In re J.D.

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 18, 2013
Docket2012-299
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re J.D. (In re J.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re J.D., (Vt. 2013).

Opinion

Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2012-299

APRIL TERM, 2013

In re J.D. } APPEALED FROM: } } Human Services Board } } } DOCKET NO. M-09/10-441

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Petitioner appeals pro se from a Human Services Board decision denying a request to expunge his name from the child protection registry. Petitioner essentially contends the Board erred in denying the request because the evidence demonstrated that he no longer presents a risk to the safety or well-being of children. We affirm.

The facts may be summarized as follows. The law requires the Department for Children and Families to maintain a “child protection registry” containing “a record of all investigations that have resulted in a substantiated report” of child abuse or neglect. 33 V.S.A. § 4916(a)(1). A person whose name has been entered in the registry may file a request with the Commissioner “seeking a review for the purpose of expunging” a registry record. 33 V.S.A. § 4916c(a).

In early 2010, petitioner contacted the Department seeking to expunge his name from the child protection registry. Petitioner had been entered in the registry based on two substantiations by the Department, one for sexual abuse in August 1996, and one for neglect in June 2004. Petitioner met with a reviewer for the Department and submitted materials in support of his request, including four character-reference letters.

In September 2010, the reviewer—on behalf of the Commissioner—issued a written decision denying the request. The reviewer noted at the outset that petitioner did not contest either substantiation decision, and that he did not want the Department to wait until the conclusion of a related family court proceeding before acting on his request to expunge his name. The reviewer summarized the two underlying substantiated incidents as follows. In August 1996, the Department determined that petitioner, then fourteen years old, had sexually abused an eight-year-old cousin. Petitioner was adjudicated a delinquent as a result, placed on probation, directed to undergo sex-offender counseling, and discharged from probation in 2000 when he reached the age of eighteen.

The second matter involved a 2004 substantiation of neglect of two young children— A.D., petitioner’s one-year old son with his partner G.C., and G.C.’s two-year-old child J.C. Based on DCF records, the reviewer noted that a DCF investigation had found the trailer in which the couple and the children lived to be in an extremely unsanitary condition and the children to be suffering from severe neglect. A CHINS petition was pending in November 2004 when petitioner, G.C., and the children moved without prior notice to Montana. There, records indicate that the children were taken into custody in March 2005 by the Montana Department for Public Health and Human Services. The Montana Supreme Court ultimately affirmed an order terminating petitioner’s parental rights to A.D. and G.C.’s parental rights to J.C., observing that the evidence of abuse and neglect was “overwhelming.” In re J.C. & A.D., 2008 MT 127, ¶¶ 50, 52, 183 P.3d 22.

Turning to the statutory criteria for determining whether petitioner had established that he no longer presented “a risk to the safety or well-being of children,” the reviewer focused primarily on whether the circumstances indicated that “a similar incident would be likely to recur” and whether petitioner had engaged in any activities such as therapy, employment or education that would “reflect upon [his] changed behavior.” 33 V.S.A. § 4916c(b)(4)(5). The reviewer described a 1997 psychosexual evaluation of petitioner, and his ensuing treatment. In 1998, his therapist described a lifetime of troubling sexual thoughts dating back to a very early age and ongoing, petitioner’s unwillingness to abide by a variety of risk management strategies, and his knowing engagement in high risk activities and failure to report his lapse behavior. Although petitioner claimed to have completed the sex-offender treatment, the reviewer noted that he had not provided any documentation showing successful discharge from the program, records indicated that his participation was “inconsistent,” and DCF records reflected that his therapists had concluded that he needed a level of intervention that was not being met. The reviewer further found that petitioner had not pursued or undergone any additional sex-offender treatment since 2000 and that a 2005 psychosexual evaluation in Montana, based solely on petitioner’s own self-report, found petitioner to be at a “moderate” risk to reoffend.

With respect to the 2004 substantiation of neglect, the reviewer observed that DCF records at the time characterized petitioner as “very resistive” to recommended services, and indicated that “little progress had been made” prior to his move to Montana. Petitioner claimed that Montana had been “wrong” to terminate his parental rights despite his stipulation there to parental abuse and neglect and what the Montana Supreme Court characterized as “overwhelming evidence” of severe neglect.

The reviewer also described character-reference letters submitted by petitioner including one from a man who had known petitioner for two years and one each from G.C.’s mother and father—all expressing confidence in petitioner’s ability to safely parent his new child. In addition, the reviewer noted that the letter from a Montana child care agency, dating from September 2005, indicated that petitioner had completed a “parenting inventory” and recommended an additional parenting program.

Based on the foregoing, the Department reviewer found that petitioner had failed to show that he no longer presented a risk to the safety or well-being of children. Despite the documented concerns regarding his sexual attraction to young children, petitioner had presented no documentation that he had completed additional sex offender treatment. Despite the extreme neglect that had resulted in the termination of his parental rights to A.D., petitioner had presented little documented evidence of progress in his ability to care safely and adequately for R.D., and had shown “minimal insight” into these concerns. As for the character-reference letters, the reviewer observed that they tended to “minimize” petitioner’s considerable past problems, and she noted that G.C.’s father—one of petitioner’s character witnesses—was himself on the registry for a sex offense involving a child, casting further doubt on petitioner’s judgment in such matters. The reviewer also noted a then-current ongoing DCF investigation into potential risk of 2 neglect and sexual abuse petitioner posed to his youngest child. Given these factors, the reviewer concluded that it was not appropriate to remove petitioner’s name from the child protection registry.

Petitioner appealed the decision to the Human Services Board, which reviewed the record, heard additional argument, and issued a decision in July 2012. Although review was on the record, additional facts noted by the Board were the dismissal in January 2011 of the CHINS petition that had been pending at the time of the review, the birth of another child to petitioner and G.C. in January 2012, and a letter, dated January 20, 2011, from the director of a sex- offender treatment program who had evaluated petitioner while the CHINS petition was pending. The letter expressly declines to address the issue of petitioner’s inclusion on the child protection registry.

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

Related

Turner v. Roman Catholic Diocese
2009 VT 101 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2009)
In re J.C.
2008 MT 127 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
K.G. v. Department of Social & Rehabilitation Services
758 A.2d 323 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In re J.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jd-vt-2013.