‘She had severe nappy rash from her waist to her feet,’ the judge stated.

Judge Sutcliffe called the woman’s actions ‘inexcusable’, saying she had ‘deprived’ her daughter of ‘the most basic nappy care’.

‘Your criminal neglect of your daughter is inexcusable, but in assessing your moral culpability and prospects for rehabilitation, it is relevant that you made the call that allowed your daughter's condition to be identified and treated,’ she said.

The judge detailed the severity of the child’s condition, stating she had ‘numerous skin sores from nappy rash’.

‘The redness and peeling skin were consistent with being in contact with urine for a long time, possibly over some days, causing the skin to become red and inflamed,’ she said.


Without medical attention, the child faced a significant risk of secondary infection.

Her condition indicated she had been wearing the same nappy and clothes for four days.

A search of the woman’s home uncovered baby bottles containing spoiled milk, an ice pipe, and a small bag of crystalline substance in her bedroom.

A spokesperson for the Department for Child Protection did not comment on the specifics of the case but stated that ‘the safety of children is the Department's highest priority’.

The department claimed it continuously worked to improve the child protection and family support system to ensure children’s safety.


Judge Sutcliffe cited a psychological report stating that the woman’s upbringing in an ‘unhealthy environment’ meant she had not developed ‘key life skills’ and had turned to ‘maladaptive coping strategies’.

Her substance abuse, lack of support, and absence of early intervention were primary factors in the neglect.

‘I accept [her] observation that the offence occurred in the context of you experiencing exceptionally poor mental health, and a lack of support, rather than malicious intent,’ Judge Sutcliffe said.

The judge acknowledged the mother had been in several domestic violence relationships, including one after her arrest.


By 2024, she had given birth to a third child.

The woman received a six-month and 23-day prison sentence, suspended upon her entering a two-year good behaviour bond.

Since her arrest in July 2023, she had served one year, six months, and six days on home detention and 31 days in custody.


In a previous story, another disturbing case of child endangerment emerged, revealing how a mother exploited social media in a shocking scheme.

The child involved was left gravely ill as authorities uncovered the extent of the deception.

Read more about the chilling details and how the case unfolded here.

Key Takeaways
  • A South Australian mother, 26, was sentenced for criminal neglect after her one-year-old was found with severe nappy rash and maggots, weeks after a social worker failed to act.
  • The child wore the same nappy for four days and appeared ‘numb and emotionless’ when the mother’s uncle found her in filthy conditions.
  • A search uncovered spoilt baby bottles, an ice pipe, and drugs, while reports cited the mother’s poor upbringing, substance abuse, and lack of support.
  • She received a suspended prison sentence after serving over a year on home detention.

With child protection services under scrutiny, do you think more should have been done to intervene sooner?

Let us know your thoughts in the comments.
 

Seniors Discount Club

Sponsored content

Info
Loading data . . .
This poor woman has been badly damaged and is coping the only way she knows how. Any children she managed to raise to adulthood would be just as damaged, and the article says she has since had another child! Making babies is very easy (too easy, a lot of the time!) but caring for them is beyond the ability of some. I truly wish it was possible to sterilize people like this, for their own good.
 
She chose drugs over her babies.

I have absolutely no compassion for this mother.

I grew up with my grandparents raising me as my own mother wasn't a good mother and I was determined to never be like her.

Two of my sisters were and are still drug addicts. One took care of her kids but one severely neglected her kids and docs removed them into foster care
Her eldest child was abused in foster care in Dungog nsw and passed away at 12 years old.
All my sisters kids 8 of them were born Heroin babies. The best thing the government should have done was sterilise her.
Her last two kids she got to keep them although another sister is raising her second youngest daughter and is now putting her through uni.

The youngest is a boy in year 9 and never attends school.

5 of her children and drug addicts, one dead, one starting uni and one still at school but never attends .

My final thought , Mother's on drugs should never have access to their children.
They deserve to be loved and nurtured.
I've tried and tried to help my sister
 
This woman was obviously incapable of caring for her children. However Child Protection Services need to foot the blame here. Those children should have been removed from the mothers care when it was obvious there was something direly wrong within the family. Child Protection Services seem to have the mantra "blood family is best for children" when it is blatantly obvious that is not always the case. Social workers' training has to be rectified to reflect this fact.
 
This poor woman has been badly damaged and is coping the only way she knows how. Any children she managed to raise to adulthood would be just as damaged, and the article says she has since had another child! Making babies is very easy (too easy, a lot of the time!) but caring for them is beyond the ability of some. I truly wish it was possible to sterilize people like this, for their own good.
More for any children's sake as they don't deserve to be put through and suffer at her hands. She knows enough to get her brother to come and get her kids, earlier would have been better for all concerned particularly the poor child. It breaks your heart to think of kid's lying there screaming in pain and neglect.
 
This poor woman has been badly damaged and is coping the only way she knows how. Any children she managed to raise to adulthood would be just as damaged, and the article says she has since had another child! Making babies is very easy (too easy, a lot of the time!) but caring for them is beyond the ability of some. I truly wish it was possible to sterilize people like this, for their own good.
Poor woman be damned ,she knows were to get the drugs she needs.:mad:
 
She chose drugs over her babies.

I have absolutely no compassion for this mother.

I grew up with my grandparents raising me as my own mother wasn't a good mother and I was determined to never be like her.

Two of my sisters were and are still drug addicts. One took care of her kids but one severely neglected her kids and docs removed them into foster care
Her eldest child was abused in foster care in Dungog nsw and passed away at 12 years old.
All my sisters kids 8 of them were born Heroin babies. The best thing the government should have done was sterilise her.
Her last two kids she got to keep them although another sister is raising her second youngest daughter and is now putting her through uni.

The youngest is a boy in year 9 and never attends school.

5 of her children and drug addicts, one dead, one starting uni and one still at school but never attends .

My final thought , Mother's on drugs should never have access to their children.
They deserve to be loved and nurtured.
I've tried and tried to help
A long time ago in Launceston a young girl in a bad relationship who knew my son asked if l could look after her baby who was around 6 months old . He had really bad nappy rash and it took a few days to get rid of it.
The effects the drugs she had been taking resulted in over a month of bad nights and we never knew when she was coming to pick him up but l wish now she had left him permanently as l heard later he was being abused and they had left Launceston.
Which brings me to another time l was about to leave Jimmys supermarket L/ton just as a ruff looking guy with three sad looking children all of them covered in bruises were coming in. l rushed to the phone box to report him hoping they would catch him but as it was a Saturday they were closed not even another number to contact .l was disgusted
 
Of course the CPS should have acted earlier….what on earth could they have been thinking. I have no empathy for this mum…she had enough sense to get her drugs…she had no love or affection or even a care for her. The brother was a godsend but I think that he should have told the authorities ….it’s such a sad situation…I don’t know if this child would thrive on foster care but at least she would be out of her mother’s sight, and I think the mother would be happy with that ……it’s heartbreaking to hear about children who are suffering from abuse and neglect…. I think that when a child is born into this kind of home and where CPS are involved, the mother should be sterilised….better a child is not born into suffering…..
 
As a former Child Protection Social Worker the Department is blamed continually for non action. Any action required either evidence to act and remove the child and a case plan to work positively with the family. In this State the needs and wants of the child are of considerable importance. It is very rare for a child to want to leave his or her family. So I would say there is a considerable amount of information lacking in this story. Not least the wish and need for confidentiality to achieve the best outcome for the child.
 
As a former Child Protection Social Worker the Department is blamed continually for non action. Any action required either evidence to act and remove the child and a case plan to work positively with the family. In this State the needs and wants of the child are of considerable importance. It is very rare for a child to want to leave his or her family. So I would say there is a considerable amount of information lacking in this story. Not least the wish and need for confidentiality to achieve the best outcome for the child.
Do you think a 1 year old has the ability to make that decision
 
As a former Child Protection Social Worker the Department is blamed continually for non action. Any action required either evidence to act and remove the child and a case plan to work positively with the family. In this State the needs and wants of the child are of considerable importance. It is very rare for a child to want to leave his or her family. So I would say there is a considerable amount of information lacking in this story. Not least the wish and need for confidentiality to achieve the best outcome for the child.

As a former Child Protection Social Worker the Department is blamed continually for non action. Any action required either evidence to act and remove the child and a case plan to work positively with the family. In this State the needs and wants of the child are of considerable importance. It is very rare for a child to want to leave his or her family. So I would say there is a considerable amount of information lacking in this story. Not least the wish and need for confidentiality to achieve the best outcome for the child.
In Launceston around 1970 there was no one contactable on the weekends which should have been a night and day 24hrs a day service. l tried to get help for three obviously abused children and l felt so bad and disgusted with the society when l couldn't do anything
Of course children will say they want to stay with their parents they are too scared to say otherwise
 
  • Like
Reactions: duckiedoodle
Do you think a 1 year old has the ability to make that decision
Of course not. An assessment of the situation - of all relevant details and whether the parents and extended family would be willing to work towards ensuring there is a safe environment for the child. If this fails, by continued contact with the family and further checks on the child. Then a decision will be made for the future safety
 
Of course not. An assessment of the situation - of all relevant details and whether the parents and extended family would be willing to work towards ensuring there is a safe environment for the child. If this fails, by continued contact with the family and further checks on the child. Then a decision will be made for the future safety
The trouble is they are sent back to their parents and it happens again
 
  • Like
Reactions: duckiedoodle

Join the conversation

News, deals, games, and bargains for Aussies over 60. From everyday expenses like groceries and eating out, to electronics, fashion and travel, the club is all about helping you make your money go further.

Seniors Discount Club

The SDC searches for the best deals, discounts, and bargains for Aussies over 60. From everyday expenses like groceries and eating out, to electronics, fashion and travel, the club is all about helping you make your money go further.
  1. New members
  2. Jokes & fun
  3. Photography
  4. Nostalgia / Yesterday's Australia
  5. Food and Lifestyle
  6. Money Saving Hacks
  7. Offtopic / Everything else

Latest Articles

  • We believe that retirement should be a time to relax and enjoy life, not worry about money. That's why we're here to help our members make the most of their retirement years. If you're over 60 and looking for ways to save money, connect with others, and have a laugh, we’d love to have you aboard.
  • Advertise with us

User Menu

Enjoyed Reading our Story?

  • Share this forum to your loved ones.
Change Weather Postcode×
Change Petrol Postcode×