Jane Doe v. Crystal Rivera and Monroe County

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 13, 2026
Docket3:23-cv-01066
StatusUnknown

This text of Jane Doe v. Crystal Rivera and Monroe County (Jane Doe v. Crystal Rivera and Monroe County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jane Doe v. Crystal Rivera and Monroe County, (M.D. Pa. 2026).

Opinion

| IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT | FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA JANE DOE, : No. 3:23cv1066 Plaintiff ; i (Judge Munley) V. ‘ CRYSTAL RIVERA and MONROE : | COUNTY, : Defendants : | TEED year aa aaa ees | MEMORANDUM | A written custody order provided Plaintiff Jane Doe with primary physical | custody of her three minor children. During an investigation by Defendant | Monroe County’s Children and Youth Services Department (“CYS”) into

| allegations of child abuse, Doe lost custody of two of those children pursuant to a CYS supervisor's phone call with a judge. In this action, Doe asserts that the | county and the supervisor, Defendant Crystal Rivera, violated her Constitutional

| rights during the investigation by forcing a switch in custody to her ex-husband without due process of law. | Before the court are cross-filed motions for summary judgment. Doe asserts that partial summary judgment should be entered in her favor on the defendants’ liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (“Section 1983”). Defendants take a

| different view in support of their own motion for summary judgment. According to their motion, Defendant Rivera facilitated a transfer of physical custody to Doe’s

ex-husband through customary county practices. Per defendants, the custody transfer occurred at the direction of an on-call judge, who issued a verbal order based on what Rivera stated on the phone. Defendants assert that Rivera is immune from liability in her role at CYS under binding Third Circuit precedent and that no viable municipal liability claim exists against Monroe County. For the reasons set forth below, immunity shields the child welfare worker, but the county takes the hit. Defendants’ motion for summary judgment will be granted in part. Defendant Rivera enjoys absolute quasi-judicial immunity from Doe's Section 1983 claim. The motion will be denied with respect to the Section 1983 claim against Defendant Monroe County. Plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment will be granted as to Defendant Monroe County’s liability based on the undisputed facts and B.S. v. Somerset Cnty., 704 F.3d 250 (3d Cir. 2013). Background Serious allegations were levied against Doe in the summer of 2021. Specifically, Monroe County CYS was investigating allegations that Doe’s oldest male child sexually assaulted Doe’s youngest female child and that Doe attempted to cover it up. These child abuse allegations were levied as Doe was engaged in ongoing domestic relations litigation with her ex-husband—in divorce, in custody, and in support. (Doc. 74-1, Doe Decl. 1, Jf 5—9).

| 1. The Child Custody Order and ChildLine Report | At the time of the CYS investigation into sibling sexual abuse, an interim

| child custody order was in place in the associated civil action filed in the Monroe County Court of Common Pleas. (Doc. 74-4, 11/16/2020 Custody Order).

| Pursuant to the order, Doe enjoyed primary physical custody of her three | children. Id. They will be referred to as Older Son, Younger Son, and Daughter | in this memorandum.' Under that order, Husband enjoyed partial physical | custody every other weekend. Doe and Husband shared legal custody of the three children. | Per Doe, the relationship between Older Son and Husband had become so

| antagonistic by June 2021 that there was family violence. Specifically, according | to Doe, Husband pinned Older Son to the ground during a physical altercation.

| (Doe Decl. 1, I] 10-11).

| 1 The parties used the same or similar pseudonyms for the children. Older Son and Younger | Son are the biological children of Doe’s first husband. (Doc. 74-1, Doe. Decl. 1, ] 2). Daughter | is the biological child of plaintiff's second husband. Id., {| 3. Doe’s second husband adopted | Older Son and Younger Son. (Doc. 25, Am. Compl. {| 11). Doe and her second husband | separated in 2018, began their family court litigation in 2019, and were divorced on May 4, | 2020. Id., ] 12-15. From the court's review of the record, plaintiff's first husband was not | involved in the relevant underlying state court proceedings. Therefore, for ease of addressing | the issues, the court will refer only to plaintiff's second husband in the body of this | memorandum and use “Husband” as a pseudonym. |

A report was made to ChildLine regarding the children on June 10, 2021.7 (Doc. 74, Pl. SOF J 18).2 On about June 18, 2021, a Monroe County CYS caseworker called Doe to tell her the agency was conducting a welfare check. Id. {| 19. The caseworker made several attempts to see Doe and the children after | the ChildLine complaint was filed, but Doe was not home during several of those | attempts to make contact. Id. | Doe later agreed to meet at the agency office and then later at the | Children’s Advocacy Center (“CAC”).4 Id. By text message, Defendant Rivera,

2 ChildLine is a toll-free hotline, part of a mandated statewide child protective services program | designed to accept child abuse referrals and general child well-being concerns and transmit | the information quickly to the appropriate investigating agency. See 23 PA. CONS. STAT. § Earlier in this litigation, Doe attempted to obtain the identity of the individual who made | the ChildLine report on June 10, 2021, ostensibly to demonstrate that it was Husband or his proxy. (Doc. 38). After reviewing the parties’ letter briefs on the issues and conducting an in | camera review, United States Magistrate Judge Susan E. Schwab denied Doe’s request. (Doc. | 51). This matter was reassigned after the cross-filed motions for summary judgment were ripe | for disposition. The court refers to the parties’ statements of fact (i.e, “PI. SOF” or “Def. SOF”) for undisputed facts or facts which the opposing party admitted in their responses to the statements of fact. | 4 A “children’s advocacy center” is defined under Pennsylvania’s Child Protective Service Law (“CPSL’) as: | A local public agency...which...operates within this Commonwealth | for the primary purpose of providing a child-focused, facility-based program dedicated to coordinating a formalized multidisciplinary response to suspected child abuse that, at a minimum...assists county agencies, investigative teams and law enforcement by providing services, including forensic interviews, medical evaluations, therapeutic interventions, victim support and advocacy, | team case reviews and a system for case tracking. | 23 PA. CONS. STAT. § 6303(a).

the casework supervisor, advised Doe that she had an appointment on June 30, 2021, and that she should bring all the children. Id. J 20. | The CAC interviews were not scheduled to investigate allegations of Husband's physical abuse of Older Son that Doe mentioned in her summary | judgment declaration. Rather, according to Defendant Rivera’s summary | judgment affidavit, the ChildLine report provided to CYS contained allegations | that Older Son, then approximately 14 years of age, had sexual contact with

| Daughter, who was then 7 years old. (Doc. 74-6, Emerg. Pet. for Custody, □ 3; 71, Def. Ex. A., C. Rivera Aff., {] 1). | 2. Defendant Rivera Believed that Younger Son and Daughter Implicated | Older Son in Sexual Abuse and that Doe Engaged in Cover-up Efforts As part of the CYS investigation, Plaintiff brought Older Son, Younger Son, land Daughter to the CAC in East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania on June 30, 2021. | (C. Rivera Aff., 9 4). A former Pennsylvania State Police Trooper, Lynn | Courtright, conducted forensic interviews of Younger Son and Daughter. Id. □□ 6. | Defendant Rivera watched the forensic interviews on closed-circuit

| television. Id. 9. According to Rivera’s impressions from the interview, Daughter told Courtright that Older Son penetrated her body and that it felt “bad.” Id.

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Jane Doe v. Crystal Rivera and Monroe County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jane-doe-v-crystal-rivera-and-monroe-county-pamd-2026.