Matter of Cheyanne B. V. (Larry A. V.)

2003 NY Slip Op 51502
CourtNew York Family Court
DecidedNovember 26, 2003
DocketIndex No.: NN 08983-03
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2003 NY Slip Op 51502 (Matter of Cheyanne B. V. (Larry A. V.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Family Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Cheyanne B. V. (Larry A. V.), 2003 NY Slip Op 51502 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2003).

Opinion

Matter of Cheyanne B. V. (Larry A. V.) (2003 NY Slip Op 51502(U)) [*1]
Matter of Cheyanne B. V. (Larry A. V.)
2003 NY Slip Op 51502(U)
Decided on November 26, 2003
Family Court, Monroe County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on November 26, 2003
Family Court, Monroe County


In the Matter of Cheyanne B. V. and Nikolas A. V.
Children under the Age of Eighteen Years
Alleged to be Neglected by
LARRY A. V., RESPONDENT.




Index No.: NN 08983-03 APPEARANCES:

Peter Essley, Esq., Deputy County Attorney, of counsel

Frederick P. Lester, Esq., for Respondent

Stephen R. Weisbeck, Esq., Law Guardian

MARILYN L. O'CONNOR, J.

DECISION AND ORDER

Monroe County Department of Human and Health Services filed a petition under Article 10 of the Family Court Act on August 12, 2003 alleging that respondent father had neglected his children, Cheyanne, age 2 1/2 (DOB 1/24/01) and Nikolas, an infant (DOB 9/16/02). At the time of the filing, the father was incarcerated and the mother was deceased, and the Respondent/father was legally responsible for the children's care. Prior to the death of the mother and the incarceration of the father, the daughter Cheyanne had been in the father's custody, and the infant son Nikolas had been in the mother's custody. The petition alleges that the father neglected the children by taking actions which resulted in him being stopped at about 3:30 AM while driving a car with his daughter in the back seat, filthy and only partially dressed, and with the body of the children's mother in the trunk of his car, wrapped in a blanket bound with duct tape. It is also alleged that the respondent father acknowledged that the children's mother was dead. It was further alleged that the daughter knew her mother was dead, and when asked about her father, she began to shake and cry. The petition alleges that the daughter was immediately removed from the father's care, and reasonable efforts to prevent or eliminate the need for removal were not made because of the immediate incarceration of the respondent father and his pending murder in the second degree charges. A history of domestic violence between the parents was alleged. For the reasons set forth below, the petition is sustained based on the evidence adduced at trial and the court finds the children were neglected children.

At the hearing, Maria Bianchi, a Child Protective worker, Deputy David Kron, of the Monroe County Sheriff's Office; Lynn Oswald, emergency foster care parent; Dr. Caroline R. Dignan; forensic pathologist and Deputy Medical Examiner; and Investigator Thomas Passmore, [*2]of the Monroe County Sheriff's Office, were the witnesses for the petitioner. The respondent did not testify, nor did he call any witnesses. The petitioner's witnesses were credible.

Officer Kron testified to the following facts and observations. He said that he stopped the respondent due to the burned out taillights on his car at about 3:30 AM, observed the little girl asleep in the back seat, discovered in a computer check that the respondent had an outstanding harassment warrant, discovered that the car had no valid registration and no insurance, and placed the respondent in custody. He then called a friend suggested by respondent to come take the child, and that the friend came, arriving at 4:20 AM. However, upon doing the routine inventory search of the car, which he was having towed pursuant to standard procedures, he observed what was obviously a body wrapped in something like a blanket and duct tape in the trunk. Thus, he asked the respondent about the situation and was informed by him that there was a person in the blanket, who did not need an ambulance. The officer pressed on the body through the blanket and found it stiff. He also found a gallon of gasoline, a can of starter fluid, a rope and a bag of charcoal in the trunk. As a result Child Protective was called, and arrangements were made for Child Protective worker Bianchi to take the girl to an emergency foster care parent, Ms. Oswald.

Bianchi testified that she arrived at the scene where the respondent was stopped, and observed that the little girl was extremely filthy over her whole body, wore only jeans and a very dirty and smelly diaper, had very matted hair, and seemed frightened. She did not notice bruising on the child. The child had been in a car seat.

Ms. Oswald's testimony confirmed that the girl was delivered to her around 7:30 AM, wearing only jeans and a very dirty diaper, with "Nothing on top and no shoes". Additionally, "she was dirty and she had very muddy feet". The mud struck Ms. Oswald as unusual, being black not brown. Cheyanne was promptly given a bath as she "really needed one". Ms. Oswald had to wash the little girl's hair twice. Ms. Oswald further testified that the girl ate two bowls of cereal and some toast for breakfast. Significantly, she explained that while sitting on the woman's lap, the girl pointed to the floor and said, "Mommy, mommy no more, mommy dead". This was volunteered not solicited. Ms Oswald further testified that about an hour and a half after the girl arrived, and not knowing the details of what was going on, she asked the little girl about daddy. The little girl responded by "cowering into" or snuggling into her, and not saying anything, and she "started shaking". Ms. Oswald promptly changed the subject, took her to another room and turned on the television for her.

The medical examiner, Dr. Dignan, testified to her method of examining the body and that the children's mother had died from asphyxiation. She explained that she drew this conclusion from the many petechiae—very tiny hemorrhages caused by pressure building up and the vessels bursting—in her eyes, on her face, in her mouth, on her chest and shoulders. Dr. Dignan noted that the victim was naked when removed from the wrapping material, which turned out to be a mattress pad. The body was positively identified as the children's mother by the dead woman's own mother. Dr. Dignan testified that the body had plastic wrap tightly wrapped around the head and neck several times; had a hemorrhage in the neck i.e., deep bruising in the neck which did not show up on the skin. The doctor said this was caused by force applied to the neck. She could not say whether the children's mother died of strangulation or smothering, both of which are methods of asphyxiation. The doctor, who testified that she had seen perhaps one [*3]hundred or even more cases of asphyxiation, concluded that the victim could have died one or two days before she was found in the car trunk, and that she was a homicide victim. Dr. Dignan tested for evidence of a sexual assault or sexual activity, both vaginally and rectally, and found no sperm. She concluded there was no evidence of sexual intercourse prior to death.

The final witness, Investigator Passmore, who interviewed the respondent father, testified to statements made by him. Passmore said the respondent said he believed that his kids were "better off" without him or the mother and at least now they would "have a chance".

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Bluebook (online)
2003 NY Slip Op 51502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-cheyanne-b-v-larry-a-v-nyfamct-2003.