Pair charged with kidnapping after refusing treatment for son
SALT LAKE CITY — A father who took his son out of Utah, defying a court order to give the boy chemotherapy for cancer, was arrested in Idaho, but the 12-year-old boy and his mother were still missing Wednesday.
And now the father is too, after being released by an Idaho judge on $50,000 bail before extradition hearings.
Both parents, Daren and Barbara Jensen of Sandy, have been charged with kidnapping in the state’s custody battle for their son, Parker.
“We’re not in the business of filing criminal charges to make people get treatment, but this is a matter of life or death,” said Kent Morgan, a deputy district attorney for Salt Lake County.
Daren Jensen was arrested Saturday after a car accident in Bannock County, Idaho, where his wife has relatives. But she and their son were nowhere to be found, said Angela Micklos, another deputy district attorney.
Micklos said she was shocked to learn Jensen had been released on bail, and while he’s no longer considered a fugitive, Micklos said she doubts he’ll show for extradition proceedings.
Jensen told police in Idaho that his wife and son may be on their way to Houston, where the family planned to enroll the boy in a clinical trial for antineoplaston therapy.
Utah doctors testified that Parker Jensen has only a 5 percent chance of living without chemotherapy for a cancerous tumor, Ewing’s sarcoma. With chemotherapy, he would have a 72 percent chance of being alive after five years, the doctors said.
But the parents refused, and state lawyers obtained a juvenile-court order for chemotherapy that was supposed to begin Aug. 8. The family disappeared, and the state obtained a warrant to take custody of the boy. Within days, the family “absconded from the state altogether,” Morgan said.
Morgan said the parents would have faced only contempt-of-court charges had they stayed in Utah, but now face felony kidnapping charges for taking their son out of state.
Before a court hearing last June, the Jensens told Salt Lake City television KUTV that 45 weeks of chemotherapy would stunt their son’s growth and leave him sterile.
“We are totally competent parents, and it’s ridiculous that we have to come here (to juvenile court) and prove we can make decisions for our child,” Barbara Jensen told the station.
Morgan said, “If you’re dead, you can’t have children either.”
“It’s pretty well settled in law that a state can intervene to save a child’s life,” said Susan Eisenman, an assistant attorney general for Utah.
This story appeared in The Daily Herald on page B4.


