In re Tamara G.

295 A.D.2d 194, 745 N.Y.S.2d 6, 2002 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7959
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 18, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 295 A.D.2d 194 (In re Tamara G.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Tamara G., 295 A.D.2d 194, 745 N.Y.S.2d 6, 2002 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7959 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

—Orders, Family Court, New York County (Susan Larabee, J.), entered on or about January 3, 2000, as amended February 28, 2000 (fact-finding), and June 27, 2000 (disposition), in this Family Court Act article 10 proceeding, finding that the respondent-appellant had sexually abused his daughter, and releasing the child to the nonparty mother, denying the respondent any contact with her “until such time as the child and her therapist deemed it advisable,” unanimously reversed, on the law and the facts, without costs, and the matter remitted to a different judge for proceedings not inconsistent with this Court’s decision, including new fact-finding and dispositional hearings.

Respondent Murray G. and his wife Alice G. divorced in 1990. Alice was granted custody of their only child, Tamara G., born [195]*195on June 16, 1986. Respondent had visitation rights three out of every four weekends, and the child spent half of the summer and certain holidays with him. This proceeding concerns allegations, first raised in 1997, that respondent had sexually abused his daughter.

At the fact-finding hearing, the presentment agency introduced testimony from Tamara’s private psychologist, Dr. Mel Schneiderman; a case worker from the Administration for Children’s Services (ACS), Charlie Banks; and an expert in pediatrics and child sexual abuse, Dr. Margaret McHugh. The agency also presented various hospital records.

Dr. Schneiderman testified that Alice G. took then 11-year-old Tamara to see him on November 18, 1997, following complaints, repeated by Tamara in the session, that she no longer wanted to visit her father because he ignored her and refused to help her with her homework. On November 23, 1997, Alice G. telephoned Dr. Schneiderman and told him that Tamara had told her that respondent had exposed himself to her and that she had seen him masturbating. At her therapy session two days later, Tamara told the doctor that her mother’s account was true, but refused to repeat the details. On December 9, 1997, Tamara told Dr. Schneiderman that her father would put his hands in his pockets and play with himself for “hours at a time”; that on a few occasions he had pulled down his pants and played with his “private parts” for “hours and hours”; and that he “writes with a pen on his private parts” and has been doing so “since she was five years old.” Dr. Schneiderman reported the allegations to ACS.

On December 14, 1997, Alice G. called Dr. Schneiderman and told him that Tamara said that her father had raped her both anally and vaginally during her visit with him during the weekend of November 8, 1997. Tamara was taken to St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital for examination. The hospital records reported a normal rectal examination. However, the report of the vaginal examination stated, as relevant, the “hymen is not intact, copious discharge, erythema around introitus, no hematoma or ecchymosis.” A second report of abuse was made to ACS, respondent’s visitation was cut off, and the presentment agency filed its original petition, which alleged, inter alia, that respondent had raped his daughter.

Dr. Schneiderman testified that on December 17, 1997, Alice G. told him that Tamara was refusing to go to school and was terrified that respondent would kill her. At his sessions with Tamara on December 23, 1997 and January 13, 1998, she refused to talk about the abuse. On January 15, Alice G. told [196]*196Dr. Schneiderman that Tamara was expressing a desire to kill herself. Dr. Schneiderman told Alice G. to take Tamara to St. Vincent’s Hospital. Tamara was hospitalized for approximately two months and placed on Zoloft. When Dr. Schneiderman saw Tamara on March 3, 1998, after her release from St. Vincent’s Hospital, he found her “very guarded” yet, at the same time, “provocative,” attempting to sit on his lap. During this session, Tamara stated that she was no longer suicidal but was very angry with her mother. She said she was also afraid the respondent would try to kill her. Dr. Schneiderman diagnosed Tamara as suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) stemming from the alleged abuse. However, Dr. Schneiderman also opined that some of Tamara’s more outrageous allegations might be fantastical, which, he stated, was not uncommon in a case of child sexual abuse.

Charlie Banks, the caseworker for ACS, testified that she interviewed Tamara and her mother on December 12, 1997, the day after the agency received an initial report of abuse; this report did not allege rape. Alice G. told Ms. Banks that she had been pleased to have Tamara visit respondent because she wanted Tamara to have a relationship with her father, and it gave her time for herself. When questioned by Banks about the allegations, Tamara reluctantly admitted that her father had masturbated in front of her, but denied that he had ever rubbed up against her or touched her inappropriately. She said that'she had not immediately told her mother because she was afraid that respondent would kill her.

On April 13, 1998, after learning about the alleged rape, Banks re-interviewed Tamara. In an apparent misunderstanding about the date of the rape, Banks asked Tamara whether she remembered what had happened on June 28, 1997. Tamara told her that respondent had raped her for the first time that day. According to Banks, Tamara told her that respondent called her into his bedroom in the morning, and that he had raped her both vaginally and anally. Again, Tamara stated that she did not report the rape to her mother because she feared respondent would harm them.

Dr. McHugh, an associate professor of pediatrics at New York University, next testified for the agency as an expert in child sexual abuse. Dr. McHugh worked in a clinic at Bellevue Hospital which examined children for suspected sexual abuse. A few days after being discharged from South Oaks Hospital [197]*197on April 3, 1998,1 Tamara was admitted to Bellevue following complaints from her mother that Tamara had assaulted her. At the time of Tamara’s admission, Alice G. had a black eye and a number of bruises. During her hospitalization at Bellevue, Tamara was reported as having visual hallucinations, suicidal ideation, and homicidal ideation towards respondent. She was assessed as suffering from PTSD with psychotic features, and diagnosed with a moderate to severe major depressive disorder. On April 17, 1998, Dr. McHugh performed a genital examination of Tamara, at the request of her treating psychiatrist. Dr. McHugh found thinning of the “posterior fourchette” and “hyperpigmentation” and a “hemorrhoidal mass” in the “perineal area,” conclusively indicating sexual abuse “consistent with manipulation of the area.” Contrary to the St. Luke’s Emergency Room report, Dr. McHugh found that Tamara’s hymen was intact and that there was no physical evidence of either vaginal or anal penetration.

At the close of the agency’s case, respondent moved for Tamara to be produced, either in camera, or before the court, and to dismiss the petition. Petitioner opposed, and made a cross motion to conform the pleadings to the proof. The court denied respondent’s motion in its entirety. However, it granted petitioner’s cross motion to conform the pleadings to the proof. On October 25, 1999, petitioner filed an amended petition which tracked the testimony of Dr. Schneiderman. The original rape allegations were replaced by allegations consistent with Dr. McHugh’s examination, that respondent had repeatedly touched and rubbed up against his daughter in a sexual manner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 A.D.2d 194, 745 N.Y.S.2d 6, 2002 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-tamara-g-nyappdiv-2002.