Tag Archives: Maxim Kuzmin

Dead Russian adoptee bruised all over, autopsy shows

A 3-year-old adopted by a West Texas couple had more than 30 bruises and other marks on his body as well as signs that he was routinely injured by accident, according to an autopsy report released Tuesday.

Russian authorities have blamed Max Alan Shatto‘s death on abusive treatment by his adoptive parents, despite West Texas authorities’ insistence that the boy’s death was an accident. An Ector County grand jury has declined to indict the parents, Alan and Laura Shatto, who also adopted Max’s half brother, Kristopher.

The autopsy report released to the Odessa American suggests that the Shattos were struggling to care for Max due to his behavioral problems and his tendency to hurt himself. The Shattos have declined to comment publicly about the boy’s death.

The boy, born Maxim Kuzmin, died Jan. 21 after Laura Shatto found him unresponsive outside their home in Gardendale, Texas.

A medical examiner’s investigator wrote in the report that she found abrasions, scrapes and bruises from head to toe on Max’s body. Alan Shatto told authorities that the boy hit his head against items in the home and had serious behavioral problems.

He said a doctor had prescribed the anti-psychotic drug Risperidone, but the couple stopped giving Max the drug after about four days after reading about the side effects and because it appeared the boy was having trouble swallowing. Laura Shatto reported that three days before his death, Max nearly choked on a cooked carrot.

She said he tended to bang his head and claw himself, which she tried to prevent by cutting his nails short and having him wear gloves at night.

Russian authorities and state media have used the boy’s death to fan anger over the fate of Russian children adopted by Americans. Russia has used the case to justify its controversial decision in December to ban U.S. adoptions. Americans have adopted an estimated 60,000 Russian children over the last two decades, at least 20 of whom have died.

The lack of charges against the Shatto family “raises serious questions,” Konstantin Dolgov, a Foreign Ministry official, told a state-controlled television channel last week. “It turns out that the child died and his adoptive parents are in no way guilty of this. Moreover, they are trying to persuade us that the boy’s lethal injuries were inflicted by himself.”

Bobby Bland, the Ector County district attorney, has said four pathologists reviewed an autopsy report and ruled Max’s death to be accidental.

“The injuries on the child were not consistent with abuse,” Bland said this month. “They were, instead, consistent with the previously diagnosed behavioral disorder.”

He said Max likely suffered the fatal injuries during 10 minutes when he was playing outside and Laura Shatto was in the bathroom.

Laura Shatto told authorities that on the day of his death, Max “began throwing a fit” when his parents tried to take him to the bathroom in the morning, according to the report. He eventually went back to bed and wasn’t woken up until 3 p.m., Laura Shatto told authorities.

He and his half brother watched TV for …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Teen adopted by American couple returns to Russia claiming adoptive parents treated him badly

A teenager adopted by an American couple has returned to Russia after five years claiming that his adoptive family treated him badly and that he lived on the streets of Philadelphia and stole just to survive, according to Russian state media reports.

The allegations by Alexander Abnosov, now 18, will likely fuel outrage here over the fate of Russian children adopted by Americans. It’s an anger that the Kremlin has carefully stoked to justify its controversial ban on U.S. adoptions.

Russia‘s Channel 1 and Rossiya television — which are both state controlled — reported Tuesday that Abnosov returned from a Philadelphia suburb to the Volga river city of Cheboksary, where his 72-year-old grandmother lives.

Russian media identified the teen as Alexander Abnosov, but also show him displaying a U.S. passport that gives his name as Joshua Alexander Salotti.

Abnosov, who spoke in a soft voice and appeared somewhat restrained, complained to Rossiya that his adoptive mother was “nagging at small things.”

“She would make any small problem big,” he said on Channel 1. He also told Channel 1 that he fled home because of the conflicts with his adoptive mother, staying on the streets for about three months and stealing.

“I was stealing stuff and sold them to get some food,” he said with a shy smile.

According to the daily Komsomolskaya Pravda, Abnosov says that his parents visited him while he stayed in a shelter in Philadelphia, but that they didn’t ask him to come home as he’d expected. Channel 1 said his adoptive father gave him $500 to buy a ticket to Russia, though it wasn’t clear when he arrived here.

The newspaper said it reached Abnosov’s adoptive mother, who denied driving him away. She was quoted as saying he was asked to come home, but said he wanted to return to Russia where he has relatives to care for.

The teen’s adoptive parents — Steve and Jackie Salotti — could not immediately be reached Tuesday. A woman who identified herself as a relative at the couple’s home in Collegeville, Pennsylvania, said the parents weren’t there and did not want to discuss the case.

Abnosov’s story was top news on Russian state television, which tried to cast it as an example of the alleged misfortunes that befall Russian children adopted by U.S. parents.

The Russian government in December banned all American adoptions of Russian children in retaliation for a new U.S. law targeting alleged Russian human-rights violators.

Some 60,000 children have been adopted by Americans in the past two decades, and many Russians disagree with the ban, seeing it as a politically driven move depriving children of a chance to have a family.

To help justify it, the ban has been accompanied by extensive state media coverage of what is described as numerous cases of parental cruelty to adopted Russian children in the United States. The Kremlin also has accused U.S. authorities of turning a blind eye to such cases.

Most recently, Russian officials pointed to the Jan. 21 death of 3-year-old Max Shatto, born Maxim Kuzmin, whose mother found him unresponsive …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Russians investigating adoptee's death in Texas

Authorities in Russia say they want to know how a toddler adopted by an American family died in West Texas.

Russia‘s Investigative Committee said Monday that it had opened an investigation into the Jan. 21 death of 3-year-old Maxim Kuzmin. The committee says it has information the boy was mistreated.

Texas Child Protective Services confirmed Monday that Ector County Sheriff’s Department is investigating the death of 3-year-old named Max Shatto.

Sheriff’s Department spokesman Sgt. Gary Duesler says an autopsy is pending on a 3-year-old boy who was adopted from Russia. CPS spokesman Patrick Crimmins said the agency was investigating allegations of physical abuse and neglect. No arrests have been made.

Russian authorities recently banned American adoptions. They say the boy’s case is another example of “inhuman treatment” by American parents.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News