Hampton v. Williams

2023 IL App (1st) 220942-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 11, 2023
Docket1-22-0942
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 220942-U (Hampton v. Williams) 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
Hampton v. Williams, 2023 IL App (1st) 220942-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 220942-U

SIXTH DIVISION August 11, 2023

No. 1-22-0942

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).

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

CHERUN HAMPTON, ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court Petitioner-Appellee, ) of Cook County, ) v. ) No. 13 D 650572 ) MARK WILLIAMS, ) Honorable ) Fredrick H. Bates and Respondent-Appellant. ) Karen J. Bowes, ) Judges Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court. Justices C.A. Walker and Tailor concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We affirm and remand with directions. The circuit court did not err in entering an ex parte emergency order of protection without giving notice to respondent or without the presence of a court reporter, but the emergency order of protection has been extended for over three years and a hearing on the plenary order of protection should be conducted as soon as reasonably possible.

¶2 The orders that underlie this appeal are two ex parte emergency orders entered by the

circuit court on January 27, 2020. The first order was an emergency order of protection against

respondent Mark Williams, filed by petitioner Cherun Hampton on behalf of herself, their then

nine-year-old son, and her older son from another relationship. The second order was an No. 1-22-0942

“emergency order” suspending Mr. Williams’s parenting time with his son. Since January 2020,

the emergency order of protection has been extended, and the hearing on the plenary order of

protection continued. Mr. Williams’s timely interlocutory appeal, in which he is self-represented,

is from an order entered on March 30, 2022, again extending the emergency order of protection,

and temporarily denying Mr. Williams’s any parenting time with his son. For the following

reasons, we affirm but remand with directions.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 This case involves a highly contentious multi-year battle between Ms. Hampton and Mr.

Williams regarding the custody and parenting of their minor son, whom we will refer to as D. We

discussed the history of this case through August 2018 in a prior appeal, Hampton v. Williams,

2019 IL App (1st) 181894-U, and provide here only an overview of the facts relevant to this appeal.

¶5 In May 2014, Mr. Williams’s paternity over D. was established, and in December 2015,

the parties entered into a lengthy and detailed custody judgment and parenting agreement. Id. ¶ 6.

The agreement gave Ms. Hampton sole custody and made her home D.’s prime residence. Id. Mr.

Williams was the non-custodial parent with parenting time on alternate weekends from Friday

afternoon through Monday morning, and alternate weekdays from Wednesday afternoon through

Friday morning, along with various holiday time. But even before the agreement was reached, Mr.

Williams expressed concern about D. living with Ms. Hampton due to his concerns about her older

son, D.J., D.’s half-brother. Id. Starting in 2016, Mr. Williams made specific allegations that D.

was being abused by D.J., and has continued to make similar allegations. Id. Ms. Hampton has

consistently denied these allegations, accused Mr. Williams of coaching D., and claimed Mr.

Williams filed multiple false reports with the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services

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(DCFS), all of which were unfounded by the agency. Id. ¶ 7. This conflict has led to both parties

filing multiple petitions, emergency motions, and other requests for relief, which have in turn

resulted in multiple changes to the parenting schedule. Id. ¶¶ 9-32.

¶6 On August 22, 2018, the circuit court ordered that the December 2015 parenting agreement

was to resume. In addition, the court ordered Ms. Hampton to keep D. enrolled in behavioral

therapy and psychotherapy, to enroll D.J. “in a program to assess whether he pose[d] any risk to

the minor child, or have him reside with his grandmother as previously proposed,” and to “not

under any circumstance leave [D.J.] alone with [D.]”

¶7 Mr. Williams initially appealed from that order and from another in which the court refused

to discharge the guardian ad litem then assigned to the case, and we affirmed the court’s rulings.

Id. ¶ 2.

¶8 On January 27, 2020, Ms. Hampton filed two emergency motions. In the first, a petition

for an emergency order of protection, Ms. Hampton alleged that she, D., and D.J. needed protection

from abuse by Mr. Williams. Ms. Hampton accused Mr. Williams of threatening to harm her and

D.J., and of bullying D. She said she “fear[ed] for [her] and [her] kids[’] safety and mental well

being.” As a remedy, Ms. Hampton requested that Mr. Williams should be ordered to stay away

from her, D., and D.J. Ms. Hampton also asked that Mr. Williams’s visitation be temporarily

suspended because he had “used court and DCFS to harass [her] and [her] family and bullied [their]

son into saying he was abused.” Ms. Hampton insisted that during police and forensic interviews

when his father was not present, D. told the truth.

¶9 In the second, an emergency motion to modify Mr. Williams’s visitation with D., Ms.

Hampton alleged that there was an open DCFS report because Mr. Williams “reported neglect and

-3- No. 1-22-0942

sexual abuse on 1/24/20 for the exact same allegations that have been unfounded previously on 3

separate occasions in which he alleged that [D.] was sexually abused.” Ms. Hampton said she

signed a two-week safety plan on January 24, 2020, calling for D. “to stay with a family member

until the police investigation and forensic questioning of [their] son [was] complete to prevent [D.]

from going to protective custody over false allegations.” Amongst other things, Ms. Hampton

accused Mr. Williams of coaching D. to say he had been abused, alleged that she feared for D.’s

safety and mental health, and said she believed Mr. Williams would “continue to bully our son

[D.] into lying so that the investigation may turn out in his favor. In order to allow our son [D.] the

opportunity to tell the truth without being intimidated by his father it is extremely important that

he is not granted visitation during this time.”

¶ 10 On January 27, 2020, Judge Fredrick H. Bates entered an emergency order of protection.

In the order, the court found that Ms. Hampton, D., and D.J. were protected persons, granted

physical care and possession of D. to Ms. Hampton, and ordered Mr. Williams to have “no contact

of any kind” with Ms. Hampton, D., or D.J. The matter of his visitation rights was “reserved,” but

with no contact until further order of the court. On the same day, the court also granted Ms.

Hampton’s motion to suspend Mr. Williams’s parenting time, finding that she had “established

that the factors set forth in 750 ILCS 5/602.7(b) [best interest factors for “Allocation of parental

responsibilities; parenting time”] and 603.10(a) [“Restriction of parental responsibilities”] [we]re

present in this case.”

¶ 11 On February 14, 2020, Mr. Williams’s attorney requested a continuance to prepare for the

hearing on the plenary order of protection. In a written order entered that same day, Judge Bates

explained in detail why he had granted Ms. Hampton’s emergency motion to modify parenting

-4- No. 1-22-0942

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