Alonzo Troy Roane v. Halifax County Department of Social Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 4, 2018
Docket0058182
StatusUnpublished

This text of Alonzo Troy Roane v. Halifax County Department of Social Services (Alonzo Troy Roane v. Halifax County Department of Social Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Alonzo Troy Roane v. Halifax County Department of Social Services, (Va. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Beales, O’Brien and Malveaux Argued at Richmond, Virginia UNPUBLISHED

ALONZO TROY ROANE MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0058-18-2 JUDGE MARY BENNETT MALVEAUX DECEMBER 4, 2018 HALIFAX COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF HALIFAX COUNTY Kimberley S. White, Judge

James C. Martin (Martin & Martin Law Firm, on briefs), for appellant.

Matthew W. Evans; Elizabeth Blair Trent, Guardian ad litem for the minor child (Gravitt Law Group, P.L.C.; The Trent Law Practice, PLC, on brief), for appellee.

The Circuit Court of Halifax County (“circuit court”) entered an order terminating the

residual parental rights of Alonzo Troy Roane (“father”) to his daughter, A.R. Father appeals

that order, arguing that the circuit court erred in terminating his rights because he committed no

abuse or neglect and the evidence was insufficient to support termination. For the following

reasons, we affirm the circuit court.

I. BACKGROUND

We review the evidence in the light most favorable to the Halifax County Department of

Social Services (“DSS”), the party that prevailed before the circuit court, affording it all

inferences fairly deducible therefrom. See Bristol Dep’t of Soc. Servs. v. Welch, 64 Va. App.

34, 40, 764 S.E.2d 284, 287 (2014).

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. Father and Spring Bryant (“mother”) are the biological parents of A.R., who was born in

2011. Father and mother also had a son, A., who was a year or two younger than A.R. DSS

became involved with the family in January 2016. At that time, father lived in Florida and the

children lived in Virginia with mother and Terence Bryant (“Bryant”). DSS received a

complaint alleging that mother and Bryant were physically abusing A. After DSS began an

investigation, mother removed A. and A.R. from school, and the children began living with

Bryant’s mother in a neighboring county.

In February 2016, Bryant’s mother beat A. to death. A.R. witnessed the killing and saw

her brother’s body being placed in a trash bag in the back of a car. DSS learned of A.’s death

and filed an emergency removal petition for A.R., who was placed in foster care. DSS did not

attempt to place A.R. with father at that time because they were unaware of him. However,

during the investigation of A.’s death, DSS learned of father and that he was living in Florida.

Father attended a May 4, 2016 hearing, following which the Halifax Juvenile and

Domestic Relations District Court (“J&DR court”) entered an adjudicatory order finding that

A.R. had been abused and neglected by her parents as defined in Code § 16.1-228(1).1

Specifically, the J&DR court found that A.R.’s “sibling was killed by an unsuitable person the

parents left the children with, in an unsuitable house and i[n] what appeared to be an effort . . . to

hide [the] children from authorities. [The] [c]hildren were unclean, under[]nourished and

neglected.” Two days later, following a hearing at which father was present, the J&DR court

entered a dispositional order approving DSS’s foster care plan. The plan stated that A.R. would

1 Code § 16.1-228(1) provides, in pertinent part, that an abused or neglected child is one whose “parents . . . create[] or inflict[] . . . , or allow[] to be created or inflicted upon such child a physical or mental injury by other than accidental means, or create[] a substantial risk of death, disfigurement or impairment of bodily or mental functions . . . .” -2- remain in DSS’s custody with the goal of returning her to her home or placing her with a

relative. Father did not appeal the dispositional order.

DSS initiated a study of father’s Florida home through the Florida Department of

Children and Families. While the study was underway, DSS filed a foster care review plan in

July 2016. The plan noted that A.R. was receiving therapy and had told her therapist of alleged

abuse by family members. It also noted that A.R. had not seen father for more than a year and a

half prior to her foster care placement and that father had not contacted DSS since the

dispositional hearing nearly three months earlier. While some of A.R.’s maternal relatives had

filed for custody, none of their petitions had yet been fully evaluated. The review plan

concluded that no progress had been made toward the goal of returning A.R. to her home.

In September 2016, father attended a foster care review hearing. At the hearing, the

J&DR court found that DSS had made reasonable efforts to pursue the goals of the foster care

plan and continued A.R.’s foster care placement.

Later that month, DSS received the home study from the Florida Department of Children

and Families. The review indicated that father was living with a girlfriend with whom he had

been involved for several years on an on-and-off basis. Father reported that had not seen A.R.

since July 2014 and had last spoken with her by phone in November 2015. Florida officials

approved a home placement for A.R. However, DSS had a number of concerns arising from the

results of the home study. Tara Toombs, a DSS foster care adoptions worker assigned to A.R.’s

case, later testified that these concerns included the small size of the Florida home and father’s

potential financial and housing instability absent his girlfriend’s support. Toombs also noted that

A.R.’s therapist had recommended she have no contact with father or mother at that time because

of the “strong . . . trauma [A.R.] was dealing with.” Toombs also stated that although DSS had

emailed with father to initiate the home study and had informed him that he needed to undergo a

-3- psychological and parenting assessment, she did not hear from father after she took over A.R.’s

case in April 2016.

During A.R.’s foster care placement she received therapy from Jonci Berneche, a

licensed professional counselor. Berneche initially diagnosed A.R. with an adjustment disorder.

As the therapy progressed and Berneche learned more about the trauma experienced by A.R.,

Berneche updated her diagnosis to include post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”). Berneche

testified that A.R. shared that she had been abused and identified mother, Bryant, and Bryant’s

mother as her abusers. As a result of witnessing the abuse and death of A. she experienced

abandonment issues, excessive fear, and constantly recurring thoughts and nightmares. Berneche

testified that change is a frightening thing for traumatized children and worked with A.R. and her

foster parents to establish consistency and a sense of safety in A.R.’s daily life.

Father attended one meeting with Berneche on September 29, 2016. Prior to that meeting

Berneche spoke with A.R. about father. At first, A.R. did not remember who father was. When

Berneche asked A.R. if she would like to meet him, she said she did not want to. At the meeting

with father, Berneche shared her concerns that A.R. did not remember him. She also told father

that any change in A.R.’s life would have to be introduced gradually because A.R. “could not

handle any additional abrupt transitions.” Berneche explained that due to A.R.’s trauma, it was

important for father and other individuals who would have contact with her to undergo

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