she doesn't get along with anyone, does she?  
 
The shocking thing would be if someone actually said something nice about her 
for a change..........unfortunately, that doesn't look like it will ever happen!

--- On Mon, 3/23/09, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: {Dawgs/Dittos} Octo Mom
To: [email protected]
Date: Monday, March 23, 2009, 9:21 PM


Octuplets' mom claims nurses were spying
The Associated Press
8:36 PM EST March 23, 2009
Octuplets mother Nadya Suleman has fired a nonprofit group of nurses
that helped care for her children, accusing the group of spying on her
and reporting her to child welfare officials, her spokesman said Monday. 
Suleman attorney Jeff Czech said the relationship started badly between
Suleman and Angels in Waiting, which has been training nannies paid by
Suleman at the family's La Habra home. 
Last month an attorney for Angels in Waiting filed a complaint against
Suleman with child welfare officials, seeking an investigation into
whether the mother could provide a suitable environment for her 14
children. 
Suleman later had several confrontations with the nurses, Czech said,
and the situation grew unbearable Sunday when Suleman came to believe
that Angels in Waiting founder Linda West-Conforti was allegedly filing
a report against her with child welfare officials. 
"It started out adversarial and never really resolved itself," Czech
told The Associated Press. "Nadya felt that she was being judged
wrongfully and she didn't need it. All it did was make a difficult
situation worse." 
Czech did not detail the complaint and lawyer Gloria Allred, who
represents the nurses' group, refused comment Monday, saying more
details will be released Tuesday. 
A call to the Orange County Department of Children and Family Services
was not immediately returned, but child welfare cases are typically kept
private to protect the identities of the children involved. 
Angels in Waiting had initially offered to provide around-the-clock
care, to be paid for by public donations, but later scaled back its
offer to only provide training to Suleman's nannies. Suleman has said
the offer was changed because the group wasn't receiving donations, but
Allred has denied that claim. 
Czech said that Suleman will have her nannies trained by nurses from the
Kaiser Permanente Bellflower Medical Center, where the octuplets were
born on Jan. 26. Hospitals provide some training free of charge to new
mothers. A call to Kaiser seeking detail of their program was not
immediately returned.




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