In Re The Welfare Of: A.m.m.a. Antonial Monroe, App. v. State Of Wa., Dshs, Res.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 15, 2016
Docket74202-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re The Welfare Of: A.m.m.a. Antonial Monroe, App. v. State Of Wa., Dshs, Res. (In Re The Welfare Of: A.m.m.a. Antonial Monroe, App. v. State Of Wa., Dshs, Res.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re The Welfare Of: A.m.m.a. Antonial Monroe, App. v. State Of Wa., Dshs, Res., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

In the Matter of the Welfare of ) No. 74202-7-I A.M.MA, DOB: 10/14/11, ) (Consolidated with No. 74203-5-I)

A minor child. ) DIVISION ONE r*<5 crr> STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND 2si» cr HEALTH SERVICES, CD

en

Respondent, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION 2^ £f)r-rr' —*— * r 3

CO CO •ZL<. ANTONIAL MONROE,

Appellant. ) FILED: August 15, 2016

Schindler, J. —Antonial Monroe appeals the order terminating his parental

rights to A.M.M.A. and denying his guardianship petition. Monroe asserts the court

erred in denying his motion for a continuance and insufficient evidence supports finding

a guardianship was not in the best interests of the child, the proposed guardian was not

suitable, and he did not play a meaningful role in the child's life. Because the court did

not abuse its discretion in denying the continuance and substantial evidence supports

the challenged findings, we affirm. No. 74202-7-1 (Consol. with No. 74203-5-l)/2

Monroe is the father of A.M.M.A., born October 14, 2011. After A.M.M.A. was

born, Monroe had only sporadic contact with A.M.M.A. and the mother.1 The child's

mother and A.M.M.A. lived with the maternal grandmother.

When A.M.M.A. was about six months old, Monroe was convicted of promoting

prostitution in the first degree and possession of a controlled substance. Monroe has

been in prison since July 2012. His early release date is April 2021.

When A.M.M.A. was about two years old, his mother's behavior became erratic.

She was living "from couch to couch" and in her car. She routinely dropped A.M.M.A.

off at her mother's house and then disappeared for a day or two. After she disappeared

for three weeks, her mother called Child Protective Services.

The Washington State Department of Social and Health Services (Department)

filed a dependency petition. The court entered an agreed dependency order on May 7,

2014. The disposition order required Monroe to participate in a psychological

evaluation with a parenting component, a substance abuse evaluation, random

urinalysis, a domestic violence assessment, and a parenting class. The court also

authorized Monroe to have supervised visitation with A.M.M.A. in prison.

The Department placed A.M.M.A. in foster care while investigating placement

with a relative. Monroe's half-brother Cortez Jackson and his partner Lorraine Lahas

volunteered to care for A.M.M.A. Monroe agreed. In May 2014, the court ordered

relative placement with Jackson and Lahas.

Between March 2012 and March 2014, Monroe had one visit with A.M.M.A. in

prison. From October 2014 to June 2015, A.M.M.A. regularly visited Monroe in prison

1The trial court terminated the mother's parental rights to A.M.M.A. She is not a party to this appeal. No. 74202-7-1 (Consol. with No. 74203-5-l)/3

once or twice each month for two hours.

On January 13, 2015, the Department filed a petition to terminate parental rights

to A.M.M.A. The petition identified parental deficiencies of Monroe including a history of

domestic violence, substance abuse, and lack of parenting skills. The Department

alleged neither parent was capable of providing an adequate, stable, and safe

environment for A.M.M.A.

After the Department filed the termination petition, Monroe contacted Department

social worker Natalie Judd about establishing a guardianship for A.M.M.A. and

appointing his grandmother Bernice Nurse as the guardian.

The Department maintained that Nurse's 1991 conviction for domestic violence

assault in the second degree disqualified her from both a guardianship and having

unsupervised contact with A.M.M.A. But in May 2015, the dependency court authorized

Nurse to drive A.M.M.A. to prison to visit Monroe. The dependency court and the

Department made clear to Nurse that no one else could accompany her on the visits to

prison with A.M.M.A. The Department advised Nurse of the prison schedule and

frequency of the visits.

On June 12, Nurse was going to drive A.M.M.A. to prison for the first time. After

she encountered some difficulties in complying with the prison schedule, social worker

Judd left Nurse a telephone message reminding her of the required visit times.

On June 26, Nurse was scheduled to pick up A.M.M.A. from daycare at about

12:00 p.m. Nurse got lost on the way and did not arrive until 2:30 p.m. Daycare staff

informed Nurse she was too late because Lahas planned to take A.M.M.A. to an

appointment at 4:00 p.m. No. 74202-7-1 (Consol. with No. 74203-5-l)/4

Nurse called Monroe about the cancelled visit. The call was recorded.

Nurse: . . . [Y]our grandmother is so fuckin', fuckin' pissed. It's pathetic. I drove all the way out there Tony. All the way out there .... I'm so mad at these mother fuckers, I don't know what to do. . . . They can't do this. . . .

Monroe: Oh, I'm gonna kill [Lahas]. I'm gonna kill her.

Nurse: (Unintelligible) I'll tell you to.

Monroe: ... I'm gonna fuck up [Jackson's] whole house. I got some hitters.

Nurse: Hey.

Monroe: I don't care about none of that. I don't care about none of that. He crossed the line. ... I got some little cats that will go out there and tear that house up with them kids in it.

Monroe continued to make threats of violence against his half-brother Jackson during

the call. At one point, Nurse told Monroe the problem was not with Jackson, but with

Lahas.

After the call from Nurse, Monroe left a threatening message on Jackson's

answering machine.

You punk ass . . . , you got this bitch tryin' to dictate my motherfuckin' son . . . when you shoulda gave my son ... to my grandmother. . . . You can play this for the courts .... I'm gonna smoke you .... I'm gonna smoke you and that bitch .... Fuck you and your kids .... They can die with you . . . . That's how serious I am.

Monroe also called his girlfriend Brandi White and told her to assault Lahas.

You need to go and beat that bitch's [(Lahas's)] ass. That's what you need to do. . . . You need to pull that bitch by her hair, and drag her all up and down the street. You don't even need to hit the bitch. Drag her by her hair, up and down the mother fuckin' street. Make the bitch get concrete burns. ... I want you to beat that bitch's ass, that's what I want you to go do. No. 74202-7-1 (Consol. with No. 74203-5-l)/5

Jackson told the Department about the threats and expressed fear for the safety

of his family. Jackson and Lahas requested A.M.M.A. be removed from their care.

Based on the nature of Monroe's threats and the potential risks, the Department placed

A.M.M.A. in foster care.

On July 21, Monroe filed a guardianship petition asking the court to appoint

Nurse as A.M.M.A.'s guardian. The court consolidated the guardianship petition and

the petition to terminate parental rights for trial beginning September 2, 2015. A.M.M.A.

was nearly 4 years old at the time.

On August 27, 2015, six days before the scheduled trial date, Monroe filed a

motion to continue the termination trial and require the Department to investigate

guardian placement with Nurse. Monroe noted the Office of Public Defense had

completed a favorable home study but said the study was limited in scope because of

the lack of access to information from the Department.

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