In the Matter of: Am.K., A Child In Need of Services and A.M. v. Marion County Department of Child Services and Child Advocates, Inc.

983 N.E.2d 210, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 80
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 2013
Docket49A02-1207-JC-533
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 983 N.E.2d 210 (In the Matter of: Am.K., A Child In Need of Services and A.M. v. Marion County Department of Child Services and Child Advocates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana 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 the Matter of: Am.K., A Child In Need of Services and A.M. v. Marion County Department of Child Services and Child Advocates, Inc., 983 N.E.2d 210, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 80 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

BAKER, Judge.

A.M. (Mother) was involuntarily committed for emergency mental health treatment, and the Indiana Department of Child Services (DCS) filed a petition alleging that each of Mother’s two children was a child in need of services (CHINS). The juvenile court determined that A.M.-K. was a CHINS, and Mother was ordered to participate in various services and to abide by the recommendations of mental health professionals, including taking all medications as prescribed.

Mother challenges the propriety of the parental participation order. More particularly, Mother claims that because the DCS failed to file a parental participation petition, the juvenile court lacked the authority to order her participation in any services or treatment. Mother also claims that the order directing her to take any medications as prescribed violates her constitutional right to decide her own mental health treatment.

*212 We conclude that Mother was adequately notified of the DOS’s recommended plan of participation and that Mother acquiesced to the trial court’s authority to enter a parental participation order. However, we also conclude that the DCS failed to present sufficient evidence to overcome Mother’s liberty interest in deciding her own treatment when Mother objected to the order and presented evidence of her concerns. Accordingly, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for additional proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

In September 2011, Mother was staying at a hotel in Indianapolis with her nine-year-old daughter S.M. when she decided to go swimming in a nearby creek. Mother left S.M. with the hotel’s owner, whom Mother knew, and walked to the creek, stripped down until she was naked, and swam until she suffered a stomach cramp and had to get out. Someone observed Mother lying in the grass naked and called the police.

When Officer Steven Jones from the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department (IMPD) arrived, he located Mother behind the hotel “sitting completely nude on the sidewalk.” Tr. p. 56. Officer Jones asked Mother why she was not wearing any clothes, and she replied that “she wanted to be nude and she was allowed to be nude.” Id. Although Mother initially refused to find her clothes, she allowed herself to be covered with a blanket and eventually got dressed. Officer Jones became concerned for Mother’s mental health when he observed that Mother was demonstrating odd behavior, such as “emotional swings from ... crazed laughter to yelling into the sky ... ‘in the name of Jesus Christ I have seen the light.’ ” Id. Officer Jones detained Mother to take her to a hospital for mental health evaluation and treatment.

DCS family case manager Amy Ryan (FCM Ryan) also responded to the scene after the DCS received a report that S.M. “was left alone in a hotel room while [Mother] ... swam in a drainage ditch naked.” Id. at 66. When FCM Ryan arrived, Mother was already dressed, and S.M. was sitting in the back of a police vehicle. S.M. “looked scared” and asked FCM Ryan “why her mom was cra2y.” Id. at 72. Mother told FCM Ryan that she had removed her children from school to come to Indianapolis “for a natural healing experience.” Id. at 67. She stated that she left six-year-old A.M.-K. with his father “a few weeks prior to [the incident].” Id. Mother also admitted to having attempted suicide in September 2009 by overdosing on prescription medications and alcohol. As a result of Mother’s suicide attempt in 2009, S.M. had previously been adjudicated a CHINS, but the case closed in approximately March 2010.

When FCM Ryan asked Mother about any current drug use, Mother replied, “I am clean from my sin and what I did is within.” Tr. p. 67. FCM Ryan also discussed Mother’s mental health treatment to that point. Mother told FCM Ryan that she had been diagnosed with “post-traumatic stress disorder, a pseudo seizure disease and a neuro cardio disease.” Id. at 68. Mother also told FCM Ryan that she “had stopped taking her medication a week ago.” Id. However, Mother did not indicate what disease that medication had been prescribed to treat.

FCM Ryan substantiated the allegation of neglect as to Mother because “[S.M.] was left alone in the hotel room and ... [Mother] was admitted to [a] psychiatric facility, [leaving] no one to care for [S.M. and A.M.-K.] at the time” and due to “concerns about [Mother’s] mental health and *213 her ability to care for the children.” Id. at 68-69.

Mother was involuntarily committed for mental health treatment for several weeks. She was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and prescribed lithium. However, Mother was taken off the lithium and prescribed Geodon because the lithium had elevated her blood pressure and caused an episode with Mother’s heart condition. However, upon Mother’s discharge from commitment, Mother’s primary care physician, Dr. Charlie Williams, took her off the Geo-don and told her to schedule a follow-up appointment in a year. Mother claimed that she also had “a bad allergic reaction” to the Geodon and that it “made [her] very sick ... to where [she] couldn’t sleep and where [her] heart was puttering.” Tr. p. 142-43.

Once she was discharged, Mother began having supervised parenting time with her children, but her parenting time was suspended in December 2011. Prior to the suspension of her parenting time, Mother had asked that she be permitted to see her children individually instead of together. In March 2012, Mother participated in a psychological evaluation, which recommended in part that Mother participate in a psychiatric evaluation to determine if she would benefit from anti-psychotic medication. 1 Mother also began individual counseling with Tatenda Mandaza, a home-based therapist referred by the DCS.

A fact-finding hearing on the CHINS petition was held over two days in April and May 2012. 2 At the hearing in April, Mandaza testified that Mother had experienced “minimal progress” in therapy. Tr. p. 75. Mandaza noted that Mother’s “thinking patterns sometimes tend to be egocentric and ... it was hard for her to differentiate what was best for her children and what she wanted.” Id. at 83. Mother would also become “overwhelmed” regarding the need to discipline both children during visits. Id. Mandaza recommended that Mother continue therapy and participate in a psychiatric evaluation. Mandaza recommended the evaluation because Mother had been “diagnosed with different variations of a psychotic disorder by more than one professional” 3 and because “research shows that medication sometimes is helpful in treatment.” Id. at 76. Mandaza further stated her belief that “at this point ... therapy alone is not going to be as effective.” Id. at 78.

A.M.-K.’s stepmother testified that she had previously observed Mother acting “not all there” once when Mother and S.M. dropped off items at her home for A.M.-K. Id. at 92.

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983 N.E.2d 210, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-amk-a-child-in-need-of-services-and-am-v-marion-indctapp-2013.