D.R. v. Superior Court CA2/8

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 21, 2024
DocketB335013
StatusUnpublished

This text of D.R. v. Superior Court CA2/8 (D.R. v. Superior Court CA2/8) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.R. v. Superior Court CA2/8, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 5/21/24 D.R. v. Superior Court CA2/8 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION EIGHT

D.R., B335013 Petitioner, Los Angeles County v. Super. Ct. No. 22CCJP04657A THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS ANGELES COUNTY, Respondent; LOS ANGELES COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY SERVICES Real Party in Interest.

ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS in mandate. Tiana J. Murillo, Judge. Petition denied. Children’s Law Center and Sarah Liebowitz for Petitioner. The Law Office of Emily Berger, Los Angeles Dependency Lawyers, Inc., and Dominika Anna Campbell for Rebecca E. (Mother) as Joinder on behalf of Petitioner. No appearance for Respondent. Dawyn R. Harrison, County Counsel, Kim Nemoy, Assistant County Counsel, and Jessica Buckelew, Deputy County Counsel, for Real Party in Interest. ********** INTRODUCTION Juvenile dependent D.R., through his counsel, filed in this court a petition for extraordinary writ seeking review of the juvenile court’s order terminating family reunification services and setting a Welfare and Institutions Code1 section 366.26 hearing (setting order) for June 4, 2024. D.R. fails to show error in the juvenile court’s order. His petition is therefore denied. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND D.R. was born in November 2022 to mother Rebecca E. and a father whose whereabouts were then unknown. D.R. was detained from mother at birth after testing positive for fentanyl. The juvenile court sustained a petition based on D.R.’s positive drug test and mother’s history of drug use and abuse. The court ordered D.R. removed. He was initially placed in a foster home and later moved to the home of maternal grandparents. At no point has he lived with mother. Father disclaimed any interest in the proceedings below. D.R. is not mother’s only child. He has an older half sister. A March 2021 child welfare referral concerning half sister alleged mother smoked fentanyl pills in the family home and had been addicted to fentanyl for the past two years. The Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (Department) investigated and mother denied substance abuse but failed to submit to drug testing for the Department. The case evaluated out after half sister’s father obtained full custody through the family court. He won custody after mother submitted—after six months delay and multiple family court orders—to drug testing in November 2021. Her test was positive for fentanyl. Half sister’s father told the Department that mother had been using drugs for five to six years, that after he and mother separated, in about 2017, mother became

1 All undesignated statutory references as to the Welfare and Institutions Code. 2 romantically involved with a drug dealer, and that both maternal aunts also use drugs. Public records corroborate mother’s history of drug use and involvement in the drug trade. In December 2018, she was arrested in Chatsworth with the drug dealer half sister’s father mentioned. Mother appeared to be under the influence and police discovered in their car a loaded gun, large quantities of heroin, Oxycodone and cocaine, and almost $10,000 in cash. In March 2022, eight months before D.R.’s birth, mother was arrested in North Carolina following a traffic stop. She, father, and another man were found in a vehicle with fentanyl pills and more than $20,000 in cash. Mother was freed on bail after this arrest on the condition that she enter a rehabilitation program. She left her rehabilitation program after one night and was then “ ‘ “missing” ’ ” for 90 days. Mother has minimized her drug history. After D.R. tested positive for fentanyl at birth, mother claimed she had been to rehab and sober for a year until, just a few weeks prior, she tried to treat a toothache by rubbing cocaine on her gums. That cocaine, she reasoned, must have contained fentanyl and caused D.R.’s positive test. (D.R. tested negative for cocaine.) Upon D.R.’s detention, the juvenile court ordered the Department to provide fentanyl and other drug testing referrals for mother. Mother failed to appear for her first test in November 2022. Her second test was February 2023 and she refused to provide an adequate sample. Two days later, she tested positive for fentanyl. Three days after that, she tested positive again at a higher concentration. She missed her scheduled test about two weeks later; three days after the missed test, she tested positive at a concentration higher than the previous test. Mother disputed the results. She insisted she was not using drugs and the positive tests must have been caused by her touching drug residue while cleaning. She said “[i]f I was going to have a dirty test I would just do a no-show because it counts as the same as a

3 dirty.” She claimed she was testing for the sober living facility where she was staying and all of her tests had been negative. The Department was unable to verify mother’s claims with the sober living facility. Upon D.R.’s removal, the juvenile court ordered family reunification services for mother. These included a full drug/alcohol program with aftercare; random and on-demand weekly drug/alcohol testing, including for fentanyl; a 12-step program with court card and sponsor; and individual counseling to address case issues, including substance abuse. According to mother, she would not drug test for the Department because the Department’s testing site did not let her watch as her urine sample was analyzed. She said she would begin testing for the Department once she enrolled in a drug treatment program with parallel testing. She began an outpatient program in May 2023. She checked into a sober living home in June for a scheduled six- month stay. But in August, she was still making excuses for not testing for the Department. A letter from her outpatient program stated she “provided test results on 7/19/2023 and 7/24/2023” which were “negative.” The letter did not specify that testing was for fentanyl. Mother withdrew from this program a few months later. At the six-month review hearing in September 2023, the juvenile court found mother was not in substantial compliance with her case plan. Though it recognized she was making progress, the court emphasized mother needed to test for the Department, reiterating that it was “a court order”; that the directive was not to punish mother but to help her grasp the scope of her disorder; and that the court might consider accepting program testing in lieu of Department testing in the future, but it would need “to be able to have access and see the tests.” The court again ordered mother to test for the Department. Mother failed to heed the juvenile court’s order. At the start of the 12-month review hearing in January 2024, she still

4 had not tested for the Department since her series of positive tests in February 2023. In advance of the hearing, her inpatient program gave the Department a summary, dated December 20, 2023, of results from eight drug tests administered in fall 2023 showing mother tested negative for various drugs.2 The summary contained no reference to testing for fentanyl. An accompanying letter stated mother had “passed a total of 27 drug tests.” The program also noted, without explanation, that mother’s expected completion date was pushed back from December 2023 to February 2024. The juvenile court inquired with mother’s counsel about why she had ignored the order to take fentanyl tests for the Department.

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D.R. v. Superior Court CA2/8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-v-superior-court-ca28-calctapp-2024.