In re A.W. CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 2025
DocketA171706
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re A.W. CA1/2 (In re A.W. CA1/2) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re A.W. CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 6/6/25 In re A.W. CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re A.W. et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

SAN FRANCISCO HUMAN SERVICES AGENCY, A171706 Plaintiff and Respondent, v. (San Francisco County Super. Ct. Nos. JD22-3070C, JD22-3070D, D.W. et al., JD22-3070E, JD22-3070F, Defendants and Appellants. JD22-3070G)

D.W. (mother) and J.W. (father) appeal from a juvenile court order terminating their parental rights as to five (A.W.2, D.W.2, J.W.2, I.W., and A.W.3) of their 10 children at the conclusion of a permanency hearing. (Welf. & Inst. Code,1 § 366.26.) Mother and father contend the court erred by failing to apply the parental-benefit exception. We affirm.

1 Further undesignated statutory references are to the Welfare and

Institutions Code.

1 BACKGROUND2 The Parties Mother and father are in their early thirties and have 10 children. For ease of reference and considerations of privacy, we list the 10 children from the oldest to the youngest as follows: N.W., E.W., A.W., A.W.2, D.W.2 (minor shares the same initials as mother), J.W.2 (minor shares the same initials as father), I.W., A.W.3, R.W., and J.W.3. (born after the initial dependency petition). At times, we refer to the children individually or by the following sibling groups: (1) the three older children (N.W., E.W., and A.W.);3 (2) the five middle children (A.W.2, D.W.2, J.W.2, I.W., and A.W., undesignated references to “children” are to this sibling group, who are the subject of this appeal), and (3) the two younger children (R.W. and J.W.3).4 Early Proceedings On March 4, 2022, the San Francisco Human Services Agency (Agency) received a referral regarding 16-year-old E.W., who reported father sexually abused her since she was 12 years old. The Agency’s investigation revealed father had been making E.W. watch “daddy-daughter porn, making her send

2 Because this appeal raises only the issue of the beneficial parental

relationship exception, we focus on the facts related to that disposition as to the five subject children. 3 N.W. turned 18 years old soon after the initiation of the instant

dependency proceedings and was declared a non-minor dependent; her case was later dismissed. At all relevant times, A.W. remained a dependent of the court and was returned to parents’ care in August 2022, following a five- month out-of-home placement. E.W. also remained a dependent of the court but in an out-of-home placement with a relative; parents and E.W. expressed the mutual desire not to reunify. 4 Mother’s and father’s parental rights were terminated as to the two

younger children in January 2024; separate challenges to this determination were lodged and later abandoned on appeal.

2 him photos of her body parts as well as videos . . . .” Mother and the paternal grandmother “knew what was taking place and did nothing to protect the minor.” On March 8, 2022, the Agency filed a section 300 petition seeking to detain parents’ then-existing nine children: 17-year-old N.W., 16-year-old E.W., 15-year-old A.W., 9-year-old A.W.2, 8-year-old D.W.2, 7-year-old J.W.2, 6-year-old I.W., 4-year-old A.W.3, and 15-month-old R.W. The petition alleged the nine children were at risk of harm because father had been molesting E.W. since she was 12 years old and because of mother’s and father’s history of drug and alcohol abuse, father’s mental health issues, and father’s aggressive behaviors. All nine children were detained and placed in three different foster homes (E.W. was in one home; N.W., A.W., and R.W. were in a second home; and the five middle children were in a third home). Following detention, the Agency filed an ex parte application seeking to suspend father’s and reduce mother’s visits because father had punched J.W.2, hit him with a belt, and touched his penis; and father showed the five middle children pornography. The children were guarded and appeared to have been coached about what to say to the Agency’s case workers; parents had also threatened that the children would be “adopted” if they talked about what happened at home. The juvenile court granted the Agency’s request and suspended father’s visitation pending trial and reduced mother’s visits to one two-hour in-person visit and one one-hour virtual visit per week. But the ongoing supervised visitation with mother continued to cause the five middle children emotional turmoil, who presented as dysregulated after visits. Despite the suspension of father’s visits, mother called father during visits and had the children watch videos from him. During one virtual visit with mother, A.W.3 was

3 screaming and crying and had to be consoled by the resource parent. At an April 2022 visit, D.W.2 refused to see mother. In another virtual visit, A.W.3 began crying because her foster mother left the room; “mother, while on camera and in front of the children, claimed that the children were being coached and ended the visit early.” During this reporting period, J.W.2 disclosed that father taught him how to watch pornography. In a subsequent forensic interview, J.W.2 confirmed that he watched pornography with his father, who taught him how to access it; father also had touched his genitals, rubbed his butt, licked his butt, kissed him, and used a glove and stuck a finger in J.W.2’s rectum. J.W.2 disclosed that father touched J.W.2’s face after father touched his own butt, and J.W.2 thought there was “poop” on his face. J.W.2 said his mother came into the room and washed his face. Since placement, J.W.2 had accessed pornography several times on the foster parent’s phone and computer. Because of the level of detail in J.W.2’s disclosures at age seven, the Agency believed he was telling the truth. I.W. disclosed that father pulled her underwear down, put his hands down her pants, repeatedly rubbed her vagina, and told her that if she told anyone, “momo” would get her. I.W. had nightmares, said that a monster was following her, that the monster was covering her mouth so she would not talk, and that the monster was threatening to kill her. I.W. said the monster was her father. I.W. was acting out, kicking walls and having screaming fits. The six year old was also hearing voices, indicating severe trauma. She had trouble sleeping, had nightmares, and would yell at night, “let me go, don’t touch me.” The caretaker was nurturing to I.W., who at times did not want to sleep alone, and the two would sleep on separate couches next to one another.

4 D.W.2 had disclosed, and E.W. confirmed, that father had slapped her and pulled her hair. D.W.2 had an episode in May 2022 where she screamed and yelled that she was seeing “spirits.” D.W.2 had acted out at the foster home, having tantrums, kicking walls, and spitting on the caretaker. Once during a bath, A.W.3 asked D.W.2 to touch her private parts. D.W.2 did not touch A.W.3, who said she did not know why she had asked to be touched; D.W.2 said it was because they watched “porn” together. Four- year-old A.W.3 disclosed in detail that she, D.W.2, and I.W. watched “naked girls kissing.” A.W.2 also confirmed to the resource parent that D.W.2 and I.W. would watch pornography. A.W.2 reported she knew they were not returning home and was “not mad about it.” Father did not take any responsibility for his actions other than to say he had been drunk and high and, thus, did not remember committing the abuse. In conversations with mother and father about the abuse, father was controlling and dominating.

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Bluebook (online)
In re A.W. CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-aw-ca12-calctapp-2025.