In Re Peter S.

973 A.2d 46, 2009 R.I. LEXIS 70, 2009 WL 1717020
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 19, 2009
Docket2008-32-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 973 A.2d 46 (In Re Peter S.) 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 Peter S., 973 A.2d 46, 2009 R.I. LEXIS 70, 2009 WL 1717020 (R.I. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice ROBINSON

for the Court.

The respondent father, Peter S., appeals from a Family Court decree terminating his parental rights with respect to his three children, Peter William S. (born October 4, 2002), Michele S. (born December 31, 2003), and Joshua S. (born September 20, 2005).

This case came before the Supreme Court on March 9, 2009, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After considering the record, the memo-randa submitted by the parties, and the oral arguments of counsel, we are of the opinion that cause has not been shown and that the case should be decided at this time.

For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the decree of the Family Court.

I

Facts and Travel

The plight of Joshua, respondent’s youngest child, first came to the attention of the Department of Children, Youth and Families (“DCYF”) on January 1, 2006. On that date, Joshua, who was then just over three months old, was taken to the Hasbro Children’s Hospital for emergency medical attention. Immediately after his admission to the hospital for seizures and lifelessness, the DCYF Child Abuse Hotline received a call from a doctor at the Hasbro Child Safe Clinic regarding these critical injuries.

In May of 2006, DCYF petitioned for involuntary termination of respondent’s parental rights with respect to the three children who are the subject of the instant appeal; those petitions alleged that the father was “unfit by reason of conduct or conditions seriously detrimental to the child, in that the father has committed conduct toward any child of a cruel or abusive nature.” The termination of parental rights trial commenced in the Family Court on May 3, 2007.

At trial, the state was permitted to amend the three above-referenced petitions to add an allegation that the father was “unfit by reason of conduct or condition seriously detrimental to the children, namely imprisonment of such a duration as to render it improbable for [the] father to care for the children for an extended period of time.” Next, the state introduced into evidence a certified copy of the father’s judgment of criminal conviction and commitment. (The father had pled nolo contendere to and had been convicted of felony assault for the injuries inflicted upon his infant son, Joshua. As a result of that conviction, he was sentenced to twenty years, with nine years to serve and eleven years suspended, with probation; he was further ordered to have no contact with the victim.)

Dante D’Alessio, a DCYF child protective investigator, was a witness at respondent’s termination proceeding. He testified that he was assigned to Joshua’s case on January 1, 2006 as a result of a report from Shelly Martin, M.D., of Hasbro Children’s Hospital’s Child Safe Clinic that Joshua had suffered a serious head injury. He testified that the DCYF hotline was contacted at 10:43 a.m. on that date and was informed that Joshua was lifeless and was experiencing a seizure. Joshua had been taken from his home in West Green *49 wich to Kent County Hospital and then to Hasbro Children’s Hospital. Mr. D’Ales-sio further testified that he initially contacted Dr. Martin by phone and was told that the results of a seizure scan were within a normal range and that the child had no external injuries.

Mr. D’Alessio testified that he interviewed both parents at Hasbro Children’s Hospital on January 1, 2006. He related the sequence of events surrounding Joshua’s emergency as told to him by respondent. He testified that respondent stated that, after Joshua had woken up at approximately 6:45 a.m., he went to check on the child and then left the child’s room to prepare a bottle. The father told Mr. D’Alessio that, when he returned, he noticed that Joshua was limp, lifeless, and was having trouble breathing and that he attempted to stimulate breathing by rubbing the child’s back, but then decided to call 9-1-1. The respondent further told Mr. D’Alessio that he was not aware of any trauma suffered by the child, aside from an incident that had occurred several weeks before, when Joshua was struck by a plastic toy thrown by another child.

Mr. D’Alessio further testified that the next day the doctor told him that, although not all the tests had been completed, it nonetheless appeared that Joshua’s head trauma had been inflicted upon him by a third party. Mr. D’Alessio testified that he then called the West Greenwich police and reported this information. He stated that he interviewed the parents again on January 3, 2006 and that the father continued to deny any knowledge as to how Joshua had been injured. The respondent told Mr. D’Alessio that Joshua had awakened crying in the morning, but he insisted that he did not become frustrated with the child and did not hurt him. He stated that he called 9-1-1 after speaking to his wife and that he told emergency personnel that Joshua was having a seizure and that he had a history of seizures.

Mr. D’Alessio testified that, on January 3, 2006, upon responding to a phone message from Joshua’s mother, Nicole, 1 he spoke with her and she told him that she had spoken to respondent, who told her that he had shaken the baby. Mr. D’Ales-sio testified, that when he spoke with Nicole, she was on her way to the West Greenwich Police Department to give a statement regarding what respondent had recently admitted to her. He further testified that he and another investigator went to the police department and that he was present at the police station during most of the interview that the police conducted with Nicole. Mr. D’Alessio stated that he was also present when Nicole spoke with respondent by phone from the police station. He stated that, while listening to their conversation on the speaker phone, he heard respondent confess to having shaken the baby three or four times due to the fact that Joshua would not stop crying.

Christine Barron, M.D., the clinical director of the Hasbro Children’s Hospital’s Child Protection Program, also testified at respondent’s trial. She was qualified as an expert in the field of pediatric emergency medicine. Doctor Barron testified that she became aware of Joshua on January 1, 2006, when he was admitted to the Hasbro Children’s Hospital pediatric intensive care unit. She further testified that Joshua had first been transported from home by emergency medical services to Kent County Hospital, where he was stabilized, *50 and was then transported to the pediatric intensive care unit at Hasbro.

Doctor Barron testified that, in addition to undergoing physical examinations, Joshua underwent a computed tomography scan of his brain, an MRI of his brain, an MRI of his entire body, a dilated ophthal-mologic examination, and a battery of other tests at Hasbro. She testified that Joshua was diagnosed with acute and chronic subdural hematomas (“collections of blood * * * just above the brain tissue and below the dura”) and subarachnoid hematomas (“blood * * * at the surface of the brain”). Doctor Barron further testified that Joshua was also diagnosed with “bilateral ischemic brain injury,” which she said meant that the “tissue of his brain was injured” and that he had bilateral retinal hemorrhages and a skull fracture.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
973 A.2d 46, 2009 R.I. LEXIS 70, 2009 WL 1717020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-peter-s-ri-2009.