In Re Jean Marie W.

559 A.2d 625, 1989 R.I. LEXIS 102, 1989 WL 57139
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 1, 1989
Docket88-262-A
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 559 A.2d 625 (In Re Jean Marie W.) 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 Jean Marie W., 559 A.2d 625, 1989 R.I. LEXIS 102, 1989 WL 57139 (R.I. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This matter comes before the Supreme Court on appeal from a decision of the Providence County Family Court granting four petitions filed by the Department for Children and Their Families (DCF) on behalf of two infant sisters. The two initial petitions, filed by DCF on March 23, 1987, sought to remove the girls from the respondent-mother’s custody on allegations of abuse and neglect in violation of G.L.1956 (1984 Reenactment) chapter 11 of title 40, and G.L.1956 (1981 Reenactment) chapter 1 of title 14. The later two petitions, filed on June 2, 1987, further alleged that, by reason of her conduct, the respondent-mother was an unfit parent and requested the termination of her parental rights pursuant to G.L.1956 (1988 Reenactment) § 15-7-7. 1 By agreement of both parties the four petitions were consolidated for trial.

The Family Court granted DCF’s petitions on February 5, 1988. The court ordered the children to be committed to the care and custody of DCF after finding that the mother had committed, or knowingly allowed to be committed, acts of sexual abuse, physical abuse, and neglect upon her daughters in violation of chapter 11 of title 40. The court further found the mother to be an unfit parent because of her cruel and abusive conduct toward the children and ordered the termination of her parental rights under § 15-7-7. We affirm.

Jean Marie, born November 16,1982, and Veronica, born December 17, 1985, were aged four and one respectively, when their plight was first discovered by a Providence police officer on the morning of March 20, 1987. Responding to the mother’s report of a break-in in progress, the officer arrived at her apartment to find two children, dirty and infested with lice and fleas, sleeping on a couch. The apartment itself had a heavy odor of urine and was littered with dirty clothes, garbage, used sanitary napkins, and drug paraphernalia — including caps to hypodermic needles, spoons for melting heroin or cocaine, and what appeared to be marijuana seeds. Further inspection of the premises revealed a broken toilet, a stove covered with rotting, insect-infested food, and an empty refrigerator.

After attending to the mother’s complaint, 2 the officer informed her that owing *628 to the condition of the children and the apartment he was going to take the two girls to the hospital. Both children were then taken to the Rhode Island Hospital Pediatrics Clinic for examination.

At the hospital Jean Marie was uncooperative and would not allow a full physical examination. She did, however, allow several lab tests that indicated that she suffered from chlamydia and gonorrhea, two sexually transmitted diseases. A full physical examination of Veronica revealed signs of head lice and fleas and indicated that she was markedly developmentally delayed for her age. Lab tests indicated that Veronica also suffered from chlamydia and showed the presence of cocaine metabolites in her urine. 3

While at Rhode Island Hospital, Jean Marie was also evaluated by a child-life specialist who observed her play with anatomically correct dolls. 4 During her play with the dolls, whom she referred to as “Gary,” “mommy,” and “me,” Jean Marie showed “Gary,” an adult male doll, engage in various oral, anal, and vaginal sex acts, involving penile and digital penetration, with the “me,” female child, doll while in the presence of the “mommy” doll. Jean Marie also showed the “Gary” doll hitting the “me” doll. The child-life worker recorded her observations and submitted them to the examining physician.

Relying on the results of his examinations of the children, the background provided by the police, the lab reports, and the child-life worker’s report, the examining physician diagnosed both children as victims of child abuse and filed a report placing the girls in DCP custody for seventy-two hours. Later that day DCF placed the children with a foster mother.

During the children’s stay in foster care their foster mother observed that Veronica was particularly unresponsive and uncoordinated for her age and that Jean Marie was afraid to go to sleep and had frequent nightmares. After two days the foster mother noticed while bathing Jean Marie that her vagina looked extremely irritated. The girl told her foster mother that her vagina and rectum hurt, that the “black monster” did it to her, and that he had a knife and was going to kill her. The following morning Jean Marie spontaneously told her foster mother that she was “tired of them guys putting them dicks in my mouth and in my coo-coo” 5 and that “them guys” hurt her bad. She also revealed that “the black monster” was not a monster but a black man who had “humped” her and made her pregnant. Jean Marie told her foster mother that she had a baby in her tummy.

On March 23, 1987, Jean Marie’s foster mother took her to Kent County Hospital after discovering an abnormal vaginal discharge in the child’s underwear. This time, after some persuasion, Jean Marie reluctantly allowed a pelvic examination. Upon his examination the physician observed a reddening around the child’s vaginal opening and a foul smelling, purulent discharge. Specimens of the discharge revealed gono-coccal vaginitis, otherwise known as gonorrhea. Relying on his observations, the background provided by the foster mother, and statements that Jean Marie had made to him regarding a man who had oral and vaginal intercourse with her, the doctor diagnosed sexual molestation.

The following day the foster mother returned to Kent County Hospital to have Veronica examined. This examination, conducted by yet another doctor, revealed that the child had a punctured hymen and bruising to her urethra and the left fold of her *629 labia. 6 This doctor also diagnosed sexual molestation.

In May of 1987 DCF referred Jean Marie to the East Side Center in Providence for a three-day evaluation by a registered, independent clinical social worker. The social worker observed Jean Marie at various types of play. At one session, in which the child was allowed to develop her own play, Jean Marie repeatedly played out a violent, make-believe scene about a man with a knife trying to kill her baby. At another session, in which the child was given a family of anatomically correct dolls to play with, Jean Marie showed that she was familiar with common slang terms for both the male and female genitalia and spontaneously positioned the dolls in various sexually explicit positions while making comments such as “they are humping” and “most of the time he sticks it in the mouth.” Relying on her observations and background information provided by DCF, the social worker diagnosed sexual abuse.

Relying on the testimony and evidence received at trial, the Family Court justice found that the mother had inflicted, or allowed to be inflicted, upon her children physical injury and sexual abuse and that the children were without proper parental care and supervision. He further found the mother to be an unfit parent and terminated her parental rights.

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Bluebook (online)
559 A.2d 625, 1989 R.I. LEXIS 102, 1989 WL 57139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jean-marie-w-ri-1989.