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    Md. mom who killed son agonized over school costs

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Ben Barnhard finally had reason to be optimistic this summer: The 13-year-old shed more than 100 pounds at a rigorous weight-loss academy, a proud achievement for a boy who had endured classmates' taunts about his obesity and who had sought solace in the quiet of his bedroom, with his pet black cat and the intricate origami designs he created.

    But one month before school was to start for the special-needs teen, his mother, psychiatrist Margaret Jensvold, shot him in the head, then killed herself. Officers found their bodies on Aug. 2 in the bedrooms of their home in Kensington, Md., an upper-middle class Washington suburb. They also found a note.

    "School — can't deal with school system," the letter began, Jensvold's sister, Susan Slaughter, told The Associated Press.

    And later: "Debt is bleeding me. Strangled by debt."

    Although family members said they were stunned by the killings, they also said Jensvold had become increasingly strained by financial pressure and by anguished fights with the county public school system over the special-needs education of her son, who had an autism spectrum disorder. They said the school district — apparently believing it could adequately educate Ben — had refused to cover tuition costs for the boy to attend a private school for special-needs students. Jensvold didn't have the money herself and didn't want to return her son to public school, where relatives said she felt harshly judged and marginalized and where Ben had struggled.

    "It was a huge stress," Slaughter said. "It's very hard being a single parent under any circumstances, but to have a high-needs child is overwhelming. And then to have him inappropriately placed in the school, and have the school fighting with her, was really traumatic."

    Jensvold also offered an explanation for taking her son's life.

    "She did mention in the note that she knows people whose parents committed suicide when they were children and how difficult and traumatizing that was, and she didn't want to do that to Ben," Slaughter said.

    "It is very true," she added. "I can't imagine Ben ever recovering from the loss of his mother."

    Special needs education is an emotionally freighted issue, perhaps especially so in Montgomery County — an affluent region where parents tend to be actively engaged in education and where schools are highly regarded nationwide.

    School district spokeswoman Lesli Maxwell said that privacy laws prevented her from discussing the particulars of Barnhard's case, but that the district offered vast options for its 17,000 special-education students and will refer students for private schooling when it can't meet their needs.

    Jensvold, a Johns Hopkins-educated psychiatrist specializing in women's health, was passionate and determined. She made news in 1990 by filing a gender discrimination lawsuit against the National Institute of Mental Health, where she was a medical staff fellow. A judge ultimately ruled against her, calling her version of events an "illusion." She later had her own private practice but most recently was working at Kaiser Permanente.

    She also was a protective mother, constantly fighting with Montgomery County schools over how best to accommodate her son. He was her world, said her divorce lawyer, Robert Baum.

    "She came with an album of pictures of her in a very warm and endearing type of situation," he said. "Her arms around him playing outside, amusement parks, all the types of things you'd love to see of parents dealing with their kids."

    Ben was an active infant — his family nicknamed him "ATB," or All-Terrain Baby — but became increasingly withdrawn and isolated, and relatives said as a child he developed an autoimmune disease that's sometimes triggered by strep. A divorce court filing lists 18 specialists involved in Ben's care, and Jensvold's own suicide note hints at some of the child's difficulties: "writing problems, migraines, hearing things" — and "a bit paranoid."

    "Ben's needs — unable to meet Ben's needs," Jensvold wrote in her note, according to Slaughter.

    He had a small group of friends and enjoyed origami, animals and picking tomatoes with his grandmother, his father said. But school was difficult for him, and his weight — topping 275 before his weight loss-program — made him a target for teasing. He found comfort with even more food.

    "He used to say, 'Mom and Dad, I don't want to go to school. I don't want to deal with those people. They're mean to me and they hurt me,'" recalled Jamie Barnhard, Ben's father and Jensvold's ex-husband. "It broke both of our hearts."

    The couple placed their son in the county's special education program, but Barnhard said his son struggled in the system. He spent about nine months at Wellspring Academies, a weight-loss boarding school in North Carolina, returning in the spring more than 100 pounds slimmer and more confident.

    "He wanted to ride his bike. He wanted to be a kid again," Barnhard said. "He wanted to go out and have fun. He wanted to fly airplanes with his dad. He wanted to just do anything."

    But there were still concerns about where to send Ben to school.

    Jensvold appeared consumed by his education at her father's memorial service last spring, Slaughter said. She confided that she was having trouble paying the roughly $50,000 tuition for Ben to attend Wellspring. She presented a binder about five-inches thick detailing his academic needs, along with a chart showing how his IQ scores had fallen over the years.

    At the end of June, Slaughter wrote her sister to say their mother would pay for Ben's education for the coming year. Jensvold had planned to enroll her son in the Ivymount School, a Rockville, Md., private school specializing in autism and other learning disabilities. Tuition there ranges based on a child's needs, but can be more than $60,000, the school said Monday. Her mother said she'd send a check.

    In her final months, Jensvold only sporadically communicated with her family, as she had for years, Slaughter said. Emails to Jensvold frequently went unreturned, mail sometimes unopened.

    Ben spent July 4 with his divorced parents aboard his dad's restored boat, treading past the Washington Monument with a picnic dinner of barbecue and fresh pineapple. It was a final moment of serenity.

    He died a month later. One day after his body was found — co-workers hadn't heard from Jensvold for days and newspapers had accumulated outside the house — a $10,000 check from Jensvold's mother arrived, Slaughter said.

     

    615 comments

    • Deb  •  9 mths ago
      Well, I have been there. I have been treated like the bad parent, who was a pain to the school simply by trying to advocate for my special needs child when they wouldn't give him the help he needed. Took almost 4 years just to get the IEP approved after he was diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum Disorder! It was hard to try to battle the public school system as a single parent working full time. My son was picked on, locked in the bathroom, and given silent lunch almost daily for not having his work done when he didn't know what to do. By the time I got home from work it was too late to go to the school. My son was suicidal, had low self esteem. I hated going to work and leaving him at public school but had no choice. I couldn't afford private school and didn't have the time to fight for public school to provide private school. Almost at the end of my rope, I found a wonderful private Christian school that I could afford. Two years later, my son is doing well. No IEP required, off all meds, self esteem grows daily. Just passed end of grade tests to go into 7th grade! No one picks on him anymore at this school. He is safe, and I can go to work and feel good about it. Sad for this family. Thanking God for the Blessings He has provided in my family.
      • stubborn 9 mths ago
        Deb, I'm happy to hear that you and your son are happier, especially being the parent of 3 children. It's good to know things can work out. God Bless you!!!
      • KIMBERLY 9 mths ago
        we have a very sad sad school system, I'm glad you found the help you needed..But not fair that you had to go thru all that. Why can't the public school system see they have left so many children behind!!
      • Gretchen 9 mths ago
        Lots of families here use the Catholic school system. They are much more willing to work with kids.
    • tm  •  9 mths ago
      Just reading this brought tears to my eyes. It was bad enough the kids were teasing him and then the mom kills him?! If she wanted to kill herself, fine. I hate when adults take the lives of their children!!! Rest In Peace young man! My prayers to his family.
    • Michelle  •  9 mths ago
      I am a "regular" public school teacher with 13 years experience at a large high school of 3200. Just last year we became the district "magnet school" for students with autism who couldn't function in a traditional mainstream or special ed. classroom. There were about 20 students in the class, which was located across from my classroom. (It was specifically put there because there is a very small office next to the room we jokingly call "the rubber room" because it is padded, and they throw the students in there when they become violent and out of control because so many try and hurt themselves when this happens.) The students are in a self-contained classroom with a special ed. teacher and 3 instructional aides. The special ed. teacher in charge of the class has no specific training with autistic students. (Though I hear she is attending seminars this summer.) Public school systems are woefully unprepared to handle autistic students because frankly, it is so "new" most teachers (including me) have never received any information or training about it. I believe it when I hear parents say they get the runaround from districts regarding their autistic kids because I don't think most districts know how to best educate these kids, and with budgets being how they are these days, districts don't want to pay to send the students to a private (and expensive) school.
      • Jerry B 9 mths ago
        And how much of a pay raise will you demand after WE pay to educate yourself on autism????
      • Tom 9 mths ago
        Jerry B... what a stupid question! Everyone in the corporate world gets pay raises when they improve their skills through training. What would be the point of doing it? So you want teachers who were trained to "teach" a subject to now have to become specialists in autism, bipolar disorder, ADD, and about a hundred other disorders that cause unique behavioral issues, and receive no increase in pay? That's insulting.
      • susan 9 mths ago
        How about home schooling if you are not satisfied with the public school system? Why do you think the county should PAY for these kids to attend private schools? If YOU want private school for your kid, YOU pay!!!
    • Concerned American  •  9 mths ago
      This is just the beginning. Lack of finances to buy school supplies and to send our kids to school is very real and is very harmful to self esteem of our children. I still suffer from being humiliated by the same situation when I was in school. I'm 65. I learned to lie to my teachers and the man who brought fuel to our house. I've been supporting myself since I was 11. Even supported my family much of that time. Taking care of lawns, shoving snow, cleaning offices and when I was old enough working in grocery stores. Sometimes two and three jobs at a time, while going to school. Embarassed by the miserable conditions we lived in. When this continues to happen to us as adults, we react differently. Taking to the streets and acting out....
      • American 9 mths ago
        We never had everything we wanted either, but we didn't care and didn't take crap off bullies either.
      • Brian 9 mths ago
        Until I was 16 or so, never had new clothing, always hand-me-downs. We could
        not afford a TV, my parents never owned a car. Somehow, my brothers and I
        grew up to be self-sufficient citizens. Bless my mother and father for raising
        us right .. even though neither of them went beyond sixth grade in school.
        Today's parents are greedy, self-absorbed whiners who expect everyone else
        to take on responsibility for their children.
      • Chuck 9 mths ago
        Concerned American. You have what I consider to be the "American spirit". You work hard to support yourself and your family.
    • Skoolmarm  •  9 mths ago
      All those who keep calling "home schooling" the answer to everything! "Why not just home school him"??? "Just"? What about her job? If money problems were already such a stressor for her, just HOW, pray tell, would staying home from her job have helped? Some answer that "She could work nights." Really? She was an HMO psychiatrist-- could she really see patients in the middle of the night? Another said that "home schooling takes less time" than regular schooling. Huh? On what planet? For an autistic child, the entire DAY is spent trying to teach - whether it be academics or social interaction or behavior. Where do you people get this bizarre idea that "home schooling" is some kind of miracle answer to autism?! How do you know where the boy was on the spectrum? Or what his behavior issues or savant-style interests were? Just because you, or your wife, or your Aunt Tildie tried it & the child's now a 14 year old college student because of it, doesn't mean every child is the same, or that every parent, even a psychiatrist, is even qualified to home school. After all, being a psychiatrist didn't heal the mom's own mental illness, as so many of you brightly point out.

      Btw, yes, I am the single mother & sole support of a child on the spectrum and another who is "neuro-typical" & if anything, it was the NT son whom we came closest to considering home schooling for b/c of bullying. And, no, of COURSE I do not see suicide, let alone murdering one's child, as being remotely any kind of answer-- to ANY problem, no matter how grave. It is all the more tragic here, with, as many point out, the young man having worked so hard & gained some much-earned self-esteem by overcoming one excuse for his bullying tormenters, his obesity. Nor would I blame the school system for the desperate acts of a woman who had clearly become unbalanced, tho I'm sure they weren't blameless in the education & bullying problems. [And, btw, again, to all those hard-noses who think today's kids are just too coddled-- Bullying DOES kill! It is NOT just a "natural rite of passage" or "kids will be kids."] This tragedy is all about about the cumulative effects, over many years, of this working mother's own, clearly overpowering depression along with the exhausting stress, frustration & incredible loneliness of raising a special needs child, esp. as a single mother, along with no small measure of self-blame (esp. as a mental health professional) for not being able to "fix things" for the son who was the center of her world.
      • Camo Chick 9 mths ago
        Nothing to add here except, Bravo.
      • Anonymous 9 mths ago
        I'd never defend her final action but you're so right that it's years upon years of cumulative exhaustion, stress, frustration that drove her to this. So many people act bewildered and perplexed when someone commits suicide because, after all, they hadn't killed themselves all this time so to them, that person was "OK", all the way up to the moment right before that person killed himself/herself. Decisions like that are not thought of overnight. Is it really any wonder? Some people under tremendous stress are walking time bombs and it's unspeakably sad that something like this is the result.
      • Brian 9 mths ago
        If she was over-powered by depression, etc., what was she doing practicing
        medicine/psychiatry? She gets NO sympathy from me. If the father had killed
        the boy, you would be singing a different song. But no, women can do no
        wrong. Let's face it: she was nuts.
    • christina  •  9 mths ago
      schools SAY that they know what is best for the child but 99% don't live w/ a special needs child 24/7; so who do you think would know the child better the shcool or the parent??
      • mr 9 mths ago
        so let parents make the decisions, regardless of cost? I'm sorry, it's just not economically feasible to let every parent put their kid in a private setting.
      • Just M 9 mths ago
        Often the professionals working within the schools have an objective view without all the emotion of the parents. Plus, they have experience with many other students and disability levels. Parents want to believe so badly that their kid can be "fixed" if the right amount of money is invested. There is no magic sprinkle dust. Love your kid for who they are and strive for reasonable outcomes. Life should be about individual happiness for these kids, not projected success in the minds of the parents. Ideally, the parents and school personnel should work together to define the needs for each child. Too often I've seen great kids sabotaged by guilt-ridden, well-meaning but very misguided parents who get sucked in by the gold-digging charlatan's that convince parents that their kid can become something that they really can't.
      • Brenda 9 mths ago
        both know the child. schools just need to look deeper in the child.
    • guest  •  9 mths ago
      While I think the whole situation is very, very sad, I am confused on a particular point. The beginning of the article stated that she was upset because the school district wouldn't pay tuition for her son at a private school that deals with special needs. I'm not being mean or sarcastic in any way, but is that situation normal? Do public schools really do that? Just my own curiosity because I know in our school district they are always short on funds and if this is the case, it might be a huge problem.
    • pvxmqbwvl  •  9 mths ago
      Besides financial problems, there seemed to be a problem with "taunts" and bullying of this boy----Maybe that's why the mother wanted him in a private school. Bullying at any school can make or break a child. The child who is tormented at school has an absolutely hellish daily existence. Conversely, just having one friend can make all the difference to a child's mental health. When we hear about horrific crimes, the perpetrator is often described as a "loner" or one without friends who was bullied at school. Schools should have zero tolerance for bullying with extremely harsh consequences. No nonchalant attitude of "kids will be kids". "Anti-bullying" programs should be stressed as much as reading, writing and arithmetic with teachers and administrators pushing the notion that the classroom is the "second family". This mother could have worked around the financial problems or her child's learning problems but if the issue was her feeling helpless to stop her child from being tormented at school, that's an entirely different matter that the school should have done more to address.
    • James  •  9 mths ago
      What a tragic and painful read.
    • melissa  •  9 mths ago
      Imagine being a POOR parent of a child with special needs. Most people don't have a mother who can be asked for $10,000 checks. She was obviously mentally ill herself, regardless of our broken education system. Thousands of parents struggle more and do not murder their children.
    • BobbieM  •  9 mths ago
      There must have been more going on than the story is saying. She was having difficulty trying to meet the payments for the private school but her mother offered to pay the tuition cost and yet she still took her life and the life of her son. It's really sad that this happened after her son was making strides in improving his life--becoming healthier and more active.
    • acharacter4u2  •  9 mths ago
      My son has special needs 7 doctors. Every doctor recommends adding another doctor. The school system has done nothing to accomodate us. The financial burden is tremendous. I love my little man enough to fight for him to have a future. I would never hurt him. If he can't depend on me he can't depend on anyone. I understand things was tough but suck it up and be a good mom.
    • Danielle F  •  9 mths ago
      A year ago, the mayor of Coppell, TX did the SAME thing! She couldn't afford to send her daughter to college and her house was getting forclosed on, and she couldn't tell her daughter the truth so she killed her daughter then herself. Google the tragic story of Jayne Peters and her teenager Corinne. Sadly, as the costs of living, education and housing escalate, this probably won't be the last case we hear of concerning financially-stricken parents going crazy and "protecting" their children from a world which seems to only revolve around money.
    • Anonymous  •  9 mths ago
      This story just breaks my heart....just breaks my heart. Especially since the answer---or part of it, anyway, the $10,000---was waiting right there for her. This woman had mental issues...the cost of the school was NOT the real issue. Didn't anyone see or suspect anything...? After the boy's success in weight loss and returning to some confidence, ready to tackle the new school year....there are just not adequate words to express the sadness of this circumstance!
    • MichaelPrav  •  9 mths ago
      You can have everything and think you have nothing. Such is the human condition.
    • Paul Paul  •  9 mths ago
      Suicide is a perminant end to a temporary problem
    • A Yahoo! User  •  9 mths ago
      Having worked in health care over 35 years, I find that the most unstable people are those in the mental health field. Tragically, perhaps many sought unsuccessfully to find an answer and a treatment for their own pathology.
    • Rob J  •  9 mths ago
      This absolutel breaks my heart. A mental health expert that could not help herself. I can't imagine feeling that level of despair. I am not a man who knows God but if there is a God please make this young man whole and reunite mother and child in the the afterlife. My heart aches for both of them.
    • Highly Skeptical  •  9 mths ago
      Psychiatrists don't know jack.
    • Thomas  •  9 mths ago
      ....I'm actually pretty angry about this. This kid worked hard to lose weight and was excited to lead a more normal life. Losing 100 lbs! What an achievement! Then mom comes along and blows his brains out, because SHE is depressed about the money. Many people with autism spectrum disorders are uncommonly bright. And some are famous. For example: Ben Franklin, Thomas Edison both exhibited behaviors that are now grouped under the umbrella 'Autism Spectrum Disorders'. If it wasn't for Autism, we'd all still be living in caves. There is a HUGE list of famous people (someone look it up) that were autistic. If mom wanted to do herself in, then that's her choice. But to make that decision for her boy too....It's just plain selfish and wrong.
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