Funk v. Illinois Department of Children and Family Services

2023 IL App (3d) 220320-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 2, 2023
Docket3-22-0320
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2023 IL App (3d) 220320-U (Funk v. Illinois Department of Children and Family Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Funk v. Illinois Department of Children and Family Services, 2023 IL App (3d) 220320-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

2023 IL App (3d) 220320-U

Order filed August 2, 2023 ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

LYNETTE FUNK, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the 12th Judicial Circuit, Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Will County, Illinois. ) v. ) Appeal No. 3-22-0320 ) Circuit No. 21-MR-809 ILLINOIS DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN ) AND FAMILY SERVICES, ) The Honorable ) John C. Anderson Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge, Presiding.

____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE McDADE delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Brennan and Hettel concurred in the judgment. ____________________________________________________________________________

ORDER

¶1 Held: The DCFS Director properly denied Lynette Funk’s request that her indicated finding for neglect be expunged from the State Central Register because: (1) the administrative proceedings did not violate her constitutional rights; and (2) the indicated finding was adequately supported by evidence showing that she drove with her minor son in the car while she was intoxicated.

¶2 The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) entered an indicated

finding for neglect after concluding that the plaintiff, Lynette Funk, drove under the influence of alcohol while her minor son, R.F., was in the car, and she sought to have the finding expunged

from the record. At the administrative hearing on her request, the administrative law judge

upheld the indicated finding as supported by the evidence. The DCFS Director subsequently

adopted those findings and conclusions and denied Funk’s request. She sought administrative

review in the trial court, which affirmed the Director’s decision.

¶3 Funk filed an appeal to this court, raising constitutional and evidentiary challenges. We

affirm.

¶4 I. BACKGROUND

¶5 DCFS entered an indicated finding of child neglect against Funk based on allegations

that in September 2019, she drove a car with her three minor children, N.F., R.F., and J.F., while

under the influence of alcohol. Funk sought removal of the neglect finding from the State Central

Register, and a DCFS administrative law judge (ALJ) held an administrative hearing in Will

County to determine whether the indicated finding was supported by credible evidence.

¶6 At that hearing, DCFS presented testimony from one witness, Anthony Ollins, who was

the Area Administrator for the agency’s Joliet and Kankakee Office for Investigations. Ollins

presented the investigative report drafted by former DCFS child protection investigator Michelle

Williams-Flowers because she and her supervisor were no longer working for DCFS at the time

of the hearing. To provide a foundation for admission of the investigation report, Ollins

explained how alleged perpetrators, victims, and other witnesses were routinely contacted as part

of an investigation after receipt of an allegation of child abuse or neglect. The information

gathered during the investigation was entered into a digital tracking system and then used to draft

an investigative report that was maintained and used in the normal course of DCFS’s business.

2 ¶7 Funk objected to the admission of Williams-Flowers’s investigative report on the grounds

of “hearsay and foundation,” arguing that it contained “hearsay upon hearsay upon hearsay and

Mr. Ollins had no direct *** link to this investigation.” In response, Ollins stated that he had

access to the report as Area Administrator, despite not being directly involved in the

investigation. He was also familiar with Williams-Flowers and her work. The ALJ admitted the

report over Funk’s objection, stating that she would “determine what weight, if any, to give any

of the hearsay information contained within the investigative file.”

¶8 Funk presented testimony from Maria Acosta at the hearing. Acosta testified that her son

attended the same school and played on the same soccer team as R.F. The two families carpooled

and sometimes attended the same social activities. Acosta recounted that she spoke to Funk for

10 or 15 minutes on September 11 while at their sons’ soccer game. During that conversation,

Funk did not exhibit any behavior indicating that she was intoxicated or had been drinking.

Acosta stated that she was familiar with the signs of intoxication because she managed a

restaurant for 20 years before becoming a bailiff.

¶9 After the soccer game, Acosta received a call from Funk. Funk was upset because R.F.

had gotten out of the car during a stop due to Funk driving the wrong car. Funk asked Acosta to

make sure R.F. was safe. Acosta stated that Funk sounded upset, but not intoxicated, during the

call. After Acosta found R.F., he told her that he had called the police because his mother was

not driving the proper car. The police subsequently permitted Acosta to take R.F. to his father’s

office. When Funk called her later, Acosta again did not think she sounded intoxicated.

¶ 10 Funk testified that she had pled guilty in 2018 to driving while under the influence of

alcohol (DUI) two years earlier and was sentenced to court supervision. As part of her plea

agreement, Funk was required to install a breathalyzer device in her vehicle. Funk and the

3 children’s father had been divorced for about a year, and tensions in the family remained high.

Funk explained that her relationship with R.F., who was 14 years old, was particularly troubled.

She had taken away his phone and video game system and grounded him multiple times for

using vapes, including vapes containing marijuana, and he had not been truthful with her. For

those reasons, she believed R.F. was upset with her that day.

¶ 11 On September 11, Funk was working in direct sales, and her boss had accompanied her

on her route. Because she was embarrassed to undergo breathalyzer tests every 30 minutes with

her boss present, Funk drove a car without that device that day. After work, she picked J.F. up at

school and went to R.F.’s soccer game. While driving with her three children after the game, she

noticed R.F. on the phone. He told her he had called 911 because she was drinking and driving.

She asked him to hang up the phone so they could talk, but he refused and attempted to get out of

the car. She pulled over to allow him to get out. She then called Acosta, asking her to check on

R.F. Funk also asked N.F. if she would drive the family, but she declined despite having a

learner’s permit. When asked directly, Funk denied drinking any alcohol that day, but she

admitted that driving a car without a breathalyzer violated the terms of her plea agreement.

¶ 12 The ALJ made a number of factual findings, concluding that a preponderance of the

evidence supported the denial of Funk’s request to expunge her indicated neglect finding. She

noted that Funk was required to drive a car with a breathalyzer installed but was driving R.F. and

his siblings in a car without that device on September 11. While in the car, R.F. observed that

they had swerved and hit a curb. When he told his mother, she became angry with him. Feeling

unsafe, R.F. called the police, which triggered a hotline call to DCFS.

¶ 13 DCFS’s investigator Williams-Flowers separately interviewed all three minors about the

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