Friday, February 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Social Worker Wants 'Alex Alerts' To Protect At-Risk Children From Vanishing

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2017 03:42 PM
    CALGARY — The B.C. social worker who unsuccessfully tried to prevent Alexandru Radita from being returned to his parents' home hopes his tragic and painful death nearly four years ago will lead to changes in the social safety net to protect future children.
     
    Emil and Rodica Radita were found guilty Friday of first-degree murder of the 15-year-old, who weighed just 37 pounds when he died.
     
    The trial heard that the boy, who was covered with bedsores and riddled with infection, died of complications due to untreated diabetes and starvation.
     
    B.C. social workers apprehended Alexandru after an October 2003 hospital admission where he was near death because his parents refused to treat his disease. He was placed in foster care — where he thrived — for nearly a year before he was returned to his family, which eventually moved to Alberta.
     
    Patricia MacDonald, who was worked for B.C. Children's Services for 23 years, had begged the judge not to return Alexandru to his family.
     
    "We felt that Alex wouldn't be safe in the family home with his parents and we were asking the court to make him a continuing custody ward, meaning he would stay in the care of the ministry until we found an appropriate adoption home," said MacDonald.
     
    She said the social safety net failed Alex and she's hoping his death will lead to changes in the system.
     
    "He would have wanted for his life to have had meaning. He would have wanted it to bring about change for other children," said MacDonald.
     
     
    "I'd be asking for an 'Alex Alert.' There's an Amber Alert but we need an Alex Alert to honour him and for him to have a legacy," she said.
     
    Under her proposal, which she has taken to her local member of Parliament, the system would alert other provinces when at-risk children disappear.
     
    "It would be some sort of way of messaging from Vancouver Island right to P.E.I. that we have families that have left and we have children at risk and that they need to be red flagged. They need to be picked up and they need to be checked on," she said.
     
    Crown prosecutor Susan Pepper said the system failed Alexandru and she fears there are likely other children who have been cut off from society as well.
     
    "As good as our system is it should be better. That shouldn't happen," said Pepper.
     
    "If this case could lead to anything it would be a meaningful discussion about how to fix things and how to really make change for other children who are living in conditions that might not end in a homicide but do end in suffering.
     
    "I believe that could save a life someday and I think that if change could occur from this it would be a really fitting legacy for Alex."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C.'s Highway 5 Reopens After Overnight Closure Trapped Drivers In Winter Storm

    B.C.'s Highway 5 Reopens After Overnight Closure Trapped Drivers In Winter Storm
    VANCOUVER — Hundreds of people spent a frigid night sitting in cars, buses or transport trucks as snow and freezing rain pounded a British Columbia mountain pass, preventing drivers from moving.

    B.C.'s Highway 5 Reopens After Overnight Closure Trapped Drivers In Winter Storm

    Boy With Mystery Broken Bones Has Gene Abnormality Linked To Pain Insensitivity

    Boy With Mystery Broken Bones Has Gene Abnormality Linked To Pain Insensitivity
    A British Columbia boy who was seized twice by the Children's Ministry due to his mysterious broken bones has been found to have a rare gene abnormality linked to a condition that blocks all feelings of pain.

    Boy With Mystery Broken Bones Has Gene Abnormality Linked To Pain Insensitivity

    Wanted High-risk Sex Offender Arrested After Being Spotted On SkyTrain

    Wanted High-risk Sex Offender Arrested After Being Spotted On SkyTrain
    High-risk offender Antoine Naskathey has been arrested and remains in custody.

    Wanted High-risk Sex Offender Arrested After Being Spotted On SkyTrain

    Abbotsford Police Seek To Locate Sean Patrick Smith

    Anyone who observes Sean Patrick SMITH should contact their local police immediately.

    Abbotsford Police Seek To Locate Sean Patrick Smith

    Indo-Canadian Astronaut Shawna Pandya Is Not Part Of NASA Mission, She Says In Facebook Post

    Indo-Canadian Astronaut Shawna Pandya Is Not Part Of NASA Mission, She Says In Facebook Post
    Indian-origin citizen-astronaut Shawna Pandya has denied reports she had been shortlisted by NASA for its 2018 space mission under the Citizen Science Astronaut programme.

    Indo-Canadian Astronaut Shawna Pandya Is Not Part Of NASA Mission, She Says In Facebook Post

    Independent B.C. Politician Vicki Huntington Says Premier's Hacking Claims Are Laughable

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — An Independent member of British Columbia's legislature has stepped forward to shed light on Premier Christy Clark's allegations that the New Democrat Opposition hacked the B.C. Liberal party's website.

    Independent B.C. Politician Vicki Huntington Says Premier's Hacking Claims Are Laughable