L.F. v. The Department of Children and Family Services

2015 IL App (2d) 131037
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 12, 2015
Docket2-13-1037
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2015 IL App (2d) 131037 (L.F. v. The Department of Children and Family Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L.F. v. The Department of Children and Family Services, 2015 IL App (2d) 131037 (Ill. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

2015 IL App (2d) 131037 No. 2-13-1037 Opinion filed March 11, 2015 ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

L.F., ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of Lake County. Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 12-MR-1538 ) THE DEPARTMENT OF CHILDREN ) AND FAMILY SERVICES and RICHARD ) H. CALICA, as Director of Children and ) Family Services, ) Honorable ) Christopher C. Starck, Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge, Presiding. ______________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE BURKE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Hutchinson and Birkett concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 After the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) entered against plaintiff,

L.F., an indicated finding of child neglect due to inadequate supervision (89 Ill. Adm. Code

300.appendix B (Allegation 74), amended at 35 Ill. Reg. 2861 (eff. Feb. 8, 2011)), she

administratively appealed the finding and requested that it be expunged from the state central

register. Following an evidentiary hearing, the administrative law judge (ALJ) recommended to

deny the expungement request. Defendant Richard H. Calica, as director of DCFS (Director),

agreed and denied plaintiff’s expungement request. The circuit court of Lake County affirmed

the Director’s decision. Plaintiff timely appeals from that order. For the following reasons, 2015 IL App (2d) 131037

we reverse the trial court’s decision and order the Director to expunge the indicated finding from

the state central register.

¶2 I. FACTS

¶3 A. Background

¶4 The record reveals the following undisputed facts and procedural history. Plaintiff is the

single parent of S.H., who was born July 27, 2006. Plaintiff and S.H. lived in a two-bedroom

apartment in Round Lake Beach, Illinois.

¶5 In 2009, plaintiff was diagnosed with a dependency on drugs and alcohol. She received

inpatient and outpatient treatment for her dependency, attended Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)

meetings, and met with a sponsor. Plaintiff also received psychiatric treatment from Dr.

Katherine Singer for depression, anxiety, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and

dermatillomania—a condition that caused her to obsessively pick at her skin.

¶6 Plaintiff also began therapy with Nancy Friedman, a licensed professional counselor.

Friedman diagnosed her with and treated her for an anxiety disorder, other psychological

conditions, and substance abuse. Plaintiff met with Friedman weekly in 2011.

¶7 On July 3, 2011, while camping with friends, plaintiff was injured in a fall, suffering a

hematoma to her tailbone. Plaintiff was prescribed Tylenol with codeine. Plaintiff only took

the medicine briefly because it made her sleepy. She asked her mother, Carol M., to care for

S.H. while she was taking the Tylenol with codeine, but her mother refused.

¶8 After her mother refused, plaintiff stopped taking the Tylenol with codeine and switched

to smoking “K3,” which was considered to be legal synthetic marijuana at the time. She

testified at the administrative hearing that K3 gave her a feeling similar to a marijuana “high,”

making her feel relaxed and “happy.” The first time she smoked K3, her son was with a friend

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of hers. Plaintiff testified that she smoked K3 again a few days later but that she could not

recall whether S.H. was at a friend’s house or asleep in plaintiff’s apartment. She began

smoking K3 on a nightly basis, and in total she smoked K3 between 10 and 20 times. During

those times, S.H. was either asleep at home or with a friend, but she could not remember which

of those times S.H. was with her.

¶9 Plaintiff became concerned that she was addicted to K3. During an alcohol and

substance abuse assessment, she told the evaluator that up to five days before the evaluation she

was smoking two grams of K3 daily.

¶ 10 On August 5, 2011, plaintiff sought help from her friends George Kinser and Natalie

Brooks at an AA meeting. Kinser was plaintiff’s AA sponsor. Brooks had been her sponsor

but had not seen her for at least two months, because plaintiff had no longer desired to work on

her 12-step program. Brooks had “detached” from plaintiff when plaintiff decided to “go back

out.” Brooks knew that plaintiff was seeking help for a substance abuse problem, because, after

Brooks broke things off, they both knew that Brooks was not allowed to talk to her unless she

wanted help.

¶ 11 Plaintiff told Kinser and Brooks that she was smoking K3 and wanted help to stop,

because she was experiencing withdrawal symptoms. Kinser and Brooks agreed to help

plaintiff. Kinser agreed to keep S.H. while Brooks took plaintiff to the Highland Park Hospital

emergency room. Plaintiff admitted to smoking K3 on the way to the hospital.

¶ 12 The hospital records indicate that plaintiff told hospital staff that she wished to “detox”

from alcohol and K3. Plaintiff told staff that she was drinking in excess of 10 shots per day and

that she was shaking and had diarrhea from attempting to withdraw from K3. The hospital’s

toxicology screen of plaintiff came back negative.

-3- 2015 IL App (2d) 131037

¶ 13 The next morning, while waiting to transfer to a treatment center, plaintiff had an anxiety

attack. She left the hospital despite advice to stay. Plaintiff called Friedman and told her of

the panic attack. Friedman advised her to return to the hospital.

¶ 14 Plaintiff also called Kinser, who was concerned that she would continue to use K3. He

refused to pick her up from the hospital. He thought that it would be in plaintiff’s best interest

if she stayed at the hospital. Plaintiff began walking to Kinser’s home, which was about 15

miles away.

¶ 15 After he spoke with plaintiff, Kinser called Carol M. and told her that plaintiff was on the

way to his house, because she had left treatment prematurely. He told Carol M. that he did not

want S.H. to be at his house when plaintiff arrived. Kinser is a school teacher and a mandated

child-abuse reporter and he was afraid that he would have to call DCFS if plaintiff showed up

while under the influence and S.H. was still there. Carol M. agreed to have S.H. stay with her,

and Brooks drove him to Carol M.’s house.

¶ 16 Police officers saw plaintiff as she walked away from the hospital and they took her to

Kinser’s home. When plaintiff discovered that S.H. was not there, she drove to Carol M.’s

house. Carol M. offered to care for S.H. while plaintiff received assistance for her substance

abuse problems and plaintiff became angry and refused.

¶ 17 Carol M. called the police before plaintiff arrived, because she thought that it was not

safe for S.H. to be with plaintiff when plaintiff was so agitated. Carol M. also called Sandra

Blank, a DCFS supervisor, for advice on what to do. Blank had been Carol M.’s supervisor

when Carol M. worked for DCFS in the same office that conducted the investigation of plaintiff.

¶ 18 When plaintiff arrived at Carol M.’s home, she saw the police officers. Plaintiff became

very upset when Carol M. accused her of being drunk and refused to release S.H. to her. The

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police officers tested plaintiff for alcohol, and the test came back negative. Carol M. still

refused to allow S.H.

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