03/19/2024
This is Corey and Diana Sullivan.
The Georgia state government stole Corey and Diana’s children, because their daughter has multiple diagnosed medical conditions, and the government doesn’t want to acknowledge it. Corey was also arrested and faces decades in prison for a crime he did not commit.
The Sullivan family has been fractured since.
Corey and Diana met in middle school, married at 21, and are parents to three beautiful children: seven-month-old twins Amelia and Christian, and four-year-old Arabella.
Their children were all born by in vitro fertilization (IVF).
Corey and Diana struggled with infertility issues for fourteen years, spending most of their life’s savings on IVF procedures before getting pregnant with Arabella.
When Arabella was two years old, the Sullivans wanted nothing more than to give their daughter a brother or sister. Corey and Diana once again used IVF. When Diana found out she was pregnant with twins, she and Corey were elated. Arabella would have a little brother and sister.
Amelia and Christian had separate placentas, and during pregnancy, Diana experienced severe complications with Amelia. Christian was thriving and growing accordingly; however, Amelia was not. She had high protein levels and was not gaining weight like Christian. During the third trimester, Diana had lower-than-average protein levels in her urine, and doctors feared Amelia was not getting enough oxygen and nutrients due to restricted blood flow to the placenta. Doctors told Diana that if she delivered naturally, it would likely crush every bone in Amelia’s tiny body.
The twins were delivered by emergency C-section. At the time of her birth, Amelia weighed just 3 pounds (under 1% on the natural growth scale) and spent 42 days in the NICU. Her diagnosed health concerns are Intrauterine Growth Retardation, Anemia, Low Platelets, Limited Bone Mineral Deposition, Delayed Bone Development, Hyperchloremic Acidosis, Generalized Demineralization of the Spine, and Softness of the Bones. These conditions were diagnosed in utero and post-birth.
Recently, Diana was diagnosed with Ehlers Danlos Syndrome (EDS)—a genetic disorder that explains the complications she experienced with Amelia.
Seven weeks after being discharged from the NICU, and still very underweight, Amelia's right leg began to swell (later determined to be a broken femur). If she did eat, she would immediately throw up.
Unable to keep her formula and life-sustaining vitamins down, Corey and Diana rushed her to Southeast Georgia Health System.
There, doctors noticed she had several rib fractures in various stages of healing (these fractures were later determined by an independent doctor to have likely occurred in utero and are possibly the result of Amelia having EDS herself).
The Sullivans were referred to Wolfson’s Children Hospital in Jacksonville, FL.
If you follow me and the other stories of government abuse we've uncovered, this will start to sound very familiar:
Dr. Barbara Knox, a Child Abuse Physician (CAP), ignored Amelia's medical history and decided that she had been abused. Because the Sullivans are Georgia residents, the Georgia Department of Family and Children Services (DFCS) was notified, and local law enforcement requested the assistance of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI).
In December 2023, despite conclusive, independent medical opinions and findings to the contrary, Corey was arrested by GBI Special Agent Thomas Kimelblatt and charged with 1st Degree Cruelty to Children and Aggravated Battery against Amelia.
Agent Kimelblatt, without conducting any real investigation, relied solely on the opinion of Dr. Knox when he applied for and received the arrest warrants.
Had he actually investigated, he would've soon discovered Amelia's long medical history explaining her injuries.
Corey has yet to be indicted by a grand jury, for a very obvious reason: the state knows all of the evidence points to the Corey's innocence, and the government's guilt.
If these circumstances sound familiar, they should. The Sullivan case is eerily similar to that of Hernandez and Timms families.
The Hernandez and Timms children also have diagnosed medical conditions. Yet, DFCS, with the assistance of a CAP, accused the parents of abuse, stole their children and requested the termination of their parental rights, while local law enforcement sought felony prosecution.
Currently, DFCS, who also has clearly not actually investigated this case either, relies on the opinion of Dr. Knox and wants the termination of the Sullivans’ parental rights.
Dr. Knox, the former head of the Child Protection Program in Madison, Wisconsin, and Alaska Cares, a state-supported clinic operated by Providence Alaska Medical Center, has a questionable background. She has falsely accused parents of child abuse via a “pattern of misdiagnoses,” fostered hostile work environments, and pressured colleagues to find abuse where none existed.
Every staff member at Alaska Cares who worked for or with Dr. Knox resigned because of her unprofessional conduct. Alaska Cares investigated Dr. Knox and “determined that some of her child abuse diagnoses failed to meet the standard of care.” Dr. Knox subsequently resigned from both positions under internal investigation.
Despite this documented history of abuse of her position, Dr. Knox was hired by Wolfson’s.
The Sullivan family has suffered enough at the hands of an out-of-control governmental system. Corey and Diana’s children need to be with their loving parents, and Corey needs to be free from the threat of felony prosecution.
We’re going to get this family reunited and put this nightmare behind them. Here's how you can help:
1. In the comments, I've put a link to a list of authorities to contact, a template to email or call them, and more ways to help. Go to that link and tell them to respect this family and stop tearing them apart.
2. Share this post far and wide, and tag your family, your loved ones, your favorite influencers, and everyone else you can think of in the comments to spread the word and get as many people as possible involved in reuniting the Sullivan family.
With your help, we will reunite the Sullivan family like we’ve helped so many others.