IN THE MATTER OF V.J.R.

2024 OK 66
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 24, 2024
Docket120844
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

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IN THE MATTER OF V.J.R., 2024 OK 66 (Okla. 2024).

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IN THE MATTER OF V.J.R.
2024 OK 66
Case Number: 120844; Comp. w/120910
Decided: 09/24/2024
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA


Cite as: 2024 OK 66, __ P.3d __

NOTICE: THIS OPINION HAS NOT BEEN RELEASED FOR PUBLICATION. UNTIL RELEASED, IT IS SUBJECT TO REVISION OR WITHDRAWAL.


In the matter of V.J.R. (a/k/a F.M.), a deprived child:

BRANDI MCCUBBIN, Respondent/Appellant,
v.
THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA, Petitioner/Appellee.

ON APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF OKLAHOMA COUNTY,
STATE OF OKLAHOMA

HONORABLE KAITLYN G. ALLEN, DISTRICT JUDGE

0 Respondent/Appellant, Brandi McCubbin (hereinafter "Adoptive Mother"), appeals the trial court's order terminating her parental rights for failure to protect V.J.R., also known as F.V.M. (hereinafter "Child"), from shocking and heinous abuse pursuant to 10A O.S.2021, § 1-4-904(B)(9). This Court retained the appeals in this case and a companion case--i.e., Victoria Rodriguez v. State of Oklahoma (In re M.R.), No. 120,910 (Okla. filed Dec. 7, 2022)--to address an issue of first impression concerning whether the trial court should have applied ICWA's heightened burden of proof in a case that does not involve a Native American child or family. In Rodriguez v. State (In re M.R.), 2024 OK 28, ¶¶ 0, 16--23, 548 P.3d 120, 123, 128--31, we held that, in such a case, the parent lacks standing to challenge the constitutionality of ICWA and that, even if we were to presume standing existed, the equal protection claim must fail because ICWA's heightened burden is based on a preference that is political (i.e., tribal membership) rather than racial. Thus, all that remains in this appeal is to dispose of Adoptive Mother's remaining arguments concerning the sufficiency of the evidence against her and the admission of a DVD recording of Child's forensic interview into evidence. Upon review of those issues, we find that the trial court's order terminating parental rights should be affirmed.

JUDGMENT OF THE DISTRICT COURT AFFIRMED.

Christian Henry, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Respondent/Appellant.

Jaclyn Rivera, OKLAHOMA COUNTY DISTRICT ATTORNEY's OFFICE, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Petitioner/Appellee.

William R. Hauser, OKLAHOMA COUNTY PUBLIC DEFENDER'S OFFICE, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for V.J.R. (a/k/a F.V.M.).

COMBS, J.:

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

1 Adoptive Mother and her husband of 20 years, Charles Allen McCubbin (hereinafter "Adoptive Father"), legally adopted Child in September of 2021, when Child was approximately four-and-a-half years old. The adoption was the culmination of a temporary guardianship that Adoptive Mother and Adoptive Father had over Child since she was 15 months old, to which Child's biological birth mother (hereinafter "Biological Mother") had consented because she had been "severely injured and in dire financial hardship"1 and because Biological Mother's aunt was Adoptive Mother's best friend. Under these circumstances, the parties opted for an open adoption, meaning child occasionally had phone calls and in-person visitation with Biological Mother.

¶2 On Thursday, March 17, 2022, Biological Mother picked up Child for a weekend visitation. During the drive to Biological Mother's hometown, Biological Mother asked Child what she had been doing earlier that morning and learned that Child had been playing the "tickle game" with Adoptive Father. When describing the tickling, Child demonstrated that Adoptive Father tickled her neck, under her arms, and in the vaginal area between her legs. Child further stated that she was wearing only her panties at that time, that Adoptive Father had no clothes on, and that such tickling occurred in the bed shared by Adoptive Father and Adoptive Mother while all three of them were lying in bed. Upon arrival in her hometown, Biological Mother drove straight to the police department and reported what Child had just disclosed. The police officers there directed Biological Mother to make a police report in the jurisdiction where the alleged sexual abuse occurred. When Biological Mother reached out to the police department in Child's hometown, they referred her to a hospital where Child could be forensically interviewed.

¶3 Biological Mother took Child to the hospital for a forensic interview the next day. At the hospital, Biological Mother and Child were met by Andrea Frisby, an employee of DHS's Child Protective Services, and Amy Baum, a social worker employed by the hospital who coordinated its Child Protection Team. Ms. Baum received training to interview children about allegations of abuse and neglect and conducted more than 3,000 interviews during her 29-year career at the hospital. She conducted a 39-minute forensic interview of Child that was digitally preserved with an audio-visual recording. During the interview, Child repeated everything she had already told Biological Mother, but she dislcosed some new information as well. Ms. Baum went over anatomical diagrams for boys and girls with Child to find out what Child called various body parts. When Ms. Baum pointed to the genital area on the male diagram and asked Child what to call that part, Child told Ms. Baum that was a "tee-tee." Later, when Ms. Baum asked whether Adoptive Father ever asks Child to do anything to parts of his body, Child responded that she had helped Adoptive Father clean and put cream on his tee-tee and used her hand to indicate that she was grabbing something pole-shaped and moving up and down, back and forth. Child indicated that she had done this "a lot of times," and even drew a picture of the cream's container on her own initiative. Child also used a sigh to demonstrate the noise Adoptive Father made when she put cream on his tee-tee. A medical doctor and Ms. Frisby watched the interview live from another room. Afterwards, Ms. Baum, Ms. Frisby, and the physician decided to involve the police.

¶4 Later that day, Detective Abigail McCavitt with the Crimes Against Children Unit met with Ms. Frisby, Ms. Baum, and the physician at the hospital. They decided to take Child into protective police custody rather than DHS custody, because it remained unknown whether Adoptive Mother knew about the alleged sexual abuse or whether she would take steps to protect Child from further abuse. Detective McCavitt opened up a criminal investigation of Adoptive Father and Adoptive Mother. Detective McCavitt spoke with Biological Mother at the hospital and reviewed the recording of Child's forensic interview. Later that day, Detective McCavitt and Ms.

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IN THE MATTER OF V.J.R.
2024 OK 66 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2024)

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