CHINS: B T v. Indiana Department of Child Services

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 23, 2023
Docket22A-JC-03051
StatusPublished

This text of CHINS: B T v. Indiana Department of Child Services (CHINS: B T v. Indiana Department of Child Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CHINS: B T v. Indiana Department of Child Services, (Ind. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FILED Aug 23 2023, 9:47 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT B.T. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE Riley L. Parr Theodore E. Rokita Lebanon, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT N.T. Abigail R. Recker Deputy Attorney General Michael C. Price Indianapolis, Indiana Zionsville, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

In the Matter of: A.T., Child in August 23, 2023 Need of Services: Court of Appeals Case No. 22A-JC-3051 B.T. (Mother) and N.T. (Father), Appeal from the Boone Circuit Appellants-Respondents, Court The Honorable Lori N. Schein, v. Judge The Honorable Sally E. Berish, The Indiana Department of Magistrate Child Services, Trial Court Cause No. 06C01-2110-JC-316 Appellee-Petitioner.

Opinion by Judge Bradford Judges Riley and Weissmann concur.

Bradford, Judge.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-JC-3051 | August 23, 2023 Page 1 of 33 Case Summary [1] B.T. (“Mother”) and N.T. (“Father”) (collectively, “Parents”) are the adoptive

parents of A.T. Since being adopted by Parents in 2015, A.T. has engaged in

problematic and sometimes violent behaviors. Parents have worked with

various service providers over the years to provide A.T. with effective treatment

and care. At some point, the Indiana Department of Child Services (“DCS”)

became involved with the family, providing them with wrap-around services as

needed. On October 4, 2021, Parents and A.T. appeared at DCS, with Parents

claiming that A.T.’s condition had worsened and that she required residential

placement for treatment. A.T. also indicated that she did not feel safe in

Parents’ home at that time. Two days later, on October 6, 2021, DCS filed a

petition alleging that A.T. was a child in need of services (“CHINS”). The

juvenile court subsequently found A.T. to be a CHINS. Parents appeal part of

the juvenile court’s CHINS determination. Concluding that the juvenile court

correctly adjudicated A.T. to be a CHINS but that the portion of the juvenile

court’s order relating to Indiana Code sections 31-34-1-1 and -2 is not supported

by the evidence, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

Facts and Procedural History [2] Parents are the adoptive parents of A.T., who was born on June 5, 2006. Prior

to her adoption by Parents, A.T. “had been a victim of physical abuse and

neglect by her biological parent, including witnessing sexually abusive

behaviors by her” biological mother. Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 8.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-JC-3051 | August 23, 2023 Page 2 of 33 Parents met A.T. when she was placed at Coyote Hill Christian Children’s

Home as a ward of the State of Missouri. While placed at Coyote Hill, A.T.

had “struggled with behavioral issues including sexually acting out on others,

excessive self-masturbation, property destruction, bullying children at school,

extreme attention-seeking, and excessive lying including false allegations of

prior sexual abuse by biological father with brother’s knowledge of it

happening.” Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 8. She had been diagnosed with

post-traumatic stress disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, attention deficit

hyperactivity disorder, anxiety disorder, and reactive attachment disorder and

had been prescribed various medications.

[3] Despite being aware of A.T.’s mental-health and behavioral issues, Parents

adopted A.T. and her brother in 2015. A.T. has, at times, demonstrated

problematic and violent behavior since her adoption by Parents and has, at

times, received both inpatient and out-patient treatment for her mental-health

diagnoses. In 2016, after consultation with A.T.’s then-support team, Parents

took A.T. off of her prescribed medications, and A.T. experienced a period of

stability. However, by 2019, A.T.’s condition had deteriorated such that her

then-support team had recommended that she again be medicated.

Additionally, at some point, A.T. “began to report seeing an entity named

Samuel with her at times,” producing “letters she claimed were from Samuel,

drafted in her own handwriting.” Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 11.

[4] A.T. “was admitted to two acute emergency psychiatric stays during” August of

2020. Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 12. Beginning in September of 2020,

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-JC-3051 | August 23, 2023 Page 3 of 33 A.T. received residential treatment from Resource for “nine and a half (9½)

months.” Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 12. While at Resource, A.T.

displayed “dangerous self-harming behaviors, aggression toward peers, [and

would] inappropriately manipulate situations and cross boundaries to get her

way. She sexually acted out with peers, displayed suicidal ideation, threatened

to kill her therapist and attempted to physically harm [her] therapist.”

Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 12. A.T. was discharged from Resource on

July 19, 2021, without successfully completing her programming “due to

Medicaid terminating funding for the private placement.” Appellant B.T.’s

App. Vol. II p. 13. Following A.T.’s discharge from Resource, the family was

referred to DCS for community wrap-around services. In the months that

followed, A.T. continued to engage in problematic, sometimes violent behavior.

[5] On October 4, 2021, following another incident involving A.T., Parents brought

her to their local DCS office. Parents reported that A.T. had threatened to kill

her adult sibling and had threatened to harm them. Parents indicated that they

wanted A.T. “to go to a facility” and A.T. indicated that she did “not feel safe

in [Parents’] home.” Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 57. As of October 4,

2021, A.T. had been diagnosed with “Reactive Attachment Disorder,

Dysregulated Mood Disorder, ODD, ADHD, and Anxiety. [A.T. was] on

medications and participating in wrap around services through DCS.”

Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 57.

[6] While at the DCS office, Parents met with DCS representatives who were a part

of A.T.’s family-care team, with whom they eventually agreed to a safety plan

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 22A-JC-3051 | August 23, 2023 Page 4 of 33 that would have A.T. transported to a hospital for a risk assessment, with

Parents following behind in a separate vehicle. However, after the members of

A.T.’s family-care team left the DCS offices, a DCS supervisor, who was not a

part of A.T.’s family-care team, “overrode the agreed on safety plan and instead

had the [family-case managers] advise Parents they had to agree to take Child

home with them or DCS would charge them with abandonment.” Appellant

B.T.’s App. Vol. II pp. 16–17 (emphasis in original, internal quotation omitted).

[7] DCS removed A.T. from Parents’ home and, two days later, on October 6,

2021, filed a petition alleging that A.T. is a CHINS pursuant to Indiana Code

section 31-34-1-1. A.T. was initially placed in two different foster homes,

before being placed in “residential placement at Oaklawn Psychiatric Center.”

Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 17. A.T.’s placement in each of the foster

homes failed due to A.T.’s “verbal and physical aggression and violent physical

behavior” as, in both homes, A.T. “threatened physical harm or to kill foster

placement’s family members and laid hands on foster placement or foster

placement’s family members in anger.” Appellant B.T.’s App. Vol. II p. 17.

A.T.

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