C. K. v. Department of Public Welfare

869 A.2d 48, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 74
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 1, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 869 A.2d 48 (C. K. 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
C. K. v. Department of Public Welfare, 869 A.2d 48, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 74 (Pa. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

*50 OPINION BY

Judge COHN JUBELIRER.

C.K. appeals from an order of the Department of Public Welfare, Bureau of Hearings and Appeals (DPW), adopting the recommendation of the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) that her appeal requesting to have her name expunged from the ChildLine Registry as an indicated perpetrator of sexual abuse be denied. 1 C.K. asserts on appeal that the ALJ erred in finding that she placed her three children in “imminent risk of sexual abuse” by living with two individuals, S.S. and F.K. (the couple), who are “indicated perpetrators of sexual abuse” under the Child Protective Services Law (Law). 2

On appeal, C.K. argues that the ALJ erred by: (1) not properly considering, applying and giving persuasive effect to DPW’s stated policy defining what must be established to prove “imminent risk”; (2) concluding that imminent risk of sexual abuse existed where the children had contact with the couple; and (3) engaging in fact-finding that was unsupported by substantial evidence, as well as engaging in speculation and conjecture to reach the conclusion that C.K’s children were placed in imminent risk of abuse. The main issue presented is whether evidence that a parent, after being told not to do so, repeatedly lives with her very young children in a home with “indicated perpetrators of sexual abuse,” is sufficient to demonstrate an “imminent risk of sexual abuse” under the Law.

On November 26, 2002, Fayette County Children and Youth Services (FCCYS) received a report of suspected child abuse involving C.K.’s three children: D.M., born December 12, 1995; D.K., born November 9, 2000; and L.B., born January 22, 2002. The concern was that C.K. was permitting contact between her children and the couple, who were known to both FCCYS as well as C.K. as indicated sexual perpetrators. The report was called into ChildLine and ChildLine called the FCCYS. Caseworker Patrick Hudock was assigned to investigate. After Hudock conducted interviews with C.K., he filed three CY-48’s. 3 Thereafter, C.K. requested that the indicated cases against her be expunged. The ChildLine and Abuse Registry denied her request to expunge the record, and she then filed an appeal to DPW.

A hearing was conducted on August 5, 2003, at which Hudock and Darek Eber-hart (Eberhart), both caseworkers, testified. C.K. did not testify, and the ALJ found both caseworkers credible. 4 Eber-hart became involved with C.K’s family in early 2002 because there were concerns about the youngest child. In February, 2002, Eberhart received a report that C.K. and her children were living with the couple, who were listed on the ChildLine Registry" as indicated perpetrators of sexual abuse. (N.T. at 9.) On February 28, 2002, Eberhart went to the couple’s residence, *51 found C.K. and her children there, and informed C.K. that her children could not have contact with the couple. He asked C.K. to return to live with her mother. Eberhart testified that after this first warning, C.K. and her children did return to her mother’s residence. (N.T. at 10.)

On March 6, 2002, Eberhart received a second report that C.K. and her children were again residing at the couple’s residence. (N.T. at 10.) Eberhart, again, went to the couple’s residence, where he found C.K. and her children. This time, Eberhart took with him a family service worker and a Pennsylvania State Police officer. At this time, C.K. admitted to Eberhart that she and the children had been living with the couple since at least February 28, 2002. Eberhart gave C.K. a second warning that she and her children were to have no contact with the couple due to reports that they were indicated sexual abusers. (N.T. at 18-14.) Eber-hart, the family service worker and the officer physically helped to move C.K. and her children out of the couple’s residence and back to her mother’s home. (N.T. at 10.)

On November 22, 2002, Hudock became involved with C.K. and her children because FCCYS received a third report that C.K. and her children were again living with the couple. (N.T. at 25.) Apparently, C.K. and her children had moved to a different county after the second warning and, around November, 2002, they moved back to Fayette County. Because of this new report, Hudock contacted another caseworker, Matt Marsiglia, and a state police officer to go with him to the couple’s residence. (N.T. at 25.) The meeting place was at a Sheetz service station in Connellsville. Before the state police officer arrived, the caseworkers noticed C.K. and her children in a vehicle with S.S. The caseworkers approached the vehicle, identified themselves, told them why they were there, and asked C.K. if she was living with the couple. She initially indicated to them that she was not living with the couple but, rather, had a trailer of her own. She refused to take the caseworkers to her trailer and told them that the children’s belongings were at several different locations. (N.T. at 26-27.) At this point, the caseworkers made arrangements to take C.K. and her children back to C.K.’s mother’s home, which they did. While at her mother’s home, C.K. admitted to Hu-dock and Marsiglia that she and her children were living with the couple because “she was in the process of moving back from Clearfield County.” (N.T. at 28.) The caseworkers issued her a third warning and completed a safety plan with C.K., which she signed. (N.T. at 29.) This plan asked her not to allow her children to have any contact with the couple. Upon arriving back at the FCCYS office, Hudock completed the paperwork to accept the case for services, where FCCYS would help secure appropriate housing for the children. The case was then transferred back to Eberhart, who filed a petition for custody of the children.

As a result of Hudock’s investigation on December 4, 2002, he filed one CY-48 for each of the children. Hudock testified that the fihng of the indicated reports was based upon the fact that C.K. admitted to him that she and the children were living with the couple. In Hudock’s opinion, this “contact” was putting the children in “imminent risk” of sexual assault after several warnings were given to C.K. (N.T. at 29-BO.)

On April 13, 2004, the ALJ issued findings of fact and an opinion in which he recommended that C.K.’s appeal be denied. Specifically, the ALJ found that the children had contact with the couple, as evidenced by C.K’s admission that she *52 was living with them from February 28, 2002 until March 6, 2002. 5 “She [C.K.] could not watch these three (3) children every minute of the day. So the proximity to the children and the exposure gave the indicated abusers the opportunity to abuse these children once again.” (ALJ Op. at 6.) The ALJ went on to state that “[t]he Department does not have to show the time, content and circumstances of the abuse, nor, in fact, that there was any abuse at all. The Department need only show that [C.K.] exposed her children to imminent risk of abuse. And that she did, and the facts support this finding.” Id.

The ALJ also distinguished two recent Commonwealth Court decisions, C.F. v. Pennsylvania Dep’t. of Pub. Welfare,

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Bluebook (online)
869 A.2d 48, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-k-v-department-of-public-welfare-pacommwct-2005.