In re Interest of Diego A. & Marissa D.

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 28, 2021
DocketA-21-332, A-21-333
StatusPublished

This text of In re Interest of Diego A. & Marissa D. (In re Interest of Diego A. & Marissa D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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 Interest of Diego A. & Marissa D., (Neb. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

IN RE INTEREST OF DIEGO A. & MARISSA D.

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

IN RE INTEREST OF DIEGO A. & MARISSA D., CHILDREN UNDER 18 YEARS OF AGE.

STATE OF NEBRASKA, APPELLEE, V.

SHEILA A., APPELLANT.

Filed December 28, 2021. Nos. A-21-332, A-21-333.

Appeals from the County Court for Lincoln County: KENT D. TURNBULL, Judge. Affirmed. Chevas Shaw for appellant. Rebecca Harling, Lincoln County Attorney, for appellee.

MOORE, BISHOP, and ARTERBURN, Judges. BISHOP, Judge. INTRODUCTION Sheila A. appeals from the orders of the county court for Lincoln County, sitting as a juvenile court, adjudicating her children, Diego A. and Marissa D., pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-247(3)(a) (Reissue 2016). We affirm. BACKGROUND Sheila is the mother of Diego, born in 2008, and Marissa, born in 2018. Additionally, Sheila appears to have an older child who was not part of these juvenile proceedings. Anieseto A. is Diego’s father. Because Anieseto is not part of this appeal, he will not be discussed any further. The identity of Marissa’s father had not yet been determined at the time of the adjudication in this case.

-1- Diego and Marissa were put in a voluntarily kinship placement on September 10, 2020. Subsequently, on October 1, the State filed separately docketed juvenile petitions alleging that Diego and Marissa were children within the meaning of § 43-247(3)(a). The State alleged that on or about September 1 through September 30, the children were “in a situation or engaged in an occupation dangerous to life or limb or injurious to [their] health or morals.” Also on October 1, the juvenile court entered orders of detention wherein the court found that continuation of the children in the parental home would be contrary to their welfare, and the court ordered that Diego and Marissa be “detained in the temporary custody” of the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), pending a hearing or until otherwise ordered by the court. The court also ordered Sheila “to submit to wearing a drug patch to be monitored and paid for by [DHHS].” In its journal entries and orders entered on October 13, 2020, following a hearing that same day, the juvenile court ordered Sheila to submit to random “UA’s” or drug patch testing as a condition of visitation, a chemical dependency evaluation, and a psychological evaluation. The court granted Sheila’s motion for paternity testing of the purported father of Marissa. Additionally, the juvenile court’s journal entries and orders entered on October 13, 2020, state, “The court has inquired as to whether any party believes an Indian child/children is/are involved in the proceedings and directs County Attorney/[DHHS] to give notice to the appropriate identified tribe pursuant to the Nebraska Indian Child Welfare Act.” The journal entries and orders further state that “[t]he tribe that is on record” was unknown at that time. In journal entries entered on October 27, the court noted that at the October 13 hearing it questioned Sheila regarding any Native American heritage and “[Sheila] states she may be a member of an Indian Tribe.” The court found, “pending notice from the Tribe, that the Indian Child Welfare Act applies.” The juvenile court’s journal entries and orders entered on November 10, 2020, state that Sheila objected to the condition of the home of the current placement for the children. After an evidentiary hearing on November 17, the court found the condition of the home was adequate and overruled Sheila’s objection; Sheila moved for a change of placement. Sheila failed to appear at a hearing on December 9, and therefore the court overruled her motion to change placement. After a hearing on December 29, the juvenile court granted Sheila’s attorney’s motion for a psychological evaluation of Sheila; the court ordered Sheila to submit to a psychological evaluation to aid in determining whether a guardian ad litem needed to be appointed for her. A journal entry and order entered on January 26, 2021, states that paternity results were received and Marissa’s purported father was not her father. The contested adjudication hearing was held on March 24, 2021. The juvenile court first took up the motion to have a guardian ad litem appointed for Sheila. Counsel offered Sheila’s psychological evaluation into evidence, and it was received. Counsel then asked to withdraw his motion for appointment of a guardian ad litem for Sheila, and based on the evaluation received into evidence, the court granted counsel’s request to withdraw his motion. The court then took up the contested adjudication. The court later clarified that Sheila’s psychological evaluation was received into evidence only for purposes of the request to withdraw the motion for appointment of a guardian ad litem for Sheila, and it was “not in evidence” for purposes of the adjudication. Dennis O’Brien, an investigator with DHHS Child Protective Services, testified that he has known Sheila since she was approximately 12 years old, and he had ongoing contact with her. He said, “She would call me if she needed something or if she needed advice or if she needed help

-2- filling [out] . . . a form” because “she struggles with reading.” When asked if he knew Sheila in his position as an investigator, O’Brien responded, “As an investigator and then also as an ongoing worker, I think.” Before the investigation that led to this current case, he had conducted nine prior investigations of Sheila, most related to physical neglect of the children. The most recent prior investigation was in July 2019 and involved domestic violence. At that time, Sheila was living with a man that paternity testing later revealed was not Marissa’s father; the man assaulted Sheila and “hit one of the boys.” On September 10, 2020, O’Brien investigated Sheila and the care she was providing to her children. He stated that DHHS received an intake alleging drug use, and Sheila had also withdrawn $24,000 from a credit union. According to O’Brien, Sheila asked the credit union to call the police, and he was “notified of that.” O’Brien “was also contacted by the sheriff’s office because [Sheila] was at the sheriff’s office bailing out a person and told the clerk at the sheriff’s office to give me a call and that she wanted to see me.” O’Brien went to the hotel that Sheila had been staying at, but she was not there. He eventually made contact with her outside of her place of business. O’Brien stated that when he made contact with Sheila on September 10, 2020, “She said [she had] been looking for me and . . . she started telling me that she needed to have me take Marissa, put her in foster care because she’s not safe with her.” Sheila told O’Brien that she was being followed and harassed, and that she had reported being followed multiple times to the police department. She told him that law enforcement could not confirm her reports. According to O’Brien, Sheila was “kind of all over the place,” “the subjects would change,” and he was concerned. He said, “There were other things that she said, but when I would . . . question her further in those regards, . . . she’d say, no, I can’t tell you this or if I tell you this something is going to happen to me,” and “so she wouldn’t provide me any details that would verify what she was saying.” O’Brien had never seen Sheila that paranoid, and was concerned about her mental health and drug use.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Adoption of Kenten H.
725 N.W.2d 548 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2007)
State v. Angela L. (In Re Interest of Kane L.)
299 Neb. 834 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2018)
In re Interest of Kane L. & Carter L.
299 Neb. 834 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2018)
In re Interest of Jeremy U.
304 Neb. 734 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2020)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In re Interest of Diego A. & Marissa D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-interest-of-diego-a-marissa-d-nebctapp-2021.