Saturday, June 23, 2007

Candace Clark: Twists in the Portage Torture Case

Candace Clark, interviewed from her jail cell on Friday, says that her boyfriend Michael Sisk was a dictator and the abused 11-year-old boy deserves to be jailed for beating his mother.
Portage -- One of the four people charged with torturing an 11-year-old boy and killing his mother said in a jailhouse interview Friday night that her boyfriend and co-defendant was virtually a dictator in the Portage home they shared, and she claimed the boy should be behind bars, too.

Her interview came hours after the secretary of the Florida Department of Children and Families said it was "unconscionable" that child welfare workers in his state had allowed four months to lapse before alerting police that Candace Clark had taken her 2-year-old girl from a foster mother - setting in motion the grim chain of events that led to the Portage nightmare.

Clark claimed the boy deserved to be in juvenile detention because he hit and bit her, and beat his mother, 36-year-old Tammie Garlin, whose body was found buried behind a Portage home last week. In the 20-minute interview at the Columbia County Jail, the 23-year-old Clark also denied killing Garlin, saying several times: "I am not a monster."

"The truth is I didn't kill (Garlin) and I didn't bury her in the yard," Clark said.

However, at another point, referring to the heinous crimes she and the other three defendants are charged with, Clark said: "No one's innocent in this."

If Clark's not a monster, the truth is she's a monstrous mother.
She described her boyfriend and co-defendant, 25-year-old Michael Sisk, as the ringleader of the Portage rental home they shared with Clark's three children; 20-year-old co-defendant Michaela Clerc; Garlin; Garlin's 11-year-old son; and Garlin's 15-year-old daughter, Felicia Garlin, who is also charged with her mother's murder and her brother's abuse.

Clark said she called Portage police on several occasions to report disturbances but never reported crimes committed against herself.

"If I did, I would die, and so would my kids," she said.

Didn't police follow up?

What sort of disturbances did Clark report?

Are we to believe that Clark alerted police to problems and they didn't find anything out of order?

That's odd.

The interview and the Florida press conference are the latest elements in a twisted and convoluted tale of shifting romances, stolen identities, fraud, and ultimately pathological violence.

...Authorities discovered Tammie Garlin's body buried in the backyard of the home June 15. A preliminary autopsy showed she was strangled, according to the Columbia County medical examiner.

Police found her 11-year-old son in a closet. According to court records, the boy reported that he had been bound, placed in a bathtub and scalded with water. Burns had mummified his hands and scarred his feet to the point where he could not walk.

His own mother had participated in the abuse, which included whippings, according to the court records.

This is absolutely sick.
...Whether the mother's life would have been saved - or the boy's body spared mistreatment - with more diligent action by Florida child protection workers is pure speculation, but the Florida human services director, Bob Butterworth, said the grim chain of events gleaned to date angered him.

"I am terribly unhappy," Butterworth said.

Butterworth is "unhappy"?

I think Andrew Garlin probably is a little more unhappy than Butterworth.

Butterworth said that a preliminary report on what went wrong will be issued early next week, and that necessary changes in policies and procedures will be made.

Butterworth's department has joined a Florida newspaper in seeking to make public the records of Courtney Clark's time in the child protective system.

What is known from available records and news accounts is that Courtney Clark was placed, by judge's order, in the care of Cynthia Martell in Sorrento Fla., in July 2006.

Martell's daughter is Michaela Clerc, who began a lesbian affair with Tammie Garlin in 2000, when Clerc was 13. Martell approved of the relationship, according to reports in the Portage Daily Register.

Martell told the paper that the romance foundered however, sometime in 2006, and Clerc then met Candace Clark in an Internet chat room. They started a relationship that ultimately brought all three women - Garlin, Clerc and Clark - to share a home in Sanford, Fla.

The group included Garlin's two children - Felicia and the 11-year-old boy - and Clark's two daughters, both under 2 years old. Adding to the mix, Clark was pregnant.

While living with Clerc and Garlin, Candace Clark maintained a relationship with her boyfriend from Kentucky, Sisk, with a penchant for fraud and identity theft, according to court records. Both Clark and Sisk had spent time in Colorado jails.

Last fall, Sisk walked away from a jail in Mesa County, Colo., where he was serving time with work release privileges. At the same time, Clark retrieved 2-year-old Courtney from Martell. The girl had been taken from Clark while Clark was in custody.

In the jail interview Friday, Clark claimed Clerc's parents had actually dropped off her daughter, Courtney, with her because they couldn't afford to care for her anymore.

Authorities have tracked the path of the group - Clerc, Clark, Sisk, Garlin and the children - to Maine, and then to Wisconsin in January. They stayed in motels in Janesville, Lake Delton and Wisconsin Dells before renting the home in Portage.

Tracing financial information led authorities to Sisk, who had rented the house in Portage under a false name.

Jim Vachon, a detective in the Lake County (Florida) Sheriff's Department, and Melissa Remy, an analyst in the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, received certificates of merit for their work in leading Portage police to the house and the children last week.

"We do know all the children are safe," Butterworth said. "If it had not been for the work of these two people, I wonder what would have happened. There's no doubt what would have happened to the 11-year-old."

Jerry Springer must be foaming at the mouth over this story.

It's shockingly sordid.

The depravity of some human beings can be truly astounding.

...Clark said she was in solitary confinement at the jail and that none of her family had visited her. She is the only one of the four people charged to grant interviews.

Looking for her 15 minutes of fame perhaps?

Is she hoping for Oprah to swoop in?


Why would Clark's lawyer allow her to do interviews?

Is he or she looking to cash in on this tale of perversion, abuse, and murder?

Ruthless people.

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