Bucks County Children & Youth Social Services Agency v. Department of Public Welfare

808 A.2d 990, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 822
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 17, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 808 A.2d 990 (Bucks County Children & Youth Social Services Agency v. Department of Public Welfare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bucks County Children & Youth Social Services Agency v. Department of Public Welfare, 808 A.2d 990, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 822 (Pa. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION BY

President Judge COLINS.

The Bucks County Children and Youth Social Services Agency petitions for review of an order of the Department of Public Welfare that adopted, in its entirety, the recommendation of an attorney examiner to sustain the appeal of R.J. and to expunge his name from the ChildLine Registry. We affirm the Department.

M.K.B., now a 19-year-old female, brought allegations of sexual abuse against R.J., the father of her close friend, J. J. and her former softball coach. She alleged that he had repeatedly touched her breasts and genitals over a five-year period prior to her 16th birthday. She claimed that the incidents took place during sleepovers at J.J.’s house, on the softball field and on a trip the team took to Florida. She claimed that her friend had witnessed some of this abuse and that R.J.’s inappropriate behavior had been the subject of a team meeting. CYS caseworker Diane Meyer interviewed M.K.B. and indicated a report of child abuse by R.J. without speaking to him or to any of the individuals whom M.K.B. told her had witnessed the abuse. Ms. Meyer’s report was based solely on *992 the information given to her by M.K.B. Detective Scott Selisker of the Warminster Township Police Department investigated the allegations made by M.K.B. but was unable to verify anything that M.K.B. reported to Ms. Meyer. R.J. then asked that his name be expunged from the Child-Line Registry; CYS refused the request and R.J. appealed to the Department. The attorney examiner who heard the appeal recommended that R.J.’s name be expunged from the Registry and an order was entered to that effect. CYS brought this appeal. R.J. has filed a brief in opposition to the appeal; the Department is not participating.

At the hearing on R.J.’s appeal M.K.B. and the CYS caseworker, Diane Meyer, testified to the alleged abuse by R.J. Ms. Meyer’s testimony was hearsay testimony based solely on what M.K.B. had related to her. Their testimony established five specific allegations in addition to the improper touching that M.K.B. alleged had occurred over the years. Those allegations were:

1) R.J. pushed her onto her back on a bed in a Florida hotel room and pushed her shirt up during a team trip when she was 15. J.J. was alleged to have witnessed this incident;
2) R.J. entered his daughter’s room one night during a sleepover and climbed onto M.K.B. J.J. was alleged to have witnessed this incident;
3) M.K.B. alleged that she discussed these incidents with J.J.;
.4) M.K.B. alleged that R.J. had had improper contact with another member of the team, K.V.; and
5) M.K.B. alleged that a team meeting was held in June 1998 to discuss the alleged improper contact between R.J. and K.V.

M.KB.’s testimony at the hearing is couched in very general terms. She admitted to having poor recall of the specifics of any of the incidents of abuse, did not remember the details of the Florida incident and did not want to discuss it. M.K.B. testified that much of her memory was in the form of flashbacks that had occurred since an automobile accident and that she was being treated by a therapist who specialized in recalled memory. The specifics of her allegations were supplied by Diane Meyer’s hearsay testimony.

Detective Selisker testified that he interviewed M.K.B. and took statements from her and the individuals that M.K.B. said had witnessed the incidents. He testified that he was unable to corroborate any of the allegations made by M.K.B. and that her statements made to him two months apart were inconsistent. Detective Selisker testified that R.J. had cooperated fully with his investigation to the extent that he had voluntarily submitted to a polygraph examination. The results of that examination were not revealed at the hearing but the fact that R.J. submitted to the test voluntarily was admitted to demonstrate the extent of R.J.’s cooperation. Detective Selisker testified that no criminal charges had been filed as result of his department’s investigation. J.J., M.K.B.’s close friend, flatly refuted M.KB.’s version of the sleepover incident and testified that she had not witnessed the incident alleged to have taken place in the Florida hotel room. Three members of R.J.’s softball team all denied that R.J.’s sexual conduct was raised at the June, 1998 team meeting. R.J. testified in his own behalf and denied that he had ever acted in an inappropriate manner with M.K.B.

The questions we are asked to determine are: 1) whether the attorney examiner erred in finding the M.K.B. had recalled memory where she testified that she recalled incidents of abuse in flashbacks and that a therapist was helping her *993 in that recall; 2) whether the attorney examiner erred in admitting testimony of the investigating police officer that no criminal charges were brought as a result of his investigation and that he found material inconsistencies in the statements made to him by M.K.B.; and 3) whether the attorney examiner erred in admitting as evidence, for the sole purpose of establishing that R.J. cooperated fully with the police investigation without admitting the result of the test, the simple fact that R.J. had voluntarily submitted to a polygraph examination? 1

Children and Youth Social Services Agency has the burden of establishing by substantial evidence that an indicated report of child abuse is accurate. If CYS fails to sustain that burden, a request for expungement will be granted. Bucks County Children and Youth Social Services Agency v. Department of Public Welfare, 151 Pa.Cmwlth. 110, 616 A.2d 170 (1992); 23 Pa.C.S. § 6341(c). The attorney examiner is the ultimate finder of fact. R. v. Department of Public Welfare, 535 Pa. 440, 636 A.2d 142 (1994). Hearsay testimony in an administrative proceeding to expunge a name is not substantial evidence unless it is corroborated. B.E. v. Department of Public Welfare, 654 A.2d 290 (Pa.Cmwlth.1995).

We are puzzled that CYS complains that the Department erred when it adopted the report of an attorney examiner who found that an alleged child victim had recalled memory of incidents of abuse that occurred through flashbacks triggered by an automobile accident. It was the alleged victim herself who testified that she experienced recalled memory through flashbacks; the attorney examiner simply found that she had so testified. We are unable to find any merit in CYS’ claim that the Department somehow erred in adopting the attorney examiner’s report because he found as fact that which is clearly reflected in the alleged victim’s testimony in the record.

CYS next argues that Detective Selisker’s testimony that M.KB.’s statements were inconsistent should not be admitted because “Detective Selisker demonstrated his lack of competency in investigating child abuse by his lack of recognition as to core and collateral inconsistencies.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
808 A.2d 990, 2002 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bucks-county-children-youth-social-services-agency-v-department-of-pacommwct-2002.