In re Bobby P.

28 Misc. 3d 959
CourtNew York City Family Court
DecidedJune 1, 2010
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 Misc. 3d 959 (In re Bobby P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York City Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Bobby P., 28 Misc. 3d 959 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

John M. Hunt, J.

I

Respondent, who is charged with committing acts which, were she an adult, would constitute the crimes of prostitution, resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration in the second degree, and false personation, has moved pursuant to Family Court Act § 311.4 (3) for an order directing the substitution of a petition alleging that she is a person in need of supervision (PINS)1 for the petition alleging that she is a juvenile delinquent.2

The juvenile delinquency petition filed by the presentment agency on May 19, 2010 alleges that on May 18, 2010 in Queens County, the respondent, Bobby E (born July 17, 1994), offered to engage in sexual conduct with an undercover police officer in exchange for payment, in violation of Penal Law § 230.00. The petition further alleges that respondent resisted arrest by fleeing from police officers who intended to take her into custody for committing the crime of prostitution, and that she obstructed governmental administration by physically resisting arrest and [961]*961by refusing to follow the directives of police officers after she had been taken into custody.

With respect to the prostitution charge, the supporting deposition of an undercover police officer, identified as “Undercover Officer CO 147,” states in pertinent part that, at approximately 6:50 a.m. in the vicinity of 111th Avenue and Sutphin Boulevard, Jamaica, Queens County, “a known prostitution location,” the respondent

“said to me in sum and substance, ‘what do you want?’ I replied, in sum and substance, ‘a quickie’, which I intended to mean oral sex, and made a hand gesture [which] indicated oral sex’. The respondent then said to me, in sum and substance, ‘you want a blowjob?’, which I understood to mean oral sex. I asked the respondent how much for the blowjob and she replied, in sum and substance, ‘fifty dollars’. The respondent then got inside of my vehicle.”

Respondent appeared before the court with the law guardian appointed to represent her for the initial appearance upon the petition on May 19, 2009 (see Family Ct Act §§ 320.1, 320.5). Theresa Slater, a foster care supervisor employed by New York Foundling Hospital, an authorized agency as defined by Social Services Law § 371 (10), was also present at the initial appearance. New York Foundling presently has joint legal guardianship of the respondent along with the New York City Administration for Children’s Services as a result of unrelated proceedings terminating the parental rights of respondent’s biological parents (see Social Services Law § 384-b; Family Ct Act § 614), and the presentment agency appeared by an assistant corporation counsel.

In requesting that the court order the respondent detained in a secure setting, the Assistant Corporation Counsel noted that at the time respondent had been arrested for the underlying crime, she was absent without permission from New York Foundling’s custody, that she had been regularly absent without permission from the agency or her foster parent from January until August 2009, and that her whereabouts had been unknown during that time. According to information provided to the presentment agency, in addition to running away, the respondent had been engaging in acts of prostitution since she has been 12 years old, she has a child of her own who had to be removed from her care by the Administration for Children’s Services, which had thereafter commenced child protective proceedings [962]*962against respondent on behalf of the child. The law guardian moved for substitution of a PINS petition for the juvenile delinquency petition, citing Family Court Act § 311.4 (3).

Information concerning respondent’s background was obtained by means of questions put to Ms. Slater who has supervised respondent’s foster care with New York Foundling since 2007. According to Ms. Slater, respondent had been referred to the “GEMS” program sometime in 2009. GEMS is the Girls Education and Mentoring Services, which is a social services program offering counseling to young women who have been sexually exploited. At some point, approximately “October or November” of 2009, respondent disappeared from the GEMS facility and she subsequently “fabricated a kidnapping, stating that kids kidnapped her from GEMS:” According to Slater, respondent “later recanted, stating it was made up and she was not kid-napped. She went off and spent some time with a young man.” According to Ms. Slater, respondent had been referred to the GEMS program by New York Foundling because “Bobby has a history of prostitution.” Ms. Slater recalled that in 2007 respondent’s foster care case had come under her supervision and that respondent, who was then just 12 years old, was already “introduced to the lifestyle” and had been working with adult pimps. Respondent gave birth to her own daughter in October 2009 and she and the infant were initially placed in a “mother/daughter” foster home in Brooklyn. Since then, the infant has been removed from respondent’s custody and placed into a different foster home. Child protective proceedings have been commenced on behalf of the infant and against the respondent by the Administration for Children’s Services.

In arguing for the substitution of a PINS petition, respondent’s law guardian contended that respondent is a victim of sexual exploitation and is entitled to the relief requested. The law guardian observed that respondent has no prior juvenile delinquency adjudications for offenses based upon acts defined by article 230 of the Penal Law, nor does she have any PINS history in the Family Court. In addition, the respondent is herself a child placed in foster care as the result of child protective proceedings and termination of parental rights proceedings which had been previously brought against her biological parents. The presentment agency argued against the requested substitution on the ground that the respondent has failed to express a genuine current willingness to accept and comply with services. As noted by the Assistant Corporation Counsel, [963]*963respondent had already been offered services by New York Foundling, including a referral to the GEMS program, but she has a history of running away from her foster home and the GEMS program facility. Respondent’s attorney contended that she is currently willing to accept services as indicated, in part, by her planned cooperation with the District Attorney’s office in its ongoing investigation of prostitution in Queens County. Indeed, the law guardian observed that her client has been assisting Assistant District Attorney Jessica Melton “to prosecute the pimp that has been involved in this young lady’s life.” Respondent had received a subpoena to appear in Criminal Court on June 7 or June 8, 2010, and it was her intention to appear and cooperate. As observed by the law guardian, respondent’s “cooperation with the Assistant District Attorney on that . . . is proof, for lack of a better word, that she is willing to cooperate with any services that are put in place for her.”

Based upon the information adduced at the initial appearance, the court determined that there was a serious risk that respondent would commit further criminal acts or acts of juvenile delinquency were she to be released to her lawful custodian pending further proceedings upon the petition.

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Related

People v. Doe
34 Misc. 3d 237 (New York Supreme Court, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Misc. 3d 959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bobby-p-nycfamct-2010.