A DNA test showed he was not the father of the child, but prosecutors are livid at not being given the information about Abraham - one of the nation's youngest convicted murderers, who shot a man at age 11 in his hometown of Pontiac in 1997 and was later sentenced as a juvenile to be held until he is 21.

After that, he is completely free, and Oakland County Prosecutor David Gorcyca fears Abraham - who shot Ronnie Green Jr. to death - has not been rehabilitated.

Whether Abraham engaged in a sexual relationship with a staffer at Maxey, which would not be a crime for Abraham but would be for the staffer, remains unclear.

Gorcyca also was displeased with his office being excluded from a meeting between the judge and Abraham's attorneys and social workers two weeks ago.

Gorcyca has taken a strong approach to the Department of Human Services, saying that there have been "deliberate and disingenuous acts ... to hide this information," on the alleged sexual contact, from his office.

"To engage in such deliberate deceit and dishonesty is shocking beyond words," Gorcyca wrote to the head of the agency. "To deny the Oakland County Prosecutor's Office the information is deceitful and dishonest, but to deny the victim's family the information is blatantly cruel."

Gorcyca has subpoenaed all recent reports involving Abraham from Maxey, citing the failure of the Department of Human Services to provide information on Abraham's status.

The revelations about the investigation occurred during what was supposed to be a simple hearing Thursday involving a request by Maxey for Abraham to visit an uncle living in Jackson County.

Oakland County Probate Judge Eugene Arthur Moore ruled Thursday that Abraham could make the visit if all of the people living at the uncle's home were subjected to background checks and if the visit were supervised.

But in asking for the visit, Elaine Rosati, the courtappointed guardian for Abraham, also said Abraham should be considered for a halfway house in Bay City to spend the last year in custody, learning how to live productively in society. She said he has exhibited leadership skills on the football field and is working toward bettering himself.

She said it's important for Abraham to start working toward his future, finding a substantial job and learning life skills outside confinement.

"I don't feel we have enough information about Nate to allow him off campus for an unsupervised visit," Carley said. "We need to find out what Nate is and isn't doing. There's something happening out at the Maxey Training School. I'm getting one wall after another from DHS and everyone else."

What started as rumors that Abraham had fathered a child turned into a police investigation, Department of Human Services juvenile justice specialist Rick Cardew confirmed in court.

"For the last six months, we've been rushing Nathaniel to finish the program because his performance has not allowed him to finish," Carley said.

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