Anonymous ID: 7b3bfa May 30, 2022, 7:54 p.m. No.16371859   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Russia Blacklist

943, Natalie Fabian Evans

 

LUKE EVANS, (birth name unknown) age 1.5, Lowell, Indiana. Died November 30, 2001 of massive head injuries, shaken baby syndrome, and poor nutrition.

 

On June 30, 2006 Fabian Evans was found not guilty of murder, battery and neglect of a dependent …

 

http://poundpuplegacy.org/node/25117

Anonymous ID: 7b3bfa May 30, 2022, 8:37 p.m. No.16372080   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2086

Russia Blacklist

Adopted Russian Kids

 

I didn't go back and look through all of these, but I did notice a strange coincidence while going through these:

 

LOGAN HIGGINBOTHAM , born Ana Puchtnaya, age 3, Shelburne, Vermont. Died November 25, 1998 of massive head injuries. Adoptive mother Laura Higginbotham, 33, claimed Logan fell and hit her head on the floor of an upstairs bedroom.

Adoptive mother Laura Higginbotham was 33 years old.

 

LUKE EVANS, born Sergei Nakonechniy, age 1.5, Lowell, Indiana. Died November 30, 2001 of massive head injuries, shaken baby syndrome, and poor nutrition.

Adoptive mother Natalie Fabian Evans, was 33 years old.

 

NINA HILT, born Viktoria Bazhenova, age 2.5, Wake Forest, North Carolina. Died July 2, 2005 on visit to Manassas, Virginia from blows to the abdominal area.

Adoptive mother, Peggy Sue Hilt, was 33 years old.

 

NICOLI (KOLYA) EMELYANTSEV, (birth name unknown) age 14 months, Tooele, Utah. Died March 7, 2008 from a "significant skull fracture" caused by blunt force trauma.

Adoptive mother, Kimberly Emelyantsev was 33 years old.

 

https://nobodyisforgotten.blogspot.com/2008/06/cases-forever-family-forever-dead.html

 

And then I saw this article from 2013 in the Moscow Times:

 

Only 'One of 33 Orphans' Denied U.S. Adoption Finds Russian Home

 

Out of the 33 St. Petersburg orphans who were set to be given new homes by U.S. families last year before their moves were blocked by Russian legislation, only one has been legally adopted by Russian parents, a news report said.

 

The 33 children already had potential American families, but were prevented from going to the U.S. when a ban on the adoption of Russian children by Americans came into effect on Jan. 1.