In Re Galen F., (Mar. 10, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 2866
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1998
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 2866 (In Re Galen F., (Mar. 10, 1998)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Galen F., (Mar. 10, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 2866 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

Memorandum of Decision This is an action by the Department of Children and Families, "DCF", to terminate the parental rights of a minor female child, Galen, born November 24, 1995. The child's likely, paternal grandfather, has been granted intervener status and seeks a transfer of guardianship of the child to him. The child's acknowledged father resist termination of his parental rights and supports his father's bid for guardianship of Galen.

A. The Female Biological Parent.

The female biological parent, herein after called Kellie B., is now nearly twenty eight years of age. She was born to an abusive, alcoholic, Vietnam-veteran with a criminal record. He died suddenly in an automobile accident when Kellie was eight years old. At the time of his death, Kellie's mother was in the hospital recovering from domestic violence injuries. The family had just been evicted from their apartment. Kellie had a stressful relationship with her mother. She left her formal education without completing the ninth grade. She has been CT Page 2867 seriously drug involved since her late teenage years; her drug of choice is heroin. She does not have a drivers license and has had sporadic employment. (Social Study, Exhibit # 2).

B. The Male Biological Parent

The person believed to be the male biological parent, who acknowledged his parentage in open court on February 17, 1998, is David F. He is thirty five years of age. He has never been married. He is the youngest of two children. His father is an ordained Christian minister who is presently sixty-seven years of age. David's mother and father separated in Venezuela where his father maintained a parish, when David was five. He was raised by his mother, mostly in Rhode Island. As far as is known, his father never remarried. David's mother apparently had twins by another man while she was separated from Reverend Robert2. David describes the twin half-siblings as being fathered by another man ". . . though legally they belong to his father." (Exhibit # 6). David completed high school in Rhode Island and has some post high school vocational training in car mechanics. He has worked in a variety of jobs including house painting, pipefitting, manual labor and at a local auto repair business.

David denied any substance abuse problems to DCF, when they first became involved with this case. He indicated only a modest recreational use. He refused to undergo a substance abuse evaluation at the beginning of this case in 1995. This failure to submit to a substance abuse evaluation caused a great deal of problems for David, for his father, and; ultimately, for Galen. David was much more candid fifteen months later, in March 1997, with Dr. David Mantell, the court appointed clinical psychologist. David admitted having been drunk too many times to count. His drug usage included pot, cocaine and heroin. At the time of the interview March, 1997 he admitted to having used both cocaine and heroin within the past month. He explained that they go hand in hand, ". . that cocaine gets you hyper and dope calms you down." (Exhibit # 6 p. 7)

David has a criminal history that includes, at least one, felony conviction. He permitted the court to see only a portion of his conviction record (Exhibit #1), apparently making a tactical decision that the court should only know of his arrest and convictions that have occurred since the birth of the child. This tactic was poorly adopted since the court knows from the unchallenged findings of Dr. Mantell and the representations CT Page 2868 contained in the Social Study that David's criminal history includes more than ten arrests for possession of drug paraphernalia, burglary, larceny, failure to appear charges and breach of the peace. A stipulation offered into evidence shows an incarceration of David from July 3, 1997 to February 6, 1998 for "unsatisfactory status regarding probation." This attempt by the respondent to keep the court "in the dark" as to his complete criminal history and as to the reason for his violation of probation was shallow and transparent.

C. The birth of the child, Galen

David said he had known Kellie, the child's mother, from some time in his past and that they met again in December of 1994. She immediately moved in with him and very shortly thereafter, she announced she was pregnant. David admitted that living with Kellie was a roller coaster of drugs and mood-swings. She used cocaine and heroin and he used them "to get in with Kellie." He told Dr. Mantell that by using some of their drug supply he was "taking it from her system and the baby's system by using their small supply, but this didn't work. She (Kellie) would get mad because she was not high enough and this would cause them to have fights." It was in to this chaotic environment that Galen arrived during the Thanksgiving holiday week, 1995.

The respondent's then 65 year old father, Reverend Robert, arrived in Connecticut from his adult community home in Florida to spend the Thanksgiving week-end with his four sons David, Christopher, Sean and John. He said he was here ". . to bring my four children together." Since he was staying just for a few days, he stayed at a local motel, even though he had a residence at a local religious community campgrounds. The reverend had maintained an unusually close relationship with his sons. He testified that he usually spoke to his son David, at least weekly on the phone. "He calls me and he shares with me what he wants me to know," the reverend carefully pointed out. He said that there have been an inordinate number of losses in his near and extended family, including his own loss of his mother and later his father. He describes himself as an orphan, although he was raised by his grandmother. It is clear to the court that being in a family, and being a part of a family, is very important to the reverend. His former wife has subsequently died and consequently, he now considers himself the patriarch of the family.

On this particular 1995 Thanksgiving week-end, his son David CT Page 2869 was very anxious and excited about the birth of the child to his friend Kellie. The reverend brought David to the hospital. "He was excited and he wanted me to be excited as he was, and I was," he testified. They both stayed at the hospital until the child was born and they both saw the child through the window in the maternity nursery at the hospital.

Galen was born prematurely on November 24, 1995. Hospital records indicated that shortly after the birth the child began experiencing respiratory distress and drug withdrawal symptoms. Kellie had admitted to using heroin, cocaine and marijuana during her pregnancy and in the weeks before delivery. Ten hours after birth the child was transferred to the neo-natal unit of a major Connecticut medical center. It is quite likely that the infant that was seen by David and his father through the window at the maternity unit of the hospital was not a happy, contented new-born.

Cocaine-exposed babies show clear signs of addiction at birth. Researchers have found that babies exposed prenatally to cocaine, as to alcohol, have a lower weight at birth, are shorter, and have a smaller head. They cry, often piercingly, shake, show erratic sleep-wake cycles, have trouble feeding, and are difficult to comfort. Due to its effect of raising blood pressure and restricting blood flow to the placenta, cocaine increases complications during pregnancy including prematurity, pre-term labor, precipitous labor, and premature detachment of the placenta. Chassnoff, "Cocaine Effects in Pregnancy and the Neonate." Karr-Morse and Wiley, Ghosts from the Nursery, Atlantic Monthly Press p. 71 (1997)

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Related

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2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 14871 (Connecticut Superior Court, 2000)

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Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 2866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-galen-f-mar-10-1998-connsuperct-1998.