In re: Adoption of K'amora K.

97 A.3d 169, 218 Md. App. 287, 2014 WL 3778355, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 1, 2014
Docket2213/13
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 A.3d 169 (In re: Adoption of K'amora K.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Adoption of K'amora K., 97 A.3d 169, 218 Md. App. 287, 2014 WL 3778355, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 83 (Md. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

NAZARIAN, J.

The Circuit Court for Baltimore City terminated Keisha K.’s (“Mother”) parental rights vis-a-vis her daughter, K’Amora, via a rarely used analytical path: the court found by clear and convincing evidence that “exceptional circumstances” justified the termination of Mother’s parental rights and that termination served K’Amora’s best interests, without deciding *289 whether or not Mother was unfit to serve as her parent. After a hearing (the “TPR Hearing”), the court grounded its finding of exceptional circumstances in: (1) Mother’s refusal to allow physicians to administer medication to K’Amora after she was born exposed to human immunodeficiency virus (“HIV”); (2) nearly two years of comprehensive but unsuccessful efforts by the Baltimore City Department of Social Services (“DSS”) to involve Mother in K’Amora’s life and assess Mother’s ability to parent her; (3) Mother’s historical inability to provide a safe environment for her other children; and (4) K’Amora’s positive and healthy experience with her foster family. Mother challenges the termination decision and we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

K’Amora was born on February 16, 2012 and, as the testimony at the TPR Hearing revealed, needed help immediately. As social worker Catherine Miller testified, right after K’Amora’s birth Mother—who was HIV-positive and had a “high HTV viral load” at the time—refused HIV medication for herself and for K’Amora, even though doctors advised her that K’Amora’s risk of contracting HIV from in útero exposure would fall “almost down to zero” with treatment. To compound the problem, Mother expressed irrational and inconsistent reasons for refusing treatment: 1

[Sjometimes she would tell us that she didn’t want to take the medications because she needed to take them on a full stomach.... And then the next time the medications were due, she would say that she couldn’t take them because she needed to take them on an empty stomach. And the conversations would just go around and around, with no successful outcome.

*290 Mother acted erratically in the hospital in other ways. She called the police to the hospital at least three times, claiming that the staff were “trying to kidnap her baby, and lying about her.” Because of concerns about K’Amora’s safety, hospital staff placed a “sitter” (a “professional who sits in the room to ensure ... the baby’s safety”) in Mother’s hospital room. Ms. Miller summed up Mother’s disposition by describing her as “argumentative, irrational and difficult to work with,” and hospital staff ultimately called DSS for an Emergency Family Involvement Meeting (“FIM”).

Tricia Fayall, a child protective service worker at DSS, received Ms. Miller’s report and oversaw the FIM at the hospital, the result of which was that “because of [Mother’s] mental state, ... we thought that it would be best for [K’Amora] to go into foster care.” It would be an understatement to say that the FIM did not go smoothly: “[Mother] called the police on us, while we were there. And then she called the police on the police, while we were there.” Mother evidently believed that Ms. Fayall (or hospital staff, it’s not clear which) were “trying to take her baby ... right then and there,” but called the police a second time because she felt that the responding officers were not “doing their job.”

Six days after K’Amora was born, DSS placed her in the care of a foster family, 2 and Mother had weekly supervised visitation opportunities. Priscilla Iwuanyanwu, the assigned case worker beginning in March 2012, oversaw K’Amora’s placement and visits with Mother; she knew Mother because *291 she had also overseen the care of Mother’s three other children, whom we discuss below. Unfortunately, Mother’s erratic behavior continued. Of her sixty-one scheduled visits with K’Amora, she missed twenty-seven. She changed her phone number frequently and never kept DSS abreast of her whereabouts. And although Mother signed two service agreements with DSS, she refused to sign the third, which would have run from February 26, 2013 to August 29, 2013.

The visits Mother did attend failed to blossom into a healthy parent-child relationship. When K’Amora cried at visits, and she often did, Mother became angry, frustrated, and confused. Mother expressed reluctance to take K’Amora out of her car seat and was known to leave a visit early if K’Amora did not settle down quickly. As K’Amora advanced from infancy to toddlerhood, Ms. Iwuanyanwu saw no bond form between them, and expressed concern that Mother took pictures of K’Amora rather than interacting with her. At one point, Mother even seemed to deny being K’Amora’s mother:

Most of the time she comes to visit, she’s kind of quiet. She don’t say nothing. If I try to tell her to try to interact with her child, she would tell me, well, it’s your child. That’s not my child. I’m just here to visit.

(Emphasis added.) Mother’s behavior at visits ranged from quiet to volatile; at one point she accused Ms. Iwuanyanwu of hitting K’Amora, and on another occasion suggested that K’Amora’s foster mother had been breast-feeding her (even though she had no reason to think this was the case). Ms. Iwuanyanwu expressed frustration that Mother seemed to make no effort to bond with her daughter, and DSS remained uncomfortable with the prospect of K’Amora living with her.

Sharmika Spence, a Team Administrator with DSS, covered for Ms. Iwuanyanwu and supervised two of Mother’s visits with K’Amora. In January 2013, Mother complained at a visit that K’Amora was upset and crying because her hair had been styled too tightly (even though Ms. Spence didn’t believe that was the case). Ms. Spence recalled that Mother “seemed to not know what to do” in response to K’Amora’s crying. *292 Although K’Amora ultimately settled down, Ms. Spence expressed the belief that she did so because she “wore herself out,” not because Mother succeeded in comforting her. Ms. Spence saw “no observation of a real bond of how a child would respond when they are familiar with someone and can be consoled.”

Ms. Spence supervised another visit in which Mother not only couldn’t connect with K’Amora, but blamed her crying on her foster parents’ neglecting to feed her—even though Ms. Spence observed that K’Amora was of an appropriate height and weight, and DSS never had any concerns about her health or the quality of her foster family’s care. Mother ended that particular visit early, and Ms. Spence observed that Mother again seemed unable to handle K’Amora’s fussiness. Ms. Spence also related an episode in which Mother called her into a visit and complained about a bruise on K’Amora’s thigh that the social worker explained came from an immunization. Mother insisted that the bruise resulted from abuse at the hands of K’Amora’s foster parents, and she contacted police. The police then required that a physician investigate, and Child Protective Services ruled out the possibility of any abuse (consistent with K’Amora’s medical records, which showed a recent immunization).

Overall, Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.3d 169, 218 Md. App. 287, 2014 WL 3778355, 2014 Md. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-adoption-of-kamora-k-mdctspecapp-2014.