In re D.P. CA2/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 2025
DocketB336742
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re D.P. CA2/3 (In re D.P. CA2/3) 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 D.P. CA2/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 5/28/25 In re D.P. CA2/3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for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 This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.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

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

In re D.P. et al., Persons Coming B336742 Under the Juvenile Court Law. Los Angeles County LOS ANGELES COUNTY Super. Ct. Nos. DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN 20LJJP00257C, AND FAMILY SERVICES, 20LJJP00257D

Plaintiff and Respondent,

v.

A.W.,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Cathy J. Ostiller, Judge. Affirmed. Lori Siegel, under appointment by the Court of Appeal, for Defendant and Appellant. Dawyn R. Harrison, County Counsel, Kim Nemoy, Assistant County Counsel, Sally Son, Deputy County Counsel, for Plaintiff and Respondent. _________________________ Mother appeals a dependency judgment based on a jurisdictional finding that she involved her 10-year-old son D.P. in a scheme to smuggle illicit narcotics into a prison during a visit with the boy’s father.1 Three days after the visit, father died from an overdose when a balloon containing methamphetamine ruptured in his stomach. Mother contends there was insufficient evidence to authenticate audio and video recordings revealing the alleged scheme and she argues the juvenile court erred by admitting secondary evidence of the recordings’ contents. We find no abuse of discretion and affirm.2

1 After declaring D.P. and his half-brother A.B. dependent children and removing them from mother’s custody, the juvenile court terminated jurisdiction over A.B. and issued a custody order granting A.B.’s father sole physical custody of the child. Mother does not appear to challenge the orders concerning A.B. To the extent she does mean to challenge those orders, our reasons to affirm the judgment with respect to D.P. apply equally to his half-brother. 2 County Counsel on behalf of the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services (the Department) argues we should dismiss mother’s appeal under the disentitlement doctrine, citing records showing she surreptitiously removed D.P. from his foster placement in violation of the juvenile court’s disposition order. We decline to dismiss the appeal. “Appellate disentitlement ‘is not a jurisdictional doctrine, but a discretionary tool that may be applied when the balance of the equitable concerns make it a proper sanction.’ ” (In re E.M. (2012) 204 Cal.App.4th 467, 474.) “In dependency cases, the doctrine has been applied only in cases of the most egregious conduct by the appellant, which frustrates the purpose of dependency law and makes it impossible to protect the child or act in the child’s best interests.” (Ibid. [cataloguing cases].)

2 BACKGROUND On June 20, 2023, prison staff found D.P.’s father dead in his cell. Two intact bindles of methamphetamine and one ruptured bindle were recovered from father’s stomach during an autopsy.3 The coroner determined the cause of death was methamphetamine intoxication. A search of father’s cell uncovered another bindle containing methamphetamine as well as notes indicating the distribution of narcotics. At the time of his death, father had only four approved visitors—mother, D.P., D.P.’s half-brother A.B., and another friend. Mother had visited father four times since his incarceration in May 2018. The most recent visits had occurred on June 16 and June 17, 2023 (three days before father’s death).

Mother has requested we take judicial notice of court records showing that D.P. was subsequently returned to the Department’s custody and that mother has since been in compliance with her case plan. We grant the request. While there is no question that mother’s violation was serious and likely endangering to her child, the juvenile court was and is in a far better position to address these matters than we are, and, in any event, there is nothing to indicate mother remains in “ ‘an attitude of contempt to legal orders and processes of the courts of this state.’ ” (In re E.M., supra, 204 Cal.App.4th at p. 474, quoting MacPherson v. MacPherson (1939) 13 Cal.2d 271, 277.) Dismissal is not warranted under the current circumstances. (See In re E.M., at p. 474 [“ ‘Dismissal is not “ ‘a penalty imposed as a punishment for criminal contempt. It is an exercise of a state court’s inherent power to use its processes to induce compliance’ ” with a presumptively valid order.’ ”].) 3 Two other bindles containing toilet paper were also recovered.

3 Officer Nicholas Rodriguez of the California State Prison- Sacramento Investigative Services Unit investigated father’s death. The following facts are taken from his August 23, 2023 memorandum to the prison warden regarding the investigation. In the month leading up to father’s death, his prison call log showed he made 238 recorded telephone calls to a 213-area-code number associated with mother. On June 16, 2023, mother and the two children had a visit with father. Later that day, father placed a series of at least seven calls to mother, during which they discussed arrangements for mother to meet with someone named “ ‘Crazy’ ” in exchange for $180. In one call, mother told father “there is ten of them,” which Officer Rodriguez interpreted to refer to the bindles of methamphetamine found in father’s cell and stomach after his death.4 Father told mother, “ ‘We shouldn’t be having any talk period after we just talked in the visiting room.’ ” The next day, on June 17, 2023, mother and the two children had a second visit with father. A recording from the prison’s audio-visual surveillance (AVS) system captured what Officer Rodriguez described as “suspicious activity” during the visit. The recording showed mother and D.P. enter the women’s restroom together and stay inside for approximately 10 minutes. After they returned, D.P. built a fort with cushions. Two minutes later, he emerged from the fort holding a bag of chips and joined

4 In an interview conducted as part of the investigation, father’s cellmate recounted that father had said he swallowed 10 balloons of methamphetamine that he received from a recent visitor. The cellmate said father wanted to sneak drugs into the facility “ ‘[be]cause it’s bad out there for his family and his girl[friend] is living in a car.’ ”

4 mother and father in the back of the visiting room. An overhead screenshot taken from the AVS recording showed D.P. eating from the bag with what Officer Rodriguez marked as “bindles wrapped in a light-colored material” inside. D.P. then handed the chip bag to father, who walked off on his own toward the front of the visiting area. The AVS recording captured father lifting the chip bag to his mouth several times “to swallow the contents” and then “immediately drinking water and/or soda.” At one point on the recording, Officer Rodriguez observed father drop, quickly pick up, and swallow “what appear[ed] to be a bindle” similar to those recovered from his stomach in the autopsy. That evening father called mother to tell her he was trying to “throw up ‘Hard Candies’ ” and “not feeling well.” He said he had swallowed toilet paper balled up in the finger of a glove and “ ‘[s]even came out . . . three of them are still in there.’ ” The next day he called mother to tell her, “ ‘They all went down. They are in my stomach now.’ ” Mother replied, “ ‘You should be able to shit it out then. . . . I need you to finish business.’ ” Two days later, an inmate who referred to himself as “ ‘Janky’ ” called mother using father’s personal identification number.

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In re D.P. CA2/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dp-ca23-calctapp-2025.