Mississippi_Child Abuse Reporting Statute
MISSISSIPPI CODE
Title 43. Public Welfare
Chapter 21. Youth Court
Intake
§ 43-21-353. Reporting abuse or neglect
(1) Any attorney, physician, dentist,
intern, resident, nurse, psychologist, social worker,
family protection worker, family protection specialist,
child caregiver, minister, law enforcement officer, public
or private school employee or any other person having
reasonable cause to suspect that a child is a neglected
child or an abused child, shall cause an oral report to
be made immediately by telephone or otherwise and followed
as soon thereafter as possible by a report in writing
to the Department of Human Services, and immediately a
referral shall be made by the Department of Human Services
to the youth court intake unit, which unit shall promptly
comply with Section 43-21-357. In the course of an investigation,
at the initial time of contact with the individual(s)
about whom a report has been made under this Youth Court
Act or with the individual(s) responsible for the health
or welfare of a child about whom a report has been made
under this chapter, the Department of Human Services shall
inform the individual of the specific complaints or allegations
made against the individual. Consistent with subsection
(4), the identity of the person who reported his or her
suspicion shall not be disclosed. Where appropriate, the
Department of Human Services shall additionally make a
referral to the youth court prosecutor.
Upon receiving a report that a child
has been sexually abused, or burned, tortured, mutilated
or otherwise physically abused in such a manner as to
cause serious bodily harm, or upon receiving any report
of abuse that would be a felony under state or federal
law, the Department of Human Services shall immediately
notify the law enforcement agency in whose jurisdiction
the abuse occurred and shall notify the appropriate prosecutor
within forty-eight (48) hours, and the Department of Human
Services shall have the duty to provide the law enforcement
agency all the names and facts known at the time of the
report; this duty shall be of a continuing nature. The
law enforcement agency and the Department of Human Services
shall investigate the reported abuse immediately and shall
file a preliminary report with the appropriate prosecutor's
office within twenty-four (24) hours and shall make additional
reports as new or additional information or evidence becomes
available. The Department of Human Services shall advise
the clerk of the youth court and the youth court prosecutor
of all cases of abuse reported to the department within
seventy-two (72) hours and shall update such report as
information becomes available.
(2) Any report to the Department of Human
Services shall contain the names and addresses of the
child and his parents or other persons responsible for
his care, if known, the child's age, the nature and extent
of the child's injuries, including any evidence of previous
injuries and any other information that might be helpful
in establishing the cause of the injury and the identity
of the perpetrator.
(3) The Department of Human Services
shall maintain a statewide incoming wide-area telephone
service or similar service for the purpose of receiving
reports of suspected cases of child abuse; provided that
any attorney, physician, dentist, intern, resident, nurse,
psychologist, social worker, family protection worker,
family protection specialist, child caregiver, minister,
law enforcement officer or public or private school employee
who is required to report under subsection (1) of this
section shall report in the manner required in subsection
(1).
(4) Reports of abuse and neglect made
under this chapter and the identity of the reporter are
confidential except when the court in which the investigation
report is filed, in its discretion, determines the testimony
of the person reporting to be material to a judicial proceeding
or when the identity of the reporter is released to law
enforcement agencies and the appropriate prosecutor pursuant
to subsection (1). Reports made under this section to
any law enforcement agency or prosecutorial officer are
for the purpose of criminal investigation and prosecution
only and no information from these reports may be released
to the public except as provided by Section 43-21-261.
Disclosure of any information by the prosecutor shall
be according to the Mississippi Uniform Rules of Circuit
and County Court Procedure. The identity of the reporting
party shall not be disclosed to anyone other than law
enforcement officers or prosecutors without an order from
the appropriate youth court. Any person disclosing any
reports made under this section in a manner not expressly
provided for in this section or Section 43-21-261, shall
be guilty of a misdemeanor and subject to the penalties
prescribed by Section 43-21-267.
(5) All final dispositions of law enforcement
investigations described in subsection (1) of this section
shall be determined only by the appropriate prosecutor
or court. All final dispositions of investigations by
the Department of Human Services as described in subsection
(1) of this section shall be determined only by the youth
court. Reports made under subsection (1) of this section
by the Department of Human Services to the law enforcement
agency and to the district attorney's office shall include
the following, if known to the department:
(a) The name and address of the child;
(b) The names and addresses of the parents;
(c) The name and address of the suspected
perpetrator;
(d) The names and addresses of all witnesses,
including the reporting party if a material witness to
the abuse;
(e) A brief statement of the facts indicating
that the child has been abused and any other information
from the agency files or known to the family protection
worker or family protection specialist making the investigation,
including medical records or other records, which may
assist law enforcement or the district attorney in investigating
and/or prosecuting the case; and
(f) What, if any, action is being taken
by the Department of Human Services.
(6) In any investigation of a report
made under this chapter of the abuse or neglect of a child
as defined in Section 43-21-105(m), the Department of
Human Services may request the appropriate law enforcement
officer with jurisdiction to accompany the department
in its investigation, and in such cases the law enforcement
officer shall comply with such request.
(7) Anyone who willfully violates any
provision of this section shall be, upon being found guilty,
punished by a fine not to exceed Five Thousand Dollars
($5,000.00), or by imprisonment in jail not to exceed
one (1) year, or both.
(8) If a report is made directly to
the Department of Human Services that a child has been
abused or neglected in an out-of-home setting, a referral
shall be made immediately to the law enforcement agency
in whose jurisdiction the abuse occurred and the department
shall notify the district attorney's office within forty-eight
(48) hours of such report. The Department of Human Services
shall investigate the out-of-home setting report of abuse
or neglect to determine whether the child who is the subject
of the report, or other children in the same environment,
comes within the jurisdiction of the youth court and shall
report to the youth court the department's findings and
recommendation as to whether the child who is the subject
of the report or other children in the same environment
require the protection of the youth court. The law enforcement
agency shall investigate the reported abuse immediately
and shall file a preliminary report with the district
attorney's office within forty-eight (48) hours and shall
make additional reports as new information or evidence
becomes available. If the out-of-home setting is a licensed
facility, an additional referral shall be made by the
Department of Human Services to the licensing agency.
The licensing agency shall investigate the report and
shall provide the Department of Human Services, the law
enforcement agency and the district attorney's office
with their written findings from such investigation as
well as that licensing agency's recommendations and actions
taken.