In the Matter of the Dependency of: L.S.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 16, 2024
Docket39817-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Dependency of: L.S. (In the Matter of the Dependency of: L.S.) 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 the Matter of the Dependency of: L.S., (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED MAY 16, 2024 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

In the Matter of the Dependency of ) No. 39817-0-III ) (consolidated with ) No. 39818-8-III) ) L.S.† ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION )

LAWRENCE-BERREY, C.J. — In 2023, an Adams County trial court entered a

dependency order and out-of-home placement for L.S., a five-year-old autistic child.

Prior to the order, the State had removed L.S. from his parents’ home over concerns of

neglect, domestic violence between the parents, drug use, and other deficiencies. L.S.

had repeatedly arrived at school wearing badly soiled clothes. L.S.’s mother, with L.S. in

her care, had twice been kicked out of a shelter for drug use. The State’s concerns

regarding violence in L.S.’s home were confirmed when L.S.’s father, on the day of

removal, initiated a seven-hour standoff with law enforcement during which he verbally

threatened officers. On other occasions, L.S.’s father had thwarted the State’s attempts to

conduct home walk-throughs and administer drug tests.

The parents appealed the trial court’s dependency and dispositional orders, and

this court consolidated those appeals. Because substantial evidence supports findings

† To protect the privacy interests of the minor child, we use their initials throughout this opinion. Gen. Order for Court of Appeals, In re Changes to Case Title (Wash. Ct. App. Aug. 22, 2018) (effective September 1, 2018), http://www.courts. wa.gov/appellate_trial_courts. No. 39817-0-III; No. 39818-8-III In re Dependency of L.S.

sufficient to sustain the trial court’s orders, we generally affirm. We remand for the trial

court to consider placement with a relative.

FACTS

In 2023, the Washington Department of Children, Youth, and Families (the

Department) filed a dependency petition for L.S., a high-needs, autistic five-year-old

living in Ritzville. L.S. had come to the Department’s attention when B.S.—L.S.’s

father—had removed L.S. from school and left him at the Vanessa Behan Crisis Nursery

in Spokane. As B.S. eventually explained to the Department, he had brought the child to

Vanessa Behan because he believed V.M., L.S.’s mother, was cheating on B.S. and

associating with gang members who had harmed their child.

When Vanessa Behan informed the Department of L.S.’s situation, social worker

Kimberly Stacy contacted V.M. in Ritzville, where she was living at a motel after B.S.

had locked her out of the family home. At their first meeting, V.M. disclosed to Ms.

Stacy that B.S. physically abused her and that lately the abuse had gotten worse. V.M.

showed Ms. Stacy where B.S. had (1) knocked teeth out of her mouth, and (2) hit her ribs

with a baseball bat, resulting in visible swelling. On this or another occasion, V.M.

further reported that B.S. abused her in front of L.S., who would cover his ears and cry

while the abuse occurred.

2 No. 39817-0-III; No. 39818-8-III In re Dependency of L.S.

Pursuant to these reports, Ms. Stacy eventually provided V.M. with instructions

for how to enlist the help of a domestic violence advocate. V.M. failed to contact the

advocate, however, because—according to Ms. Stacy—V.M. was “confused with

multiple phone calls of one step at a time of what to do.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 218.

V.M.’s failure to contact the advocate corroborated V.M.’s disclosure to Ms. Stacy that

she—V.M.—suffered from cognitive limitations. V.M. admitted that these limitations

prevented her from managing L.S.’s appointments and coordinating with L.S.’s school.

As a result, B.S. had assumed exclusive responsibility for those tasks. V.M.’s own

assessment of her limitations comported with the eventual testimony of social worker

Patricia Rodriguez, who stated that V.M. “does have a hard time understanding—simple,

like, commands and—the cognitive—there’s some cognitive delays.” Rep. of Proc. (RP)

at 42.

With Ms. Stacy’s assistance, V.M. retrieved L.S. from Vanessa Behan and moved

with him into a different Spokane shelter. Within 24 hours, that shelter evicted V.M. and

L.S. because V.M. had smoked cannabis in the shelter’s bathroom. Ms. Stacy intervened,

securing a second opportunity for V.M. at the shelter. That opportunity lasted “a couple

days” before the shelter again evicted V.M. and L.S. owing to V.M. smoking cannabis in

their room. CP at 216. V.M. moved into a hotel with L.S. Around this time, a swab test

administered to V.M. indicated methamphetamine use.

3 No. 39817-0-III; No. 39818-8-III In re Dependency of L.S.

While still living in Spokane, V.M. sought a protection order against B.S. in

Adams County. B.S. attended the protection order hearing, and the record does not

indicate that the trial court imposed any order. Although Ms. Stacy had expressed to

V.M. the Department’s concern about her reuniting with B.S., V.M. and L.S. resumed

their life with B.S. in Ritzville after the protection order hearing.

Beyond (1) V.M.’s drug use and cognitive limitations, and (2) B.S.’s violent and

erratic disposition, the Department also grew concerned over reports from L.S.’s school

about the state of the child’s hygiene. According to Camille Nelson, L.S.’s special

education teacher, L.S. had begun arriving at school in soiled clothing and dirty diapers

from the previous night. Once, L.S. showed up to school for days on end wearing the

same vomit-stained sweatpants. Ms. Nelson informed L.S.’s parents of these hygiene

issues, but the parents failed to address them. Ms. Nelson testified that she saw no

improvement in L.S.’s hygiene during the time she worked with him.

Still another concern for the Department was B.S.’s refusal to allow the

Department to (1) conduct walk-throughs of his and V.M.’s home, or (2) administer

urinalysis or additional swab tests to V.M. According to Ms. Stacy, B.S. would only

consent to these measures if they occurred at a date and time of his choosing. Ms. Stacy

explained to B.S. that walk-throughs and drug tests only were meaningful when

administered randomly. Nevertheless, B.S. did not alter his position on the matter. Ms.

4 No. 39817-0-III; No. 39818-8-III In re Dependency of L.S.

Stacy reported that B.S. in multiple conversations with her had yelled and made her feel

unsafe. Several other individuals lodged similar complaints about B.S. As one example,

multiple staff members at a hospital accused B.S. of threatening to kill them if they did

not promptly refill his prescription. The Department eventually offered B.S. anger

management classes.

In February 2023, the Department filed its dependency petition and coordinated

with law enforcement to remove L.S. from B.S.’s and V.M.’s home. When law

enforcement attempted to take L.S. into custody, however, B.S. initiated a standoff that

lasted seven hours. Although B.S. did not engage in physical violence, he threatened

such violence when he asked an officer whether that officer was “‘willing to fight to [his]

last breath’” to execute the removal order. RP at 28. Eventually, B.S. surrendered L.S.

to the officers.

Ahead of the dependency hearing, the Department placed L.S. at a foster home in

Pasco that was qualified to meet the child’s elevated needs. Although the Department

coordinated regular parental visits, and facilitated those visits by offering transportation,

B.S. and V.M.

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