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Friends create memorial fund for dead toddler

Donations can be made at Central Bank in Sioux City

By Nicole Paseka, Journal staff writer | Posted: Thursday, September 28, 2006
story_photo

Nathaniel Saunsoci-Mitchell plays happily at the home of Robert and Susan Goodburn, who he lived with last winter. Nathaniel was living with a different foster family when he suffered severe injuries that led to his death. (Submitted photo)

Community members continued to rally around the Saunsoci family Wednesday following the death of 20-month-old Nathaniel Saunsoci-Mitchell.

A family friend from Sioux City helped create a memorial fund in Nathaniel's honor to help pay for his funeral expenses and assist the family financially.

"Not only do they not have food, they don't have a headstone or anything," Will Meier said. "They wouldn't have asked if I wouldn't have prompted them."

Nathaniel, son of Jackie Saunsoci, 18, and Nathan Mitchell, died Sunday at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha after severe head injuries. He was living with a South Sioux City foster family when his injuries occurred.

Members of the Saunsoci family said Nathaniel also suffered two breaks in his collar bone, a broken leg and a dog-bite to his nose.

Meier said when he first asked the Saunsoci family if there was anything he could bring them, they first responded "apples," then "grapes." They also mentioned they did not have a headstone for Nathaniel.

"It's a different kind of poverty. Unless you've been down there, it's difficult to understand," Meier said.

Donations to the family of Nathaniel Saunsoci-Mitchell can be made in person or by mail to Central Bank in Sioux City, 522 Fourth St., P.O. Box 776, 51101. Amy Chace, vice president and branch manager of Central Bank, is overseeing the donations. The bank can be contacted at 712-293-2265.

While friends assisted the family financially, Dakota County officials continued their investigation into the child's death.

"Children are the most vulnerable people in our society, and it's important for everybody to know that this sort of thing is treat appropriately," Dakota County Attorney Ed Matney said on Wednesday.

Matney said it is "difficult to say" how long the investigation could take.

"These sorts of things take a long time to get all the materials in. We want to make sure we have everything in place," he said. "The autopsy report can take anywhere from a week up to a month to get the full report in."

After Matney receives information from the investigators and evaluates the autopsy report, he will then decide if criminal charges will be filed. He declined to speculate on how long that will take.

No criminal charges have been filed against Nathaniel's most recent foster parents at this time.

Matney said he plans to interact with members of the Saunsoci family during the investigation.

"I think that the family members of this child ... they need time to get through the process and to grieve. I wish them well through that process. It's obviously an extremely difficult process."

Matney added that the investigation has been under way since Friday, when Nathaniel was first seen at the Mercy Medical Center emergency room in Sioux City.

Nathaniel's burial will be at 10 a.m. today at the Omaha Indian Cemetery in Macy, Neb. A traditional dinner will follow at the Alfred Gilpin Building in Macy.

Previous foster parents of Nathaniel's, not the ones he was living with most recently, were shocked to learn of his death.

"He was just a sweet little boy, and I wished they would have left him here," said Susan Goodburn. She and her husband, Robert Goodburn, cared for Nathaniel from December 2005 to early March 2006. Nathaniel was not in the Goodburns' home when he received the injuries that ended his life.

Goodburn remembered Nathaniel as a wonderful child who suffered from severe asthma.

"He was wheezing all the time," she said. "He could be fine one minute and not the next. You really had to stay on top of it."

Goodburn was upset to learn Nathaniel was in a foster home with five other children because he required extra care for his severe asthma.

Meier, the family friend, also mentioned Nathaniel's battles with asthma. He said the asthma made it more difficult for young Jackie Saunsoci to care for her infant son.

"She was a good mother, and the health issues were so severe," Meier said.

"(Nathaniel) just had it brutal ... battling his health condition, then this."

Journal staff writer Nicole Paseka can be reached at 712-293-4276 or nicolepaseka@siouxcityjournal.com.

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Story Comments

ts wrote on Apr 28, 2009 12:17 PM:

" this comment goes out to sara, first of all you dont know squat about our fmily and all you know is what you read in the news papers, well take all that info and shove it. i hope the creator has pity on you on your judgement day. GET YOUR FACTS. "

Liz wrote on Dec 26, 2007 10:07 PM:

" First of all condolences to the Sunsoci family and I feel for the baby. The fact that the mother could not care for the baby and he was placed into care is one thing however why would a system that is so quick to take away a child put a child into a place that would harm him in anyway. It does not matter the color of your skin. There is a thing called justice and investigation needs to be done and I do hope that these people that let this boy be harmed do not have kids of there own and shouldn't be able to take kids in their home ever again!... "

ms wrote on Dec 20, 2007 6:38 PM:

" This child needed a stable family, capable of supervising him, providing him with his necessities, love and attention. Jacki was not able to do some of these things for him, therefore he was taken away from her. Whether he was given to a family that could do what she could not has not been proven. What is true is that this should not have happened to him - Native American or not. It's so sad so see the whites and nonwhites in here arguing about how "they" are not racist or no one else has had to deal with injustice. Give it a break. "

ms wrote on Dec 20, 2007 6:32 PM:

" First, it is not always about being uneducated or unwed. That has been seen time and time again ... the truth of the matter is that you cannot take care of someone else without being able to take care of yourself as Sara said. That is the only thing I agree with with her comments. And because I don't agree with most of what she is saying doesn't mean it's supposed to hurt her. I could care less about what she or anyone else thinks of what I have to say. There might have been some injustice with Nathaniel as far as the legal system. If Mr. Matney has not been given the full reports or does not have every single fact ... why do you expect him to know how to provide justice. The public has this preconceived notion that police reports make their way to the prosecuting attorney's office the very same day they are taken. That's not how it happens. AND some of the people involved with this situation have had run-ins continuously in Dakota County and should KNOW that it does not work like that. "

lv wrote on Oct 11, 2007 9:11 AM:

" this whole thing could have been an accident, the dont even know whats going on or how it happened. they just point there finger right at the people he lived with. they dont if the foster parents had done it. it could have been another person and is blaming the foster parents.also the mother of this baby boy should have been more responsible and shouldnt have gotten pregnate. the mother is very young and the boy probly didnt even know her vary well. the baby is in a better place know where he dont have to suffer. "

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