Another adopted Russian boy beaten to death in US
Published: 04 March, 2010, 05:04
Edited: 07 September, 2010, 22:19
TAGS: Children, Crime, Scandal, Russia, Human rights, Prime Time Russia, USA
Seven-year-old Ivan Skorobogatov, adopted by an American family from Russia's Chelyabinsk region, was allegedly killed by his adoptive parents, TASS news agency reports.
Ivan was adopted in 2003 together with his twin sister Dasha (Elizabeth) by Michael J. Craver, 45, and Nanette L. Craver, 54, and moved to Carroll Township in Pennsylvania.
In the US he was given a new name, Nathaniel Michael Craver.
![]() Michael Craver and Nanette Craver |
Four days later, the family insisted that Nathaniel be taken off life support. One more day he struggled for life on his own, but died on August 25.
An autopsy revealed that the boy's death was caused by a number of traumatic brain injuries. He had over 80 external injuries, 20 of which were to the head.
An investigation was launched. The Cravers insisted the boy had had a predisposition to destructiveness and self-mutilation.
It took half a year to collect evidence, and now the Craver couple has been arrested. They are accused of first-degree murder.
Preliminary hearings are set for March 31.
Police say the twin sister of the murdered Nathaniel Michael Craver is safe and being cared for.
In response to his death a Russian senator has forwarded a proposal to introduce a temporary moratorium on American parents adopting Russian orphans, information agency RIA-Novosti reported.
Valentina Petrenko, the Head of the Parliament’s Committee on Social Policies, said that the situation should be discussed with the US Department of State, but for the time being, no Russian children should be adopted by American couples.
Petrenko stressed that the life of a child is priceless and the damage can never be undone even if the guilty parties are punished.
Adoption agencies, however, are worried that this issue could become a political football.
“Every child has a right to a family, so a potential moratorium on US adoption may be ''counterproductive',” Aleksandra Panasova, from Spanish adoption agency AAIM, told RT. “Fifteen cases of children dying abroad have been registered over the last 15 years, which is far less than the number of orphans dying in Russia.”
Meanwhile Russia’s Investigative Committee has launched its own criminal investigation into the boy’s death. The committee’s spokesman Vladimir Markin also pointed out that it was not the first time when a Russian child adopted by an American couple dies, referring to the scandalous case of Dmitry Yakovlev.
Due diligence on its way
The Investigative Committee of Russia's Prosecutor General Office has announced plans to examine the legality of the adoption of Nathaniel Craver (Ivan Skorobogatov) and his sister by an American family.
As RIA Novosti news agency reports, the procedures leading to adoption are going to be verified, specifically whether an accredited adoption agency was involved in the case or the adoption was performed independently.
It was also noted that American officials have not reported the incident to their Russian counterparts within the legally required period. Any information concerning tragic events involving adopted children, family change or improper performance of parental authority in respect to adopted children must be handed over to the Russian side within five days time.
The US State Department is working closely with the Pennsylvania officials investigating the case and has already arranged a meeting with Russian diplomats to discuss the issue more closely.
Ivan, who was 7 years old, became the 15th Russian child since 1996 to die in the US after being adopted.
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04.03.2010, 07:21
62 comments
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If it was true that he kept hitting himself on the stove or falling down stairs,then after awhile when they KNEW this they should have altered the house so he couldn't continue doing it.They were responsible,as he was their child.
I find this article deeply saddening. I hope that policies and procedures will eventually come into place that further protect innocent children that are being adopted. It's also disappointing to see an anti-USA and anti-Russia campaign when the bottom line is a little ones life was lost. Every individual, community and country has room for improvement. We seem to forget that we are all human beings capable of doing the right thing as well as the wrong thing. Hopefully, in this little boys honor, effective policies will be placed after adoption, strict screenings for mental health will be placed (not just for young children but also the parents adopting) and we can move forward in the future with healthy adoption between both countries.













Neglect should carry the same penalty as abuse...whether they abused him or let him abuse himself,you are responsible as a parent until he's 18.