Kylie L. v. State, Dept. of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services

407 P.3d 442
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 2017
Docket7205 S-16520
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 407 P.3d 442 (Kylie L. v. State, Dept. of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kylie L. v. State, Dept. of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services, 407 P.3d 442 (Ala. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

After the trial court found that the Office of Children’s Services (OCS) failed to demonstrate it had made reasonable. efforts to reunify a family, the court nonetheless terminated the mother’s parental rights to her daughter, finding that OCS’s failure was “excused.” The mother appealed; we earlier issued an order reversing the' court’s “excused” determination and vacating the trial court’s tennination order, indicating we would fully discuss our reasoning in a later opinion. We’ do so now.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Kylie L. and Kurt B.- began a relationship in 2003 and had a daughter, Belinda B., in 2010. 1 Kurt was often abusive toward Kylie, who remained in the relationship partly because Kurt threatened that if she left him he would kill her and Belinda.

OCS became involved with the family in May 2013 when-Kurt injured Belinda. In the midst of an alcohol-fueled argument Kurt threw a glass beer bottle at Kylie; he instead hit Belinda in the back of the head, knocking her off the table on which she was seated. Kylie escaped to the becjroom with Belinda, but Kurt followed them, punching Kylie in the head and jumping on her as she attempted to protect Belinda with her body. Despite a “baseball sized lump” on Belinda’s head, Kurt refused to let Kylie secure medical care, hiding Kylie’s phone and car keys to prevent her taking Belinda to a doctor.

The next morning Kurt returned Kylie’s phone and keys so she could go to work. When Kylie arrived at work she called the police, reported the abuse to a child advocacy center, and brought Belinda to a hospital for medical attention. Kurt was arrested and OOS opened • an investigation; Belinda rer ceived a forensic evaluation and follow-up care. In June Kylie obtained a> domestic violence protective order to keep Kurt away from her and Belinda.

Kylie soon entered into a relationship with Lou C. Lou was not a safe companion; he used methamphetamine and “had a lot of involvement with the law.” Yet.Kylie had difficulty accepting that Lou was dangerous because he “didn’t physically harm her like her past partners, had.”

OCS closed its investigation in August, substantiating findings that Kurt had harmed Belinda. Only a week after closing its first investigation, OCS received another report of ham to Belinda. Kylie, Belinda, Lou, and Lou’s son had gone on a road trip. Kylie explained that during this trip she noticed Belinda was not placing weight on one of her legs. The day after they returned from the trip, Kylie took Belinda to the hospital; Kylie and Lou told the hospital staff they did not know how Belinda had been injured but thought perhaps Lou had reclined his ear seat onto the girl’s ankle. They told the doctor that Belinda had not cried out when they thought the injury might have occurred, nor had she cried during the trip. The doctor believed the injury — two broken bones in Belinda’s leg — was not consistent with Ky-lie’s explanation and reported to OCS his suspicions of non-accidental trauma. ■

OCS initiated' an investigation and implemented a protective action plan under which Belinda stayed with a family friend, OCS requested that Kylie and Lou submit to urinalysis (UA) testing, but neither showed up. The OCS caseworker referred Kylie'and Belinda to a family preservation program. The caseworker, who had received reports that Lou was involved in drug trafficking, discussed with Kylie that Lou was an unsafe person, emphasizing'the danger of exposing children to methamphetamine. By September Kylie had begun to express that she understood the danger Lou posed and had told OCS the relationship was over. The OCS worker felt Kylie “had begun to demonstrate protective capacities” and moved Belinda from an out-of-home safety plan to an in-home safety plan, requiring supervision by Kylie’s mother.

Problems with the in-home safety plan quickly developed; Kylie’s mother was leaving Belinda alone with Kylie and failing to report to ÓCS as required. In October Kylie moved to modify the protective order against Kurt, telling the court she wanted “[t]o reestablish [the] relationship between [Kurt] and his daughter.” During this period the case was transferred to an OCS family services worker who spoke with Kylie about how her pattern of engaging with dangerous men posed a threat to Belinda. The OCS worker believed Kylie was not internalizing these messages: because Lou did not physically abuse Kylie, she continued to have trouble accepting that he was unsafe, and she was planning to visit an old friend who recently had been released after serving time in prison for a manslaughter conviction resulting from a road rage incident.

In November, after Belinda had been returned to Kylie’s care under the in-home safety plan, OCS received a third report of harm, this time concerning a cigarette burn on Belinda’s lower back. Kylie told Belinda’s daycare workers that she had been holding a cigarette while removing her daughter from a ear seat and that the “cherry” fell into Belinda’s diaper and burned the. girl. OCS took emergency custody of Belinda the day after receiving the report; OCS filed an adjudication and temporary custody pétition the following day asserting that Kylie had minimized the incident.

After assuming custody and placing Belinda in foster care, OCS continued providing services.to Kylie and Belinda. OCS arranged visitation between the two and made service referrals for relationship classes, a parental risk assessment, a substance abuse assessment, and dyadic therapy, which, focuses on the parent-child relationship with' the goal of healing the child’s trauma within the context of an attachment relationship. OCS also assisted Kylie in meeting basic needs by obtaining food boxes and assisting her efforts to secure housing and heating fuel.

By all reports the dyadic therapy began very well. At some point Kylie revealed to her therapist that she was still in a relationship with Lou and that he was living in her home. But when the therapist attended a February 2014 OCS meeting addressing the possibility of a trial home visit, she did not pass on to OCS information about Lou’s continued presence in the home.

OCS learned that Kylie was pregnant with Lou’s child the following month. Because Ky-lie had previously revealed the pregnancy and continuing relationship to her therapist, OCS was concerned that Kylie was triangulating ■ providers — “telling one professional one thing, another professional something else” — making it difficult to work as a team. The therapy center did not agree with that assessment.

Kylie contended that her relationship with her daughter began to deteriorate in March, when Belinda was transferred to new foster parents who had little experience. Belinda began telling her new foster parents that her mother and father had hurt her; this led to another forensic interview, but no abuse was substantiated. OCS also moved visits from an off-site center to its own facilities. Belinda soon began exhibiting troubling behaviors and resisting visitation.

In April OCS referred Belinda to individual therapy.

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Bluebook (online)
407 P.3d 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kylie-l-v-state-dept-of-health-social-services-office-of-childrens-alaska-2017.