Marissa Valentin v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children

2023 Ark. App. 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 8, 2023
StatusPublished

This text of 2023 Ark. App. 135 (Marissa Valentin v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marissa Valentin v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children, 2023 Ark. App. 135 (Ark. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 135 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-22-633

MARISSA VALENTIN Opinion Delivered March 8, 2023 APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, EIGHTH V. DIVISION [NO. 60JV-22-241] ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR HONORABLE TJUANA C. BYRD, CHILDREN JUDGE APPELLEES AFFIRMED

STEPHANIE POTTER BARRETT, Judge

Marissa Valentin appeals the Pulaski County Circuit Court’s order adjudicating her

four children dependent-neglected, arguing that there is insufficient evidence to support a

finding of dependency-neglect.1 We affirm the circuit court’s determination.

DHS filed a petition for ex parte emergency custody and dependency-neglect on April

7, 2022, against Marissa and Ustavo Valentin.2 DHS alleged that a seventy-two-hour hold

was taken on April 4 because the children were at substantial risk of serious harm as a result

of physical abuse, neglect, and parental unfitness resulting from an altercation in which

1 An adjudication order in a dependency-neglect case is an appealable order. Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 6-9(a)(1)(A) (2022). 2 Ustavo and Marissa are married, but Ustavo lives in Connecticut, and he is not a party to this appeal. Marissa struck MC2 and threatened bodily harm to all the children. An ex parte order of

emergency custody was entered the same day. A probable-cause order was entered after a

hearing on April 12, finding probable cause to continue custody of the children with DHS

because the emergency conditions that necessitated removal persisted, and the juveniles

could not be safely returned to Marissa due to the volatility in the home and the unsafe

environment. An adjudication order was filed on July 26, adjudicating the children

dependent-neglected; Marissa timely appeals from that order.

At the adjudication hearing, fifteen-year-old MC2 testified that on April 4, she was in

the apartment with her siblings (MC1, MC3, and MC4) and Marissa, who was drinking

alcohol and taking medication. MC2 explained that when Marissa drank alcohol, she

became more violent, destructive, and verbally and sometimes physically abusive. According

to MC2, Marissa left the apartment at some point for a short time; when she came back, she

seemed angrier and more upset; she began yelling and cursing at MC2 and her siblings; and

she told them that she “might as well just kill [them] all” in their sleep. MC2 testified that

Marissa began yelling insults at her, pulling her hair, punching her in the face, and kicking

her arms and legs, leaving her with a mark on her forehead and a sore jaw; during the

altercation, Marissa also retrieved a kitchen knife and lunged toward MC2’s face with it.

MC2 stated it was not the first time Marissa had acted in such a manner toward her or her

siblings. MC2 testified that she and her younger sister were so scared that they locked

themselves in their bedroom, opened the window, broke the screen, jumped from the

second-floor apartment window to the ground, found police officers, and told the officers

2 that Marissa was trying to kill them. MC2 said that Marissa blamed her for her grandfather’s

death and for her and her siblings being in DHS custody. MC2 did not feel that it was safe

to return to Marissa’s home; she did, however, feel safe with Ustavo, and if given the choice,

she stated that she would prefer to live with him.

On cross-examination, MC2 admitted that, while in a prior foster-care placement, she

had started a fight with her brother, injuring his head and causing him to go to the hospital;

this behavior resulted in the children’s removal from the first placement to their current

placement. She acknowledged her two stays in a psychiatric hospital, once for suicidal

ideations and attacking Marissa and again for violent behavior. She conceded that she had

written a suicide note in April 2022 as well as a note about killing her grandfather shortly

before he passed away because he was trying to have the children placed with him.

Tamara Jones, the family-service caseworker, testified that she received the report of

Marissa’s attempt to harm the children on April 4, and investigated it that day; interviews

with MC1, MC3, and MC4 revealed the same facts as MC2 had provided regarding the April

3 incident. Jones also interviewed Marissa, who admitted that she had told MC2 she was

“being disrespectful as hell,” that she had “popped” MC2 in the mouth with her hand several

times and had pulled her hair, and that she had grabbed a knife and told MC2 that she was

going to “f**k her a** up”; however, Marissa denied kicking MC2. Marissa indicated to

Jones that MC2 had previously been disrespectful to Marissa’s father and had pulled a knife

on him.

3 On cross-examination, Jones opined that there were not any services DHS could

provide to prevent the removal of the children because Marissa had threatened to harm them

on more than one occasion, and they were fearful of returning to Marissa’s home because

they believed Marissa would make good on her threat to kill them in their sleep. Jones

admitted that Marissa was not arrested at the time of the incident because the police officers

believed the children’s stories were inconsistent, and the children were not taken to the

emergency room after the incident, even though two of them had jumped out of a second-

story window.

Ustavo testified that he lives in Connecticut and has sufficient space and furniture

for the children to live with him. He recounted that Marissa pulled a knife on him in 2017

or 2018 in front of the children, and he had to run for his life; he believed the past was

repeating itself. While he was currently still married to Marissa, he intended to divorce her.

Ustavo admitted that he had been convicted of assault in 1996 and had gone to prison on a

parole violation in that case in 2001, but he denied that he was currently on parole or that

his girlfriend has a criminal history. Ustavo asserted that he would be able to care for the

children if they were to come live with them, and he was prepared to provide them with

therapy or counseling if it was necessary, including assistance with any mental-health issues

MC2 might have.

Brooke Gillum, the family-service-worker supervisor, testified that DHS was doing

background checks and a home study for Ustavo, and it was arranging individual counseling,

a drug-and-alcohol assessment, drug-and-alcohol screens, a psychological evaluation, and

4 family counseling, if possible, for Marissa. The children were being referred for counseling

and comprehensive health assessments to ensure their medical needs were being met.

Gillum recommended that the children remain in DHS custody because the reasons for

removal had not been remedied; the children were still fearful of Marissa; and they were not

presently comfortable returning home with her.

Marissa testified that MC2 began having mental-health issues at age five, starting with

behavioral issues and progressing to aggression toward her older brother. She said that in

2011, after MC2 split MC1’s head open with a toy truck, she sought help for MC2, who was

diagnosed with a mood disorder and ADHD. After moving to Arkansas in 2017, MC2 was

treated at Pinnacle Pointe in 2018 for psychiatric issues after hitting Marissa in the face, and

she was again diagnosed with a mood disorder and ADHD. Marissa admitted that Ustavo

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Related

Clary v. Ark. Dep't of Human Servs.
2014 Ark. App. 338 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2014)
Mary Johnson v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children
2020 Ark. App. 513 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2020)

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2023 Ark. App. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marissa-valentin-v-arkansas-department-of-human-services-and-minor-arkctapp-2023.