Adolf Hitler, JoyceLynn Aryan Nation and Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie taken away from adoptive family
The New Jersey parents that named their children after Nazi leaders, including Adolf Hitler, lost custody after a judge decided that their long history of domestic does not make them the ideal parents for Adolf Hitler Campbell, aged 4, and his two younger sisters, JoyceLynn Aryan Nation Campbell, aged 3, and Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie Campbell, aged 2.
The court says that that Adolf Hitler Campbell frequently threatens to kill people and Deborah Campbell, the mother, sent a note to one neighbor saying she was scared of her husband because he threatened he would kill her. The children will remain for the moment in the care of the Division of Youth and Family Services (DYFS). Both the adoptive parents, Heath Campbell, aged 37, and Deborah Campbell, aged 27, have a long history of being abused when they were children and are now unemployed and disabled, so the court decided to take away the children because they are not exactly the right parents for them and they have never received adequate treatment for their serious psychological conditions. There were stories involving the five member family ever since 2009, when they had a quarrel with a Shop Rite supermarket representative from Greenwich, which refused to write Adolf Hitler Campbell’s name on a birthday cake that his parents bought for his three anniversary. Back then, police and child protection workers took the children into protective custody, but refused to give away the reason for their action, they just mentioned that it was not the children’s name that was the cause. The three judge panel of the Superior Court of New Jersey Appellate Division sent the case back to family court for further investigating because there was not enough evidence that the children were abused or neglected by the adoptive parents. The Campbell home from Holland Township got searched with the occasion of the trial, and DYFS found strange thing around the house, like nailed shut windows and weird decorative art objects in the form of skulls and knives. The Division of Youth and Family Services started monitoring them since 2008 when the neighbors sent complaints saying that the children were left in their booster seats for a very long period of time, and there were indications of domestic violence coming from the Campbell residence.

A neighbor brought to the trial a handwritten note signed by Deborah Campbell accusing her husband of threatening to kill her and expressing fear for her adoptive children’s lives. The note contained spelling mistakes, because she dropped out of high school when she was in the 10th grade, and said that her husband already stabbed her in the hand with a screwdriver and that he is teaching 3 years old Adolf how to kill a person. When she was asked in the court about this letter Deborah admitted that she had written it, but said that it contained many lies and described her husband as behaving perfectly normal. Heath Campbell, the “perfect guy”, is not able to read, has been married two times before and has other children, too. Both marriages have a history of domestic violence and one of his ex wives had a restraining order filed against him. The judges found out that she moved with her whole family to an Air Force base from Florida just to be away from him and feel safe. She also said that the children remained marked by the relationship with their father, which he used to punish them with the vacuum cleaner and that now the child screams “bloody murder” every time he sees such a cleaning device and that he can not be kept in the company of black people because he is saying awful things about them, things that he learned from his father. While he was in the DYFS custody little Adolf Hitler Campbell threatened his two sisters that he would kill them with the vacuum cleaner and called Dr. Alice Nadelman, the state psychologist, and Deborah Campbell bad names. Holland Township Police Sergeant John Harris, who escorted the child safety workers at the Campbell residence last January, said at that time that he was there to protect the workers.





