In Re C Leeck Minor

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 2022
Docket360278
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re C Leeck Minor (In Re C Leeck Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re C Leeck Minor, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

UNPUBLISHED In re C. LEECK, Minor. December 22, 2022

No. 360278 Clinton Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 20-029502-NA

Before: SHAPIRO, P.J., and BORRELLO and YATES, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent-mother appeals as of right the trial court’s order terminating her parental 1 rights to the minor child CL. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) submitted a petition on July 8, 2020, seeking to remove the minor child, CL, from mother’s care. According to the petition, CL’s father was deceased. The petition alleged that it was contrary to the child’s welfare to remain in the home with mother because mother had exposed the child to domestic violence, subjected the child to mental and physical abuse, and subjected the child to improper supervision and threatened harm due to mother’s mental health and substance abuse issues. Mother was also currently incarcerated. The petition specifically alleged that there had been incidents of domestic violence between mother and her father in May 2020, which occurred in front of CL. It was also alleged that mother “verbally assaulted and charged at her Clinton County Probation Officer in front of [CL]” in May 2020, which led to a warrant for mother’s arrest.

According to the petition, mother was arrested on July 4, 2020, following an incident during which she hit a police officer in front of CL. During the same incident, she had been screaming obscenities at CL and acting aggressively toward him. Mother allegedly had been diagnosed with anxiety disorder and bipolar disorder, had a substance abuse history involving

1 The record indicates that the child’s father is deceased. His parental rights are not at issue in this case.

-1- alcohol and other drugs, was on felony probation for driving under the influence, and had significant child protective services (CPS) history involving domestic violence, mental health and substance abuse issues leading to improper supervision of the minor child, and physical abuse of the child.

CL was taken into protective custody, and an adjudication bench trial was subsequently held. Brian Brown, a police officer with the Dewitt Township Police Department, testified that around midnight on July 4, 2020, he responded to an apartment complex for a domestic dispute. When he arrived, mother and CL were outside the apartment building. Brown testified that mother was walking away from CL and was “in a very agitated state, yelling and screaming.” According to Brown, mother’s yelling and screaming included “a lot of derogatory terms, a lot of swear words,” and mother referred to CL as “a little n****r.” Brown asked mother to stop, and she turned around to face Brown and CL. Brown stated that mother had “her hands balled up in an aggressive manner.” When Brown and his partner, Sergeant William Darnell, eventually attempted to arrest mother for disorderly conduct, she struggled and tried to “pull away.” Mother was agitated and yelling at the police officers and CL throughout the incident. Brown testified that CL reacted to mother by “[c]rying, trying to explain himself.”

Darnell testified that he arrived at the apartment complex after Brown. When Darnell arrived, he heard mother yelling and screaming. Darnell saw Brown standing between mother and CL, who was approximately seven or eight years old at the time. Darnell also testified that mother struggled and pulled away as he and Brown tried to arrest her.

According to Brown, after mother was in the police car, she “threatened to kill her son and [stated] that she had hoped he would burn in hell.” Brown indicated that mother’s behavior was consistent with that of a person who was emotionally or mentally unstable.

Charlotte Prochazka testified that she had been mother’s probation officer based on an operating under the influence conviction. As part of her probation, mother was required to complete random drug screens. Mother was also participating in Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)/Narcotics Anonymous (NA) and outpatient treatment. On May 20, 2020, Prochazka met mother outside mother’s apartment. During this meeting, Prochazka informed mother that in- person drug screening would resume June 1. Prochazka testified that as result, mother “became belligerent, aggressive, had a stance like she was going to tackle me, make fists, and yelled at me, yelled all kinds of names at me, and became—became aggressive towards me . . . .” The conversation continued. Because she felt intimidated by mother’s behavior, Prochazka ran to her vehicle. Prochazka explained what happened next:

[mother] charged at me in my vehicle. I immediately jumped in my vehicle and reminded her with my window down to check on her son who was out in the yard, approximately anywhere from 35 to 40 feet away playing in a parking lot with some rocks. It was an empty parking lot but it looked like it was the back side of a shopping mall. And she became very irate again, charged at my vehicle, and, again,

-2- I told her you need to contact your Oakland County Probation[2] officer for further guidance, I am not going to be responding to you, and I—I actually left the scene. I would have called CPS but I didn’t have my laptop with me, my contact information for that individual was not available to me.

An arrest warrant was issued for mother for violating the terms of her probation. Mother was found responsible and sentenced to 33 days in jail.

CPS worker Leslie Melvin testified that she first became involved with mother in May 2020, when she was assigned to investigate allegations involving an altercation between mother and her father. There were additional investigations continuing into July, including the July 4 incident described above. During her investigation, Melvin reviewed mother’s CPS history and found that mother had been involved in eight CPS cases since 2013. Mother’s earlier CPS history involved concerns about substance abuse, improper supervision, and mental health issues, and there was a pattern of improper supervision related to substance abuse. Mother had physically abused CL in 2016. During these previous cases, mother engaged in services that included inpatient treatment, services available in the community, in-home services, and mental health services.

According to Melvin, mother’s past substance abuse involved alcohol and cocaine, but mother had been sober for nine months when Melvin first became involved with her in May 2020. At some point, mother had been diagnosed with anxiety and bipolar disorder, and she was prescribed medication. Mother admitted that at some point she had been taking her medication incorrectly and that she noticed a difference once she started correctly taking her medication. The trial court took judicial notice that mother had recently been sentenced in the district court to 60 days in jail for her attempting resisting and obstructing conviction.

The trial court found that statutory grounds for jurisdiction had been established by a preponderance of the evidence. The court specifically found that mother had been subject to multiple CPS investigations since 2013, reflecting a consistent concern about improper supervision due to substance abuse and mental health issues. The court also found that mother had not been properly taking her medication and that her behavior toward law enforcement in front of CL, which led to her arrest, demonstrated her emotional instability and need for mental health treatment. The trial court took jurisdiction.

At the close of the hearing, Foster-care worker Luke Hunter provided an update.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re C Leeck Minor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-c-leeck-minor-michctapp-2022.