In Re Ashley E.

854 A.2d 893, 158 Md. App. 144, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 114
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 20, 2004
Docket1907, Sept. Term, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 854 A.2d 893 (In Re Ashley E.) 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 Ashley E., 854 A.2d 893, 158 Md. App. 144, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 114 (Md. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

DEBORAH S. EYLER, J.

The Circuit Court for Montgomery County, sitting as the juvenile court, issued orders changing the permanency plans for four children of Toisha B., the appellant, from reunification to termination of parental rights/adoption. This appeal challenges the decision underlying those orders. The Montgom *146 ery County Department of Health and Human Services (“Department”) is the appellee in this Court. The appellant’s questions presented, as combined and reworded, are:

I. Did the juvenile court err by denying her motion to sequester witnesses and otherwise failing to strictly apply the Maryland Rules of Evidence in the permanency plan review hearing?
II. Did the juvenile court err by refusing to exclude non-parties from the courtroom?
III. Did the juvenile court err in changing the children’s permanency plans from reunification to adoption when the evidence was insufficient to show that the Department had made reasonable efforts to reunify the appellant with the children?

For the following reasons, we shall affirm the orders of the juvenile court. 1

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

I.

The children in this case are Gregory B.-G., born August 6, 1993 (now 10 years old); Matthew B., born August 26, 1994 (now 9 years old); Laione D., born December 6, 1995 (now 8 years old); and Ashley E., born November 24, 1997 (now 6 years old). The appellant is the children’s biological mother. She has identified putative fathers for the children. According to the appellant, the children all have different fathers.

The children and the appellant first came to the attention of the Department in the late summer of 2001, when they were *147 living in Rockville. The appellant contacted the Department because she thought she was going to be incarcerated on an outstanding warrant (which did not happen). The Department assisted the family financially; located a temporary shelter for them when, later that year, they became homeless; arranged medical treatment for Gregory for a mass on his vocal cord; and twice placed the children in temporary foster care when the appellant was hospitalized for complications of a difficult pregnancy (which ended in a miscarriage).

On January 31, 2002, Laione, then 6, told her first grade teacher that “her dad” had “pushed [her] down and stuck a .. . beer bottle in [her] butthole.” The teacher immediately made a report of suspected child sexual abuse to the Department’s Child Protective Services unit. The teacher stated that Laione was upset and crying when she made the disclosure, that she demonstrated the position in which she had been restrained when the abuse happened, and that she was having problems in school, specifically with exhibiting sexually inappropx-iate behavior. In addition, the teacher reported that Laione wore dirty clothes to school, smelled bad from lack of proper hygiene, and urinated or defecated on herself daily, usually immediately before leaving school to go home.

The Department interviewed Laione. Using anatomically correct dolls, she demonstrated that a male family member, whom she identified as “Sean,” had put his penis in her mouth. Laione then described her mother’s sexual activities to the social worker; in doing so, she spontaneously got on a cot in the interview room and imitated her mother’s actions and sounds when engaged in sexual intercourse.

The next day, the appellant brought all four children to the Department for interviews. Laione denied having “sa[id] anything about penises in the mouth” the day before but then talked about Ashley and Gregory “sexing.” Gregory denied any sexual contact, but demonstrated a “horsie” game he played with the girls, which was sexual in nature. (The social worker did not interview Matthew and Ashley that day because the children were too tired.)

*148 At the social worker’s direction, the appellant took the children to the Sexual Abuse and Assault Center at Shady Grove Hospital to be examined. Laione’s physical examination revealed signs of “chronic vaginal penetration” and that the “circumference around the anus and the area around the vaginal opening [were] colored with ... magic marker.” The forensic nurse concluded from the precision of the markings and the fact that they would have caused pain that they were not self-inflicted. Laione told the nurse that “Sean” put a beer bottle in her vagina; she later said that a glass had been inserted. She denied having had sex with anyone, saying: “nobody’s ever sexed me because I’m too ugly.” She reported that Gregory did “nasty stuff” and that Ashley had “stopped doing that nasty stuff.”

When the social worker confronted the appellant about her children’s medical and behavioral problems, she denied them and became angry and defensive. She blamed the children’s problems on the school system and told the social worker she was going to move out of the country. Later, the appellant did not bring Matthew and Ashley to scheduled interviews, and complained that the investigation was ongoing. The appellant did not respond to the social worker’s offer to schedule the inteiviews at an evening time convenient to the appellant’s work schedule.

Apparently, during this period, the appellant was sexually involved with two men: “Big Gregory” and “Monte,” Ashley’s putative father. When the appellant told the social worker that the men were no longer having contact with the children, the Department transferred the case to the intensive family services unit, which provided a parent aide several times a week.

That arrangement lasted until April 22, 2002, when Laione made another sexual abuse disclosure to her teacher. Laione told the teacher that she had seen her mother “sexing it up” with two men in the bathroom; and when the three adults moved to another room “to do it harder,” her mother told her to “come join in” and watch Big Gregory perform a sex act *149 upon her. Laione quoted her mother, using explicit adult sexual language that would not be in the ordinary vocabulary of a young child. When the teacher suggested to Laione that they speak to the school counselor, Laione screamed and begged the teacher not to tell for fear that the appellant would kill her. Laione also told the teacher that Big Gregory had banged Gregory’s head against a wall.

That day, the teacher made a second report of sexual abuse to the Child Protective Services unit, and the children were placed in emergency shelter care and interviewed. Laione at iirst was fearful, saying that what had happened was a “secret” she was “afraid to tell” and that it was none of the social worker’s business. She then spelled out the word “sex” and described her mother and Big Gregory and Monte “in the bathroom ... sexing” with their clothes off. She talked about a time when the appellant and Big Gregory were in bed and the appellant, seeing her in the room, asked her to join in and perform a sex act. Again, Laione quoted her mother by using explicit adult sexual language. Laione also described seeing Gregory in the closet with Ashley, “sexing,” and said that afterward Ashley complained, “My poo-poo hurts.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
854 A.2d 893, 158 Md. App. 144, 2004 Md. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ashley-e-mdctspecapp-2004.