In the Matter of M.O., Jr., a Juvenile

451 S.W.3d 910, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 12949
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 2014
Docket08-13-00148-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 451 S.W.3d 910 (In the Matter of M.O., Jr., a Juvenile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas 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 M.O., Jr., a Juvenile, 451 S.W.3d 910, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 12949 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

STEVEN L. HUGHES, Justice.

M.O., Jr. appeals from the juvenile court’s order modifying his disposition and committing him to the Texas Juvenile Justice Department (TJJD). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

On August 29, 2011, M.O. was adjudicated for committing aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, a felony. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 22.01(a)(1), 22.02(a)(2), (b), 71.02(a). M.O.’s initial disposition in September 2011 placed him on probation in his mother’s home under standard supervision at home and at school. Subsequently, the State moved to modify the disposition, and in January 2012, M.O.’s disposition was modified to Intensive Supervised Probation (ISP) under the terms and conditions of the Serious Habitual Offender Comprehensive Action Program (SHOCAP).

In March 2018, the State moved a second time to modify M.O.’s disposition. The State alleged that M.O. had violated the terms and conditions of his supervised probation by: (1) committing arson and aggravated assault with a deadly weapon; (2) using, consuming, or possessing marijuana; (3) twice leaving electronic-monitoring premises without the court’s permission; and (4) committing school-related infractions resulting in his suspension and expulsion from public school. M.O. entered into an agreed modification order committing him to TJJD. M.O. then filed a motion for new trial contending he had agreed to the disposition to TJJD by mistake, believing he had no other option and could not contest the disposition. The trial court granted M.O.’s motion and set a modification-disposition hearing for May 3, 2013.

At the modification-disposition hearing, the trial court admitted into evidence a modification-disposition report prepared by Juvenile Probation Department Officer Oscar Miranda. Miranda’s report noted that from January 2012 to February 2013, M.O. had been charged with aggravated assault against a public servant, had committed arson at his public school, had used or possessed marijuana, had absconded from his home for several days, and had been suspended and then expelled from school. In February 2013, M.O. was placed in detention, and while there attempted to assault and twice assaulted other juveniles, flooded his room, and was caught in possession of a utensil he intended to make into a shank. The report indicated that in April 2013, the SHOCAP team, the “staffing committee,” and the Chief Juvenile Probation Officer all unanimously recommended M.O. be committed to TJJD due to his referral history, his continued commission of serious felony offenses while on probation in the community, and because he constituted a danger to himself and others. The report noted M.O. had received psychological assessments, Emotional Regulation Group Counseling, and services from the El Paso *912 Emergence Health Network and MRT, from which he was discharged due to nonattendance. The report concluded and recommended that M.O. be committed to TJJD because despite being given the opportunity to correct his behavior through ISP under SHOCAP and being afforded counseling services in the community, M.O. continued to violate the terms of his probation by committing felony offenses, abusing drugs, failing to attend school, and leaving his home premises. 1 TJJD was recommended not only for the safety of M.O. and the community, but also because TJJD would provide a secure, structured setting that would restrict M.O.’s interactions with negative peers and ensure he received educational services, vocational training, therapeutic services, and independent living skills. The report noted that reasonable efforts had been made to avoid removing M.O. from his home, as he had been afforded community-based counseling services, community-based supervision through two intensive programs, and out-of-home placement in the local Challenge Academy program. The report stated that M.O.’s mother was the subject of on-going contempt hearings and concluded that M.O.’s home could not provide the level of support needed to complete probation as shown by M.O.’s continued disregard for the conditions of his probation.

The trial court also admitted into evidence a March 2013 Psychological Assessment Report prepared by clinical psychologist, Dr. Michael P. Hand. Dr. Hand’s report included diagnoses of childhood-onset conduct disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (hyperactive-impulsive type), learning disorder, and mild mental retardation. Dr. Hand made no recommendation on M.O.’s placement, but rather recommended in part that the trial court consider M.O.’s low intellectual functioning and ADHD, and the limits those disabilities placed on M.O.’s judgment, impulse control, and susceptibility to influence by others. He further recommended that medications appropriate to M.O.’s treatment be continued, that M.O. receive special education, and that M.O. be given individual psychotherapy to assess his mood, behavior, coping skills, and self-concept. Juvenile Probation Department Officer Oscar Miranda was the only witness to testify at the hearing. On the whole, his testimony confirmed and elaborated on what was contained in his modification-disposition report. For instance, Miranda testified that after being placed on SHOCAP probation, M.O. had committed two felony offenses, including an unadjudicated charge of arson to which M.O. had admitted. M.O. also left his school campus, tested positive for marijuana, and absconded from home for four to five days. After being placed in detention on February 7, 2013, M.O. was involved in three assaults and twice flooded his room. Miranda testified that he presented M.O.’s case to the SHOCAP team, the “staffing committee,” and the Chief Juvenile Probation Officer, all of whom recommended that M.O. be committed to TJJD.

Miranda noted that the Juvenile Probation Department had provided M.O. with standard supervision at home and at school, but opined that M.O.’s mother could not adequately supervise him. According to Miranda, TJJD was the only remaining option for providing any kind of help to M.O., both because M.O. needed the rehabilitation TJJD would provide and because the protection of the public required that disposition. Miranda testified that the Juvenile Probation Department offered M.O. counseling services through El Paso Emergence Health Network, *913 MRT, and the Emotional Regulation Group Counseling, and that the Department had attempted and exhausted rehabilitation efforts to address the diagnoses noted in a prior psychology report prepared in January 2012.

On cross-examination, Miranda stated that he did not “staff’ M.O. for any other programs in January 2012, and did not think that M.O. would need a mental health program other than the programs to which M.O. had already been referred. Miranda acknowledged that SHOCAP is not a mental health program, and that MRT and the Emotional Regulation Counseling Group are standard SHOCAP programs for all gang-involved youth. Miranda explained that he was in the process of referring M.O. to the El Paso Mental Health Collaborative in 2012, but acknowledged that the Department had not modified its. programs to address M.O.’s impulse control, low intellectual functioning, low vocabulary, low verbal comprehension, difficulty with information retention, or learning difficulties. Miranda testified that an El Paso Emergence caseworker had been working with M.O.

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Bluebook (online)
451 S.W.3d 910, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 12949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-mo-jr-a-juvenile-texapp-2014.