In re M.D. CA1/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 20, 2015
DocketA140948
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re M.D. CA1/1 (In re M.D. CA1/1) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re M.D. CA1/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 7/20/15 In re M.D. CA1/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

In re M.D., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law.

MARIN COUNTY HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, Plaintiff and Respondent, A140948 v. (Marin County A.S., Super. Ct. No. JV25835) Defendant and Appellant.

Every professional involved in this sad dependency case concluded mother repeatedly coached her son M.D. to make false sexual abuse allegations against M.D.’s father, her former husband. The juvenile court found mother was inflicting serious harm on M.D., took jurisdiction, and disposed of the case by awarding father sole legal and physical custody and granting limited supervised visits to mother. Mother appeals. We affirm all the challenged juvenile court orders. BACKGROUND M.D. was born in 2002 to his then-married parents. In 2004, there was a domestic dispute. Father said mother had made a habit of locking herself in a room with M.D. On one occasion, mother would not come out or respond to father. Afraid for M.D.’s safety and angry, father forced the door open. Mother said she hid in the room with M.D. because father had threatened her life. Father was arrested for making criminal threats. Following this, M.D.’s parents separated and then divorced. Mother retained primary physical custody of M.D. Thereafter, both mother and father made numerous reports to Child Protective Services, all of which were determined to be unfounded. Through this same decade, the parents’ family court battle over dissolution issues, including custody, support, and visitation, raged on. Accusations of November and December 2012 In late November 2012, mother reported M.D., then age nine, had been sexually abused by father. Mother and a family friend, who provided acupuncture services to mother and M.D., said they both heard M.D. talk about father putting father’s “pee pee” in M.D.’s “butt.” In a November 26 forensic interview at the Keller Center, M.D. reported recounted instances of sodomy in the past three years in which father inserted his penis “all the way inside” M.D.’s anus (M.D. demonstrated by making a ring with his index finger and thumb and placing his opposing index finger through the ring). The incidents supposedly happened while N.M., father’s new wife, was at home. They also supposedly happened every time M.D. was visiting his father. According to mother, the acupuncturist told her about the abuse first, not M.D. During the forensic interview, M.D. initially said he told mother first, then said he told both at the same time. The police orchestrated a phone call from mother to father, in which mother asked father if the molestation occurred and mother pretended to have evidence of bodily fluids near M.D.’s anus. Father vehemently denied the molestation, called mother “nuts” and “disgusting,” and called the San Francisco Police Department to express concerns about his son’s safety. Meanwhile, a medical exam indicated M.D.’s “Anal Genital Findings” were “normal” and found no evidence of molestation. The social worker who observed the Keller Center interview, and who had the medical information in hand, completed a report noting a lack of sufficient detail in M.D.’s story and stating her team’s belief the allegations of abuse were unfounded. After learning the results of this investigation, and about the time mother and father had a confrontation over whether father could have his regular Tuesday visit with M.D., mother brought M.D. to a doctor to report an additional, December 18, 2012, incident of sodomy. M.D. told the doctor it hurt a little but he did not care, and that it later felt like father had “peed in [his] butt.” In the midst of these ongoing allegations, in late December, father, who had not had M.D. for Christmas in years, asked for police assistance in enforcing his court-given entitlement to Christmas visitation when mother refused to cooperate. Mother would not answer father’s phone calls. When father finally got mother on the phone to assert his right to visitation, mother complained M.D. was sick and re-asserted the molestation allegations. Father said “you know you’re crazy” and mother eventually relented and allowed the visit. The San Mateo District Attorney, in January 2013, issued a letter stating it would not prosecute father for abusing M.D. Accusations of March 2013 Mother and M.D. again reported sodomy in March of 2013. M.D. told the police that father “ ‘put his pee pee in my butt and it got wet.’ ” When M.D. returned to the police lobby area after private questioning, the officer heard M.D. ask mother several times “ ‘did [he] do good?’ ” and noticed mother trying to quiet M.D. Mother insisted on an immediate medical exam, which showed no signs of sodomy. None of the examiners observed physical injuries and M.D. could not even tolerate the insertion of a q-tip into his anus. A follow-up exam was scheduled at the Keller Center. There, again, no signs of sodomy were found. The Keller Center believed mother had been “coaching” M.D. on what to say. After mother learned of these results and apparently shared them with M.D., she called the Keller Center and said M.D. had confessed to lying—that is, father had “never placed his ‘pee pee’ inside his ‘butt’ ”—and mother stated she was distraught that she had mistakenly believed her son had been abused when he had not. It appears this explanation satisfied police and the case against father was again closed. Meanwhile, the Keller Center urged mother to get therapy for M.D. Accusations of July and August 2013 Mother and M.D. made a third round of abuse allegations in late July 2013, just days before father and M.D.’s paternal relatives were to enjoy a nine-day trip to San Diego. These allegations were far more expansive. At another Keller Center forensic interview, M.D. described a “pee pee game” in which he, father, and his four-year-old half sister (father’s child with his new wife), ran around the house trying to touch each other’s private parts. M.D. also said father put his “pee-pee on his butt with no clothes” and M.D.’s butt gets wet and sticky. M.D. also stated father sometimes holds and bites M.D.’s penis and that M.D. sometimes does the same to father’s penis. M.D. also stated father would command him and the new wife to “have sex,” which meant to roll around on the floor and kiss. M.D. finally stated father made up a game where he and father lay naked in the bed and kiss and then father gratifies himself by rubbing on M.D. M.D. said the new wife and his step-sister also joined in the game. M.D. said he lied in regards to the earlier sodomy allegations because he wanted the games with father to continue. During this interview, M.D. repeatedly asked for a break when he was asked for details about the incidents that he could not provide. M.D. could not provide sufficient “details of any sex act,” which was unusual for an articulate child of his age. M.D.’s tone and demeanor were nonchalant, devoid of emotion—like he was reading a laundry list— despite recounting a full panoply of horribles. Mother was told by several practitioners who saw M.D.’s interview that M.D.’s story was hard to believe. One of the Keller Center forensic interviewers stated it was the first time she had disbelieved a child; she could not say for sure if M.D. had been coached, but she was confident there was no abuse. Mother was also told her failure to seek therapy for M.D. after the recanted abuse allegations in March of 2013—mother claimed she was waiting for therapists to call her back—was abuse in itself.

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Bluebook (online)
In re M.D. CA1/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-md-ca11-calctapp-2015.