Ibaq Mohamed v. Dshs

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 4, 2019
Docket77885-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ibaq Mohamed v. Dshs (Ibaq Mohamed v. Dshs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ibaq Mohamed v. Dshs, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

IBAQ MOHAMED, No. 77885-4-1

Appellant, DIVISION ONE

V. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES,

Respondent. FILED: March 4, 2019

CHUN, J. — lbaq Mohamed appeals from a superior court ruling upholding

a Board of Appeals decision that she physically abused H.J.,1 a vulnerable adult.

Mohamed contends that the Board of Appeals review judge improperly prejudged

the case based on the superior court's prior entry of a protection order against

her. However, the Board of Appeals review judge followed the superior court's

mandate on remand and deliberately reviewed the evidence without considering

the protection order. And substantial evidence in the record supports the finding

of abuse. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

In January 2014, 79-year old H.J. visited her primary care physician.

Based on concerns about H.J.'s level of stress and her living situation, H.J.'s

doctor referred her to Dr. Anya Zimberoff, who is a doctor of clinical psychology

1 We use the vulnerable adult's initials, H.J., to protect her privacy. No. 77885-4-1/2

and a mental health treatment provider. H.J. visited Dr. Zimberoff the same day,

accompanied by her granddaughter. H.J. speaks Somali and she communicated

with Dr. Zimberoff through her granddaughter.

H.J. was living in an apartment and required in-home assistance for daily

tasks. H.J.'s grandson, Gasle,2 had agreed to provide care in exchange for

housing. For this reason, H.J. included him on her Section 8 housing application.

Gasle was involved in a relationship with lbaq Mohamed and they had a child

together.3

H.J. reported to Dr. Zimberoff that she was increasingly "stressed out" by

the behavior and demands of her grandson and Mohamed. H.J. described

several incidents that distressed her. For instance, about 10 months earlier

when the couple argued, H.J. tried to intervene, and Mohamed hit H.J. forcefully

in the chest and caused her to fall to the ground. H.J. said that on another

occasion, Mohamed threatened her with physical violence and told her she might

lose her subsidized housing and end up homeless. According to Dr. Zimberoff,

H.J. appeared to be "anguished" over the situation because she wanted to

protect her family, but at the same time, she felt afraid and betrayed.

Dr. Zimberoff reported her concerns about abuse of a vulnerable adult to Adult

Protective Services (APS), a division of the Department of Social and Health

Services (the Department).

2 Because he shares a last name with H.J., we refer to Gasle by his first name to protect the victim's privacy. 3 Gasle and Mohamed were married in a religious ceremony, but not legally married.

2 No. 77885-4-1/3

APS social worker Marleen Aguon investigated the report. In the course

of her investigation, Aguon interviewed H.J. with the assistance of a Somali

interpreter. She also interviewed Dr. Zimberoff, H.J.'s granddaughter, H.J.'s

neighbor, and Mohamed. She attempted to interview Gasle, but was unable to

reach him. H.J. told Aguon about the incident when Mohamed hit her and

caused her to fall. H.J. reported that the police responded and arrested

Mohamed as a result of the incident and that medics took her to the hospital.

She told Aguon that she experienced pain for several days afterward. H.J.

described another incident when Mohamed yelled at her and blamed her for

causing an argument between her and Gasle. H.J. described a third incident

when Mohamed yelled at her about the Section 8 housing application, threatened

to make a false accusation against her, and told her she would "suffer the

consequences of being homeless." H.J. said she felt "terrorized" in her own

home.

H.J. told Aguon that she had taken some steps to protect herself, including

changing the locks, and asking another relative to stay with her at night in case

Mohamed and Gasle returned. H.J.'s neighbor corroborated some details of her

allegations.

Aguon also reviewed a police report describing the domestic violence

incident involving Gasle, Mohamed, and H.J. According to the report, around

midnight on March 21, 2013, Gasle called 911, claiming that Mohamed assaulted

both him and his mother. Before police officers arrived, Mohamed called 911

3 No. 77885-4-1/4

herself. Mohamed said that, in fact, Gasle assaulted her and then told his

grandmother to "fake an injury."

When police officers arrived at the apartment, they first spoke to

Mohamed. Mohamed said she was seven weeks pregnant, she came to H.J.'s

apartment to give Gasle a ride, and he slapped her in the face and then tried to

kick her down the stairs. Gasle informed the officers that Mohamed was upset

because he was not answering her telephone calls. He said that Mohamed

came to the apartment, and when he answered the front door, she struck him in

the face, causing a cut to his lip. Gasle revealed a fresh cut on his upper lip that

was bleeding slightly. Gasle said that H.J. tried to separate him and Mohamed,

and Mohamed struck his grandmother, who fell to the ground. Police officers

were unable to communicate with H.J., but observed her on the floor of the

apartment, asking for "Allah."

Because only Gasle had a visible injury, the officers determined that

Mohamed was the primary aggressor and arrested her. Once Gasle understood

that the officers intended to arrest Mohamed, he objected and refused to provide

a written statement or allow the officers to photograph his injury. Emergency

medical personnel arrived and took H.J. to the hospital for treatment.

In April 2014, at H.J.'s request, Aguon filed a petition for a Vulnerable

Adult Protection Order(VAPO)on her behalf. H.J. dictated a declaration to a

Somali interpreter, and Aguon submitted it to the court in support of the

protection order. In her declaration, H.J. said Mohamed hit her "really hard" and

then she went to the hospital in an ambulance. After a hearing in April 2014, the

4 No. 77885-4-1/5

court entered a VAPO. It expired three years later in April 2017. In issuing the

VAPO, the superior court found that Mohamed committed "acts of abandonment,

abuse, neglect, and/or financial exploitation" of a vulnerable adult. The court

further found that Mohamed represented a "credible threat" to H.J.'s physical

safety.

After completing its investigation, APS determined that Mohamed

physically and mentally abused a vulnerable adult. See RCW

74.34.020(2)(b), (c). The Department informed Mohamed of its decision and of

her right to request an administrative hearing. When she received the

Department's letter, Mohamed learned that her name would be placed on a state

registry that would preclude her from employment involving the care of

vulnerable adults or children. Mohamed requested a hearing before an

Administrative Law Judge (AU).

The Department moved to dismiss Mohamed's hearing request, arguing

that the matter of abuse was previously resolved in 2014, when the superior

court entered a VAPO restraining Mohamed and the doctrine of collateral

estoppel barred relitigation. The AUJ denied the motion. Because the VAPO did

not include specific findings setting forth the facts that served as a basis for the

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