In Re woodbury/drayton Minors

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 19, 2025
Docket374139
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re woodbury/drayton Minors (In Re woodbury/drayton Minors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re woodbury/drayton Minors, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

UNPUBLISHED September 19, 2025 9:30 AM In re WOODBURY/DRAYTON, Minors.

No. 374139 St. Joseph Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 2024-000649-NA

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and GARRETT and YATES, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

After an adjudication trial, the trial court founds grounds to take jurisdiction over respondent-mother’s two children, KD and AW, under MCL 712A.2(b)(1) and (2). On appeal, respondent-mother1 challenges the evidence that the trial court admitted and argues that the trial court erred by finding statutory grounds to exercise jurisdiction. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

In September 2024, law enforcement was alerted to respondent-mother livestreaming video on Facebook, in which she was sharing nonsensical, bizarre statements. Officer Matt Kilbourn, of the Three Rivers Police Department (TRPD), watched the video, and officers went to respondent- mother’s location. Ultimately, the children were taken into protective custody, officers took respondent-mother to the hospital, and the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) filed a petition seeking removal and jurisdiction of the children.

The trial court held an adjudication trial in December 2024. Officer Kilbourn testified that, after watching respondent-mother’s video in September 2024, he was concerned about her mental health. When Officer Kilbourn went to respondent-mother’s location to speak with her, she was paranoid and made nonsensical statements throughout the entire interaction. Respondent-mother and the children were carrying some belongings. Officer Kilbourn was concerned because the

1 Neither child’s father is a party to this appeal.

-1- family appeared to have traveled over eight miles, without explanation. He believed that respondent-mother “was suffering from a mental health crisis.” Officer Kilbourn testified that he also did not know when the children had last eaten, although they physically appeared to be okay and were dressed appropriately. According to Officer Kilbourn, the children did not appear to be “necessarily” scared. Officer Kilbourn talked with respondent-mother about taking her into protective custody due to her mental health, and respondent-mother did not understand why that was needed, although she ultimately voluntarily went with the officers.

Officer Kilbourn also testified about viewing other social-media videos that depicted respondent-mother exhibiting the same kind of paranoid behaviors. These videos were not saved; instead, the DHHS provided five different videos to Officer Kilbourn shortly before trial. Petitioner’s attorney asked Officer Kilbourn if those five videos were comparable to the videos that he had previously viewed, and Officer Kilbourn stated that respondent-mother’s behavior and appearance in the videos were similar. Although Officer Kilbourn did not know the specific dates of the videos, he estimated that, because of the similarities, the videos were made “within the previous days leading up to” his encounter with respondent-mother. Petitioner’s attorney asked Officer Kilbourn if the videos would give the trial court “a good idea of exactly how [respondent- mother] sounded” in September 2024, and Officer Kilbourn stated, “Yes.”

Petitioner moved to admit the five videos. Respondent-mother’s attorney objected, asserting that Officer Kilbourn could not verify when the videos were recorded. Petitioner’s attorney stated that he could call respondent-mother to testify about when she recorded the videos. The trial court overruled the objection and allowed the videos to be played and admitted. Petitioner played the videos, asking Officer Kilbourn to identify the person and location depicted in the videos. Officer Kilbourn identified respondent-mother in the videos, and he confirmed that what she was saying in the videos did not make sense to him. Officer Kilbourn confirmed that the videos appeared to be from the same Facebook profile that he had observed on the day of the incident.

Officer Breanna Books, a police social worker for the TRPD, testified that she had responded to the scene in September 2024 and, when she arrived, she saw respondent-mother livestreaming in a parking lot with her belongings near her. Officer Books saw KD and AW, and they “looked not thrilled to be there.” Respondent-mother talked about the FBI following her and made other delusional statements, including about “nanobots implanted into her brain.” Respondent-mother explained that she had left their apartment because “it had been filled with gas.” Someone had checked and informed her that the apartment was fine, but respondent-mother did not trust the person, believing that the responder who checked her home was working with the FBI or other unidentified people following her. Respondent-mother and the children had gone from Constantine, Michigan, to Three Rivers, Michigan, walking some of the way and riding some of the way, “during the night.”

Officer Books testified that, in her role, she did not question people, but she spoke with people who wanted to speak with her. When Officer Books sat down next to KD, KD “very quickly and excitedly” told Officer Books what had happened. KD had stated that she was not okay, respondent-mother made them walk from Constantine, and KD had not had anything to eat or drink. KD told Officer Books that she was scared and did not want to go back with respondent- mother. Officer Book further testified that KD told her that there was nothing wrong with their

-2- apartment, but respondent-mother made them leave, and KD did not “want to have to walk here,” and they had nowhere to go. KD was worried about AW, and she thought that respondent-mother was brainwashing AW because he did not want to separate from her. KD also reported to Officer Books that respondent-mother had been dealing with mental-health issues for the previous year, including having delusions that people were following her. Officer Books testified that she had not asked KD many questions, and she did not speak much to AW because he was extremely shy. According to Officer Books, the children appeared to be scared.

Officer Books asked respondent-mother when they had last eaten, and respondent-mother answered that “it had been about two days since they had had a real meal.” Respondent-mother was not sure when they had last had water, so Officer Books got water for them. The children drank it quickly. Officer Books further testified that respondent-mother’s “moods were very unstable throughout this entire interaction.” In Officer Books’s opinion, the children “were in unseasonably warm clothing and sweating.” Respondent-mother was released from the hospital later that day, and Officer Books testified that she had “never been that upset about someone not being kept” by the hospital.

The trial court concluded that there were statutory grounds to exercise jurisdiction under MCL 712A.2(b)(1) and (2). The trial court explained that there was “no question” that respondent- mother was experiencing a “severe mental health crisis” at the time of the incident, with the children “right there in the mix of it.” The trial court noted that respondent-mother created the five admitted videos “at or near this time the incident took place.” The trial court noted that KD made an “excited utterance” to Officer Books about how scared she was. The trial court explained that the family had walked part of the eight miles away from home, partially at night. The trial court also acknowledged Officer Books’s testimony that “she had never been more upset” when the hospital released respondent-mother because of the seriousness of the situation and risk to the children.

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In Re woodbury/drayton Minors, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-woodburydrayton-minors-michctapp-2025.