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SMITHFIELD -- At 49, Ron Ford Sr. never thought he'd be pleading to rear another batch of youngsters.
But he and his wife, Debbie, want back two battered grandchildren the Ford family lost to strangers years ago. They regret it took the death of the children's younger brother, 4-year-old Sean Paddock, to spur this fight.
Sean suffocated Feb. 26 after being bound tightly in blankets to keep him from roaming at his adoptive parents' farmhouse at night, investigators have said. Bruises covered the older two, as did marks from whippings with a plastic plumbing pipe.
Here's how Sean and his siblings ended up living with Johnny and Lynn Paddock.
SEPTEMBER 2001: Sean is born; Wake County Human Services is involved with the infant's family after investigating reports that Sean's father, Dwayne Ford, was abusively disciplining his stepson.
DECEMBER 2002: Sean's day care teacher called social workers when the infant arrived shivering, his lips blue from the cold. Social workers found no heat in the home; Sean's uncle Ron Ford Jr. takes in the children but has to give them up six months later when finances become too strained.
MARCH 2003: Sean's father is charged with abusing the boy's siblings. (Dwayne Ford later pleads guilty. He is put on probation and ordered to stay away from the children.)
JUNE 2003: Sean and his siblings move into a Wake County foster home.
SEPTEMBER 2004: After several attempts to reunite the children with their birth mother, social workers give up, and they are legally severed from her care. The children are available for adoption.
OCTOBER 2004: Children's Home Society lines up Johnny and Lynn Paddock, a Johnston County couple who have adopted three other foster children through the private agency, to adopt the Ford children.
JANUARY 2005: Sean and his siblings first visit the Paddocks' farm outside Smithfield. Sean returns from the weekend visit with a bruise on his backside. Lynn Paddock said he fell off a bunk bed. He and his siblings said Paddock whipped him for playing with the family dog.
FEBRUARY 2005: Social workers conclude that Sean tumbled from the bunk bed and the Ford children resume their visits to the Paddock farm.
JULY 2005: The adoption is completed.
FEBRUARY 2006: Sean suffocates after being tightly bundled in blankets. Investigators determine Lynn Paddock has been spanking the children with plastic plumbing supply line. Lynn Paddock is charged with first-degree murder and child abuse. She remains jailed in Johnston County.
Lynn Paddock, the children's adoptive mother, is charged with first-degree murder in the boy's death and felony child abuse in the others' injuries.
Since Sean's death, the Fords have hired a lawyer to help them win custody of Sean's 7-year-old sister and 9-year-old brother, who live with new families in Johnston County foster homes. They've asked to intervene in the custody case that involves the Paddocks and Johnston County Social Services, which will determine with whom the children will live permanently. They also want Sean's adoption file opened.
Ford family blood
So far, the Fords have been rebuffed at every turn. As far as the legal system is concerned, they are the strangers -- their kinship erased the moment the children were adopted outside the family.
Right now, the Fords are among many couples vying to raise Sean's siblings. Johnston County Social Services -- the agency that, with a judge, will decide the children's fate -- isn't obliged to give them special consideration. State law prohibits Earl Marett, the agency's director, from discussing the case, but he said the agency is concerned only with finding the best home for the children.
The Fords insist that the best home is theirs.
"No matter what has happened to those kids, they still have Ford blood running through them," Debbie Ford said. "They were born into this family, and that's where they belong."
Sean's sister and brother are not being named to protect their identity because of the abuse that officials say they've suffered.
Dwayne Ford, Ron Ford Sr.'s son, was Sean's father; social workers had removed the children from their biological parents after Sean came to day care with blue lips from living in a house without heat. Their uncle, Ron Ford Jr., took them in but had to return them to Wake County social workers after going broke caring for them and three children of his own. Social workers would not split the siblings between their uncle and grandparents, Ron Ford Sr. said.
The Paddocks adopted Sean and his siblings last summer, seven months after Sean returned from a preliminary visit to their home with a bruised backside.
Ron and Debbie Fords' world hasn't been the same since Feb. 26. They had settled into a couch in their Smithfield home that Sunday night to watch the news. A newscaster reported that a little boy named Sean had been killed in his adoptive home not 10 miles from theirs. Ron swallowed hard; they both knew it must be "their Seanie."
Since then, they've not slept through the night -- haunted by images of Sean and his siblings. Ron Ford, who runs Capitol Quick Lube in Raleigh, has shed 20 pounds.
They watch and rewatch home movies of Sean and their other grandchildren unwrapping Care Bears and Pokemon toys on Christmas Day 2003. It was the last time they saw the trio. In the videos, Sean's a wobbly toddler, scurrying around the Christmas tree trying to open his cousins' gifts. His sister is a shy grade-schooler, grinning into the camera as she clutches her new doll. The oldest boy is snaggle-toothed and boisterous, yelling for his aunt to film his loot.
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