The Christine Case
Grants Pass Couple Accused of Kidnapping Their Own Children
Copied from Fight CPS and Win
Press release received from Edgar J. Steele on
Pretty serious stuff. Must be a modern Bonnie and
Ruth Christine whiles away her time in a Missoula, Montana jail, while Oregon officials move to have her extradited to stand trial on charges that she helped to kidnap her own children. Ruth is counting the days until delivery of her next child, too - anytime during the next couple of weeks.
Edgar J. Steele, an attorney based in Northern
Idaho, with offices in California, has agreed to take the lead in representing
Ruth and Brian Christine in what has become a modern-day David and Goliath
story of citizens against a government seemingly out of control. "They
just refused to play ball," said Steele from his office in
Ruth and Brian had chosen to spend a few years traveling with their young family and earning a modest income from his internet-based business dealings. He would use public-access terminals, like those found in public libraries, to conduct business.
Apparently, somebody in
By the end of the day, Brian had been hauled off and booked for "child endangerment," the three girls taken by armed deputies to a foster home and Ruth left dazed, penniless and 8 months pregnant, alone and confused in the converted bus which had served as the family home for the past two years.
Once Brian was released, he and Ruth chose to fight the legal system on their own, spurning the offer of a county-paid public defender. They did all the wrong things, according to the system, just as people often do when they dare to represent themselves in a courtroom. They didn't realize the stakes that were involved. They believed that eventually truth would find a way and they would get their children back. They were wrong.
Along the way, Ruth traveled home to
"We want Olivia, too," said the
About a month ago,
Meanwhile, though the couple's newest baby is about
to be born in
Steele pledges that the baby will not be taken
without a legal struggle. "Nor will the three older girls be adopted out to strangers without a pitched battle of epic
proportions," said Steele. "This case represents the modern trend of
Big Brother come to life in
"The criminal charges will be the toughest," said Steele. Though the Christines' alleged acts were born of desperation about never seeing their little girls again, the system just won't allow that as a justification. In a very real sense, the system drove them crazy, and now it wants to lock them up for doing the very things it is itself guilty of having driven them to do. This isn't right and I hope that we can get a jury that sees things that way. Meanwhile, we have our work cut out, just keeping the kids from being placed permanently out of reach while we deal with the criminal charges."
While Steele is providing his legal services pro bono (for free), he notes that there will be considerable costs to be expended in the Christines' defense, nonetheless, and asks that donations be directed to the Christine Defense Fund, PO Box 1255, Sagle, Idaho 83860. Donations can be made via credit card over the Internet by logging on to PayPal.com and directing donations to steele@nidlink.com, with a notation for the Christine Defense Fund.