In Re Frederick

546 A.2d 160, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 117, 1988 WL 72757
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 18, 1988
Docket87-428-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 546 A.2d 160 (In Re Frederick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Frederick, 546 A.2d 160, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 117, 1988 WL 72757 (R.I. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This matter is before the Supreme Court on appeal from a decree of the Family Court that granted a petition to terminate parental rights filed by the Department of Children and their Families (DCF). The petitioner (the mother) has three minor children. Her parental rights to the two older children, Josephine and Frederick, were terminated. She raises several issues that we shall address in this opinion. We affirm.

The DCF first became involved with the family in April 1982 following a complaint *161 by the children’s father. 1 He had alleged that the mother had neglected and physically and emotionally abused their two children. Following an investigation, DCF closed the case without taking any action.

In October 1983 DCF received a complaint from an individual who found Frederick running down a street naked. Soon thereafter, the mother admitted dependency, thereby voluntarily placing the children with DCF. The court ordered the children placed in the home of their maternal grandparents where the mother had been residing. In September 1984 the court awarded physical custody of the children to the mother but required her to obtain the court’s permission if she intended to move out of the maternal grandparents’ home. However, in October 1985 after the Child Abuse and Neglect Tracking System had received a complaint from the Providence police department stating that the children had been wandering alone at approximately 6:00 a.m., DCF again took custody of the children. This was the fourth time the children had been found wandering by themselves in different areas of Olneyville. On June 26, 1986, DCF filed a petition to terminate the mother’s parental rights.

At the hearing on the petition to terminate, evidence established that the mother had been ordered in March 1984 to undergo psychiatric evaluation and to attend counseling through the Project Child program at the Providence Center. Although she participated initially, she became less cooperative and refused to keep several scheduled appointments. Haven Miles, a psychiatric social worker who evaluated the mother at the Providence Center, testified that the mother used a “very harsh negative tone of voice with the children [and during the sessions] the children committed very minor infractions of unstated rules [in reaction to which the mother’s] punishment was to hit or shake each of the children.” Nevertheless, the mother stated to Ms. Miles that she did not have any problems with the children and was not in any need of treatment.

Doctor Amy Bellows, a psychologist at the Providence Center, evaluated the mother and testified: “[The mother] tended to blame others rather than herself for problems * * * she seems to have difficulties having close relationships with other people, that she is somewhat impulsive, sometimes confused in her ability to judge reality.”

The mother was also evaluated by Dr. James Greer, a psychiatrist at the Providence Center, on two occasions. Doctor Greer testified that the mother seemed to experience delusional thought patterns. He diagnosed her as having either paranoid schizophrenia 2 or paranoid personality, 3 although he could not state with certainty which of the two disorders she had. He recommended that she have a trial period of the antipsychotic medicine Prolixin. Doctor Greer testified that the drug causes severe side effects in approximately 40 percent of the patients who take it. He admitted that the medicine would only be effective in alleviating symptoms if the correct diagnosis were paranoid schizophrenia. His plan was to administer the medicine and observe whether there was any reduction in her delusional thinking. However, the mother, with the advice of her guardian, chose not to take the antipsychotic medicine.

*162 Linda Boutelier, the program coordinator of a parenting-skills program in Kent County, testified that the mother had participated in the program, which consisted of classes, group discussions, and home visits. Ms. Boutelier testified that she had recommended that the mother not be reunited with her children if she continued to refuse medication. She also stated that the mother seemed to be hallucinatory or delusional and had trouble supervising the two children.

While participating in the parenting-skills program, the mother gave birth to her third child, Michael. Ms. Boutelier testified that after the birth of Michael, the mother’s bonding with Frederick and Josephine seemed to decrease.

The mother was also interviewed by Dr. Paul Malloy, a clinical psychologist at Butler Hospital. Doctor Malloy testified that he conducted a Wechsler Intelligence Test. She scored a 72 on the test, which placed her in the lower-border-line-intelligence range. He conceded that “[many] people with this level of intellectual ability are capable of functioning adequately as parents, although many such people also are limited by their intellectual ability in handling certain difficult problems in a stressful situation.” However, he stated that he had “serious concern about the children’s well being, because of [their mother’s] paranoid thinking.” He further stated that the “combination of these two factors in the present case [namely, lower-border-line intelligence and paranoid thinking] were the cause of [the mother’s] failure as a parent thus far.”

The DCF also presented Catherine Uhler-Hammond, the director of the Silver Lake Child Care Center, as a witness. Both Josephine and Frederick were enrolled in the center’s program from June through September of 1986. Ms. Uhler-Hammond testified that the children were often dirty, their clothes were ill fitting, and “[m]any times they had an odor of urine and feces.” She also testified that “a lot of times this mother slapped her kids in front of us. A lot of times she was yelling at them in front of us. It was stressful. It was not conducive to whatever we have been taught about [a] good parent/child relationship.”

Several DCF caseworkers also testified. Shortly after the mother had voluntarily placed her children with DCF in October 1983, she spoke with DCF caseworker Rosemary McGwin. Ms. McGwin testified that the mother had told her that “she had heard voices in Star Market.” Ms. McGwin also stated that the mother had fantasized that she had another child, 4 which had been stolen away from her in a conspiracy which involved Ms. McGwin. The mother told Ms. McGwin that “they” attempted to cover up this plot against her by telling her that she had suffered a miscarriage.

Other DCF caseworkers involved in the case testified at length about how the mother often resisted or refused to take part in case plans that they had devised. They also discussed their difficulties in their attempts to reunify the family.

The only witness presented on behalf of the mother was Dr. Patricia Wold, a psychiatrist working in private practice. Doctor Wold gave her opinion that the mother was not mentally ill and should not be taking Prolixin. She felt that the mother would have benefited from a program supervised by persons who had experience in dealing with people of limited intelligence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
546 A.2d 160, 1988 R.I. LEXIS 117, 1988 WL 72757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-frederick-ri-1988.