Metro

ACS visited parents of tragic 5-year-old boy multiple times

Child-welfare workers made 13 visits to the parents of a Queens boy who died after being found unconscious in his home — and noted evidence of abuse more than half the time, sources told The Post Monday.

But Michael Guzman, 5, was allowed to remain with his mom and dad in the family’s Jamaica house, despite the red flags, the sources said.

On Sunday afternoon, medics were called to the home and found Michael completely unresponsive. He was rushed to Jamaica Hospital, but could not be saved.

Michael’s parents — Phyllis Reynoso and Michael Guzman — were both questioned Monday at the 103rd Precinct station house.

The Queens District Attorney’s Office was expected to bring charges of child-endangerment, at the least, the sources said.

Administration for Children’s Services workers visited the parents 13 times prior to Michael’s death.

They found credible evidence of abuse or neglect during eight trips to the house, documenting each instance as “indicated” in their reports, the sources said.

But there is no limit to the amount of home visits or “indicated” reports before a child is removed, sources said. That decision is instead made when a case worker believes a child is in imminent danger.

Authorities planned to conduct an autopsy. A spokeswoman for the Medical Examiner’s Office said, “There is no sign of acute injury.”

A neighbor told The Post he regularly heard signs of abuse from the home, and that his family had made a complaint to ACS in recent weeks.

Michael GuzmanGoFundMe

“We had to make the complaint. I heard the kids screaming. Oh, my God. It’s terrible,” said the neighbor, who requested to remain anonymous.

“I have kids myself, I just couldn’t listen to it anymore,” he explained.

“The police came, but they didn’t do nothing. My mother has been talking to the people from the city for weeks about this. We’re just fed up. It’s terrible.”

Another neighbor, Keisha Lee, 39, said she didn’t like letting her kids hang out with the boy or his siblings.

“I wouldn’t let my daughter hang out with them after I notice the patterns of behavior,” she said.

An ACS spokesperson would not comment on the case, citing confidentiality laws, but said in a statement, “We are saddened by this troubling news and are investigating the circumstances leading to this child fatality, along with the NYPD.”

The tragedy follows the Sept. 26, 2016, death of Harlem boy Zymere Perkins, which exposed major flaws in the ACS.

City and state reports concluded the agency failed the 6-year-old, who was the subject of repeated abuse prior to his death. Child-welfare workers squandered several opportunities to intervene on his behalf, the reports found.

Additional reporting by Chris Perez