Gates v. Texas Deparment of Protective & Regulatory Services

537 F.3d 404, 2008 WL 2875378
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 31, 2008
Docket06-20763
StatusPublished
Cited by353 cases

This text of 537 F.3d 404 (Gates v. Texas Deparment of Protective & Regulatory Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gates v. Texas Deparment of Protective & Regulatory Services, 537 F.3d 404, 2008 WL 2875378 (5th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PRADO, Circuit Judge:

Before us is an appeal of a district court’s decision to dismiss a family’s claims against various governmental entities and employees who allegedly performed unconstitutional child abuse investigations. For the following reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

*412 I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Gary and Melissa Gates are the parents of thirteen children — two biological (Sarah and Will) and eleven adopted (George, Scott, Derodrick, Travis, Raquel, Cynthia, Cassandra, Timothy, Andrew, Alexis, and Marcus). 1 The Gateses believe that the Texas Department of Protective and Regulatory Services (“TDPRS”) 2 and Fort Bend County (“Fort Bend”), along with employees of each, violated their constitutional rights when conducting several child abuse investigations of the Gates family.

A First Incident-February 11, 2000

Gary and Melissa adopted siblings Scott, Derodrick, Travis, and Raquel through TDPRS in 1997. Travis had a severe attachment disorder and an eating disorder that caused him to steal and gorge on food. Travis’s teachers at his school in the Lamar Consolidated Independent School District (“LCISD”) were aware of this problem and had to monitor Travis closely, as he would frequently steal food from students and teachers. Indeed, Travis’s school files contain documentation of dozens of instances of food theft by Travis. In addition to that, Gary and LCISD disagreed about how to best educate Travis overall, and the dispute culminated in a “heated” Admission, Review, and Dismissal meeting between Gary and LCISD personnel on February 10, 2000.

Also on February 10, Gary and Melissa discovered that Travis, who was ten years old at the time, had stolen food from the kitchen, including two boxes of fig bars that he ate in the attic. He had also played with matches while in the attic. In an attempt to make Travis understand the seriousness of his conduct, Gary put the fig bar wrappers in a baggie and pinned it to Travis’s shirt. Gary said it was the first time Travis had shown genuine remorse for his actions, so Gary decided to make Travis wear the baggie filled with wrappers to school on February 11. Gary included a note in the baggie that explained his reason for the punishment and invited LCISD to contact him if it had any questions.

At 8:31 a.m. on February 11, Tiffany Bezdek (“Bezdek”), a Statewide Intake Specialist with TDPRS, received a call on the Abuse/Neglect Hotline from an individual at LCISD (“the reporter”) regarding Travis. According to the Call Narrative, the reporter stated as follows:

• Travis had been forced by his father to wear food wrappers stapled to his clothes as a punishment for stealing food from home.

• Travis was not allowed to attend the Valentine’s Day parties or eat any food from school.

• Travis had a severe emotional disturbance and eating disorder.

• Travis was in a strict setting at school because Gary would not treat him medically.

• Gary was “very religious and very controlling” and weighed Travis each day, forcing him to work off any extra pounds.

• Gary once punished Travis for stealing food by requiring him to move bricks from one pile to another.

• One year ago, Gary punished Travis for stealing food by handcuffing him to his bed for a day.

Based on this information, Bezdek classified the report as Priority 1. TDPRS is *413 supposed to classify reports as Priority 1 when the reports “concern children who appear to face an immediate risk of abuse or neglect that could result in death or serious harm.” 40 Tex. Admin. Code § 700.505 (2007). 3 TDPRS must investigate Priority 1 reports within twenty-four hours. Id.

Because of the Priority 1 designation, TDPRS dispatched Defendant-Appellee Erika Davis (“Davis”), a TDPRS investigator, to interview Travis at his school. Upon arriving, Davis noticed that Travis “had a mark on his hand and a mark on his face somewhere.” Davis decided to take Travis to the Child Advocacy Center (“the CAC”) for a videotaped interview. The CAC was established pursuant to Chapter 264, Subchapter E, of the Texas Family Code. The goal of the CAC is to coordinate child abuse investigations among the various branches of government, including TDPRS, county law enforcement, and the district attorney, so that children will not experience the trauma of multiple investigations from the different governmental entities. Thus, for example, a CAC worker may conduct one interview of a child that can then be used by any branch of government, rather than each entity conducting its own interview.

Upon arrival at the CAC, Travis was interviewed by CAC worker Bonnie Martin (“Martin”). Travis told her that, following Gary’s discovery that Travis had been stealing food, Gary pushed and kicked Travis, made Travis sit in the “chair position” with his back against the wall, and run up and down stairs until his legs hurt. Travis further stated that Gary’s punishments in the past included drinking “throw up” medicine, running, and moving bricks. Travis also said he had been spanked with a board before.

Prior to Travis’s interview with Martin, Davis learned that Travis had twelve other siblings. Davis informed her supervisors at TDPRS of this fact, and Jerry Polasek (“Polasek”), a TDPRS supervisor, sent TDPRS employees Amy Odin (“Odin”) and Sherrece Haywood (“Haywood”), along with TDPRS trainees Lisa Matthews (“Matthews”) and Laura Ramirez (“Ramirez”), to interview Will, George, and Scott at their schools. Polasek, Odin, Haywood, Matthews, and Ramirez are all Defendants-Appellees in this action.

According to Will, George, and Scott, Gary was the disciplinarian in the family. His punishments included requiring the children to sit in the chair position against a wall (sometimes with weights in their laps), move boards and bricks around the driveway, and run (both for punishment and for exercise). The smaller children were spanked with a belt. Will and Scott stated that Gary had handcuffed Travis to his bed in the past to keep him from stealing food. Scott also stated that Gary pushed Travis down when he found out about Travis stealing the fig bars. After reporting this information to their TDPRS supervisors, Odin, Haywood, Matthews, and Ramirez went to lunch.

At approximately 1:30 p.m., Davis took Travis from the CAC to the TDPRS offices. She then called Gary to inform him that TDPRS had interviewed Travis and to request permission to interview his other children. Gary denied permission to interview his children and arrived at the TDPRS offices ten minutes later to discuss *414 the matter. TDPRS did not tell him that Travis was in the building.

In the meantime, Polasek called Odin, Haywood, Matthews, and Ramirez while they were at lunch and told them to go to the Gateses’ home and interview the remaining children. Before arriving at the Gateses’ home, Odin called for non-emergency support from the Fort Bend Sheriffs Department.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
537 F.3d 404, 2008 WL 2875378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-texas-deparment-of-protective-regulatory-services-ca5-2008.