In the Interest of Aneesah B., (Jan. 7, 1999)

1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 809
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1999
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 809 (In the Interest of Aneesah B., (Jan. 7, 1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of Aneesah B., (Jan. 7, 1999), 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 809 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Memorandum of Decision CT Page 810
On February 2, 1998, the Department of Children and Families (DCF) filed a petition to terminate the parental rights of Redora B. and Donald L. to their daughter, Aneesah B. A trial of the termination petitions took place on December 9, 10 and 29, 1998.2 For the reasons stated below, the Court denies the petition to terminate parental rights.

FACTS

The Court finds the following facts and credits the following evidence.

A. Procedural Background

Aneesah B. was born on May 4, 1996 at twenty-nine weeks gestation testing positive for cocaine. DCF obtained an order of temporary custody of Aneesah on June 3, 1996. On July 10, 1996, the Court adjudicated Aneesah to be neglected and uncared for and committed her to DCF custody for one year. The Court has annually extended the commitment, which next expires on July 1, 1999. As stated, on February 2, 1998, DCF filed its termination petition. On October 7, 1998, the mother admitted the statutory ground of failure to rehabilitate, see Conn. Gen. Stat. §17a-112(c)(3)(C), and agreed to contest only the dispositional phase of the termination case.

A. The Mother

Redora B. was thirty-one years old at the time of trial. At age fourteen she had a spinal fusion due to scoliosis and had a rod placed in her back. She continues to experience back pain. Although the mother dropped out of high school, she obtained a GED and completed one and one-half years of college.

The mother has a long history of substance abuse and criminal convictions. DCF was involved with her two older sons from prior relationships. The mother lost parental rights to one of the two boys through termination proceedings. The mother began a nonmarital relationship with the father in late 1995. The relationship was marred by drugs and domestic violence. At the time of Aneesah's birth, the relationship was in shambles.

After Aneesah's placement in her first foster home in June, CT Page 811 1996, DCF made unsuccessful efforts to contact the mother. The mother failed to attend the commitment hearing and so the Court did not have the opportunity to impose initial expectations. In late July or early August, however, the mother called DCF from the York Correctional Institute in Niantic, where the mother was detained on prostitution charges. On August 21, 1996, the DCF social worker assigned to the case went to the prison with Aneesah, explained to the mother what DCF expected her to do to rehabilitate herself, which centered on drug rehabilitation, and set up a weekly visitation schedule to commence on August 30, when the mother was expected to be released.

Over the next twenty months, until the late spring of 1998, the mother failed to reestablish herself as a possible placement for Aneesah. The mother missed a number of scheduled visits with Aneesah and her whereabouts became unknown for two periods of several months each. The mother was incarcerated again in October, 1996 and February, 1997 on charges of prostitution, failure to appear, and violation of probation. Although the Court entered expectations in July, 1997 that focused on drug rehabilitation, the mother failed to complete several substance abuse programs, and struggled with homelessness and sobriety. Toward the end of this period, the mother became pregnant through a different relationship. Some of the visits that the mother missed in 1998 resulted from the fact that this pregnancy was one of high risk, thus necessitating frequent medical appointments and some hospitalization.

On March 5, 1998, the mother gave birth to a healthy boy named Kahlil. This event seems to have changed the direction of the mother's life. The mother completed a program geared toward teaching parenting to women with substance abuse problems and then completed a job training program. The mother now has a job as a supervisor and has a day care arrangement for Kahlil. The mother found an apartment to share with another mother and then found her own three room apartment. The mother has been drug-free and sober for over a year. She attends Alcoholics or Narcotics Anonymous every day. In its December 7, 1998 Addendum to the Social Study, DCF "acknowledge[d] that [the mother] is making steady progress in her substance abuse treatment program and in meeting the needs of her son whom she has parented from birth."

During 1997, many of Aneesah's visits with her mother went well, although there were also times when Aneesah would cry when going to a visit. The mother's visits with Aneesah resumed on a CT Page 812 regular, biweekly basis on April 30, 1998. Since that time, the visits have been uniformly positive. Aneesah is happy to see the mother, whom, along with her new foster mother, she calls "mommy."3 Aneesah loves to be a big sister to Kahlil, whom the mother brings to the visits. The mother reads to Aneesah and gets down on the floor with her to play. The mother has brought nutritious foods for snacks, child-appropriate videos to watch, and toys and clothes for Aneesah to bring back to her foster home. As DCF has stated in its Social Study Addendum: "[The mother] is patient and thoughtful during visits with her daughter and enjoys playing with her." The mother testified credibly that she would be willing to work with DCF in effectuating a smooth, gradual return of Aneesah to her home and that she would regard Aneesah's current foster parents as part of their extended family.

C. The Father

The father, Donald L., was thirty-five years old at the time of trial. He was honorably discharged from the U.S. Army in 1983. He has four children from a prior marriage. He has supported them and there is no history of DCF involvement in their lives.

The father, however, has a long history of drug abuse. In 1989, he was convicted of two felonies. When the father began his relationship with the mother in late 1995, the father was attempting to address his drug problem. He relapsed in April, 1996 and the relationship fell apart.

The father visited Aneesah virtually every day that she was in the hospital, although on one occasion he got into an altercation with the mother. The father then failed to attend the custody and commitment hearings. DCF did not hear from the father until September, 1996, when the father called DCF from a drug program that he was attending. The father met initially with the social worker who explained that, because there was uncertainty about paternity, a paternity test was necessary before they could take the next step of arranging visitation and services. The father agreed with the idea of a paternity test because he knew that the mother had engaged in prostitution.

The father, however, failed to keep a follow-up appointment with DCF. The father, at the time, was addressing his drug problem and his homelessness. He did not call DCF again until early January, 1997, when he requested visitation with Aneesah. CT Page 813 The DCF worker reiterated the need for a paternity test but nonetheless arranged a visit with Aneesah for January 16. The father did not appear because on that same day he went to jail for twenty days on failure to appear charges.

In April, 1997, DCF sent a letter to the father, at two different addresses, requesting that he contact them. The father's mother received one of those letters and advised the father that he had some mail, but the father did not pick the letter up until June. The father, to be sure, was working twelve hour days with six additional hours of commuting on public transportation until June, 1997.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Juvenile Appeal (83-CD)
455 A.2d 1313 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1983)
In re Luis C.
554 A.2d 722 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1989)
In re Migdalia M.
504 A.2d 533 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1986)
In re Kezia M.
632 A.2d 1122 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1993)
In re Christina V.
660 A.2d 863 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1995)
In re Tabitha
664 A.2d 1168 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1995)
In re Jessica M.
714 A.2d 64 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1998)
In re Michael R.
714 A.2d 1279 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-aneesah-b-jan-7-1999-connsuperct-1999.