Tarrant County

Kentucky's New Juvenile Justice Chief Oversaw Raid in Texas

The man chosen by Gov. Matt Bevin's administration to run the Kentucky Department of Juvenile Justice is a retired Texas official who oversaw a 2008 raid on a polygamist sect, resulting in more than 400 children being seized by his agency.

Carey D. Cockerell begins his new role next month, the Lexington Herald-Leader reported. The Justice and Public Safety Cabinet said Cockerell's appointment "is part of an ongoing revamp to ensure the highest level of performance and accountability" at DJJ.

"Juvenile justice is undergoing a top-to-bottom transformation in Kentucky, and Mr. Cockerell brings the knowledge and expertise to shepherd reforms with transparency and accountability," Kentucky Justice Secretary John Tilley said Friday in a statement.

"We were impressed by his commitment to public safety and his compassion for our youth."

Cockerell was commissioner of the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services from 2005 until he retired in 2008.

In March 2008, three months before his retirement, Cockerell's agency seized 468 children during an overnight raid of the Yearning for Zion Ranch, a West Texas complex that was home to the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

The agency later said it had received a tip about physical and spiritual abuse at the ranch. However, the Texas Supreme Court ruled a month later that the agency had erred, improperly removing children from their families.

"On the record before us, removal of the children was not warranted," the court ruled.

The state's raid angered religious and civil-liberties groups and led to hearings by Texas lawmakers.

Mike Wynn, spokesman for Kentucky's Justice Cabinet, said Cockerell would not be available for an interview Friday. The Bevin administration knew about the 2008 raid when it hired Cockerell, Wynn said.

"We're aware of his background," Wynn said. "We think that he has an exceptional record. He has a reputation for reform."

Under Texas law, Cockerell's agency did not need a court order to seize children from the ranch, Wynn said. The decision was upheld shortly after the raid in a hearing before a district judge. However, the Texas Court of Appeals and Supreme Court soon overruled that judge, finding that the state had "failed to meet its burden of proof" before it broke up hundreds of families, according to court records.

Before he ran the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services, Cockerell spent 20 years as director of juvenile services in Tarrant County, Texas, where he managed probation, court and detention services, and treatment and post-adjudication programs.

In Kentucky, DJJ ousted several officials, including then-Commissioner Bob Hayter, in February following the death of 16-year-old Gynnya McMillen at one of its detention centers. The coroner ruled that the teen died from a rare heart condition. But an investigation determined that multiple DJJ employees failed to perform mandatory bed checks and falsified their logs around the time of her death.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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