Safeguarding services were warned tragic tot was at risk six months before his death
27.01.2022 - 17:15
/ manchestereveningnews.co.uk
A five-year-old boy found dead in Oldham on New Year’s Eve had been flagged as being at risk of neglect the previous summer, the M.E.N. can reveal.
Police had been alerted by a member of the public six months earlier amid concerns that Dylan Scanlon was not being properly looked after.
It is understood an officer then emailed Oldham’s multi-agency safeguarding hub, which includes social workers and other child protection experts, to highlight the concern.
While an official at the hub did reply, it is unclear what, if any, action was then taken by either agency in the months that then elapsed before Dylan's death.
Oldham council has completed an initial review of the case and is preparing for a full child safeguarding practice review, while GMP immediately referred itself to the police complaints watchdog on the night of the incident.
Dylan was found at his home on Elm Road in Limeside at around 6.20pm on New Year’s Eve.
A woman in her 30s remains detained under the mental health act. No charges have been made and it is understood a post mortem was inconclusive. GMP's Murder Investigation Team is continuing its enquiries.
The M.E.N. understands that Dylan had first been known to social services several years earlier while still very small, but a care plan and further intervention had not been deemed necessary.
He is not thought to have come across the radar of child protection again until July 2021, when police were alerted that he may be at risk of neglect.
At that point GMP emailed Oldham’s MASH, although it is not clear what official records were made on the force’s own system.
An official at the MASH is understood to have then replied, asking for more information.
Both agencies are now investigating what happened