And more reason to say there is something questionable here:
"Jenny was never physically harmed, and was 'thriving and happy before being taken away', the Court of Appeal was told."
Two experts criticised the parents, two defended them. One of the negative experts "suggested, after spending just one hour with Jenny, that she had been sexually abused by her father.
And the proof? He came to this conclusion, it seems, after Jenny had described choking on a lollipop which, so the expert said, could 'signify the child being forced to have oral sex with her father'."
One of the experts in their favour, Dr Peter Dale, a psychiatric social worker, "concluded the local authority had 'mismanaged the case'.
"They made, he said, fixed assumptions about the parents at the outset, and had not done the necessary investigations to check whether those assumptions were correct.
"Dr Dale said: 'Jenny had suffered significant harm as a result of being removed from her parents, and was likely to suffer fears of abandonment by them for some time to come and would be particularly at risk during adolescence."
'She needed urgent therapeutic input to help her make sense of what had happened to her.'
He continued: 'Plans for reunification [with her parents] should be established on a very urgent basis.'