Mekell Mikell v. Edward Maurice Burke

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 2, 2025
Docket0667244
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mekell Mikell v. Edward Maurice Burke (Mekell Mikell v. Edward Maurice Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mekell Mikell v. Edward Maurice Burke, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Ortiz and Friedman UNPUBLISHED

MEKELL MIKELL MEMORANDUM OPINION* v. Record No. 0667-24-4 PER CURIAM SEPTEMBER 2, 2025 EDWARD MAURICE BURKE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY Jonathan D. Frieden, Judge

(Adam Fleming, on brief), for appellant.

(Sonya L. Powell; Monica Sameni; Powell Radomsky, PLLC, on brief), for appellee.

Mekell Mikell (mother) appeals the trial court’s judgment awarding Edward Burke (father)

sole legal and physical custody of the parties’ minor daughter and granting mother supervised

visitation. Mother argues that the court erred in finding a material change in circumstances since

the last custody ruling. She also contends that modification was not in the best interests of the

child.1

BACKGROUND2

Mother and father married in 2016 and had one child, S.B., born in 2019. In May 2020

the parties separated, and in June 2020, mother petitioned the Fairfax County Juvenile and

Domestic Relations District Court (JDR court) for both a preliminary protective order and a

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). 1 After examining the briefs and record, the panel unanimously holds that oral argument is unnecessary because “the appeal is wholly without merit.” Code § 17.1-403(ii)(a); Rule 5A:27(a).

“On appeal, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to . . . the party prevailing 2

below.” D’Ambrosio v. D’Ambrosio, 45 Va. App. 323, 335 (2005). protective order against father. Mother’s various allegations did not include any acts of physical

abuse. The JDR court denied her request for a preliminary protective order and, after a hearing later

that month, also denied the petition for a protective order.

A few days later, mother obtained a three-day emergency family abuse protective order

against father. On the day it expired, mother again petitioned the JDR court for a preliminary

protective order and protective order. This time, mother alleged that while she was in bed with the

child, father sexually assaulted her. The JDR court denied mother’s request for a preliminary

protective order and, after a hearing, also denied her petition for a protective order.

In November 2020, the parties were awarded joint legal and shared physical custody of

S.B. They divorced in 2021.

I. Allegations and Incidents Post-Divorce

In July 2022, the parties signed a consent order permitting each parent to enroll the child

in a daycare of their choosing during their respective custodial days. That same month, father

was criminally charged with offenses stemming from mother’s 2020 allegations. The charges were

ultimately nolle prossed over mother’s objection.

During an August 2022 appointment, S.B. told her pediatrician that her father had touched

her vagina. The doctor reported the allegation to Child Protective Services (CPS).

In October 2022, S.B. began therapy at Sunstone Counseling. Mother reported that the child

had night terrors and had claimed, “Daddy touches my vagina.” Father “denie[d] abuse of any

type,” and the therapist noted “no outward appearance[] of abuse” or “direct behavioral issues

attributable to any abuse.” At the next appointment, mother repeated that the child told her, “Daddy

touches my vagina” after returning from father’s custody. Father, on the other hand, reported that

the child had said, “Mummy and [maternal grandmother] tell[] me that Daddy touches my vagina.”

CPS was advised of the allegations, and therapy was discontinued during the investigation.

-2- In a forensic interview, the child “stated that daddy touches [her] vagina while at the

aquarium with a stick.” Mother explained that she “is unsure if the child knows what part of the

body [it] is because” the child previously referred to “armpits” as “vagina.”3 CPS determined the

complaint was unfounded, and father was not charged criminally.

The child resumed therapy at Sunstone in early December 2022. The next month, child’s

counselor informed both parents that there were “no behaviors that raise[d] any concern for [the

child’s] wellbeing at [that] time” and the only concern was the parents’ “high conflict relationship.”

For the benefit of the child’s “long term mental health,” the counselor recommended that the parents

engage in “co-parenting training . . . and/or regular sessions with a co-parenting therapist who

specializes in high conflict relationships.”

In April 2023, mother moved to amend child custody, visitation, and support, alleging,

among other things, that the child “repeatedly” told mother and maternal grandmother that father

“touches her vagina.”

In July 2023, after being contacted by mother, a detective reported to Fairfax County CPS

that S.B. said father “touches and kisses [her] vagina.” During a second forensic interview, the

interviewer provided instructions to the child, who “immediately stated that ‘daddy touched my

vagina, and I really did not like it.’” She then claimed that father used “a stick” to touch her vagina

daily. The child also stated that “daddy put a water balloon on his penis and splashed me on the

face.” According to S.B., “Aunt Candance” was in the room at the time, and “Aunt Candance put a

water balloon on her penis and splashed [the child’s] face.” She confirmed that “mommy told her

what to say about daddy.” CPS eventually concluded its investigation with an unfounded

disposition.

3 Father reported a similar experience to the child’s pediatrician. -3- In early August 2023, mother successfully petitioned for an emergency family abuse

protective order against father which prohibited him from being in the presence of mother and the

child. Mother accused father of committing “horrible [acts of] molestation” against S.B. and stated

that she feared father would retaliate against the child because mother had “reported [him] to CPS

several times for abusing” the child. Among other things, mother alleged that since 2022, without

prompting, S.B. had “repeatedly stated that ‘daddy touches my vagina, and I don’t like it.’” When

the emergency protective order expired, the JDR court granted mother’s petition for a preliminary

protective order against father based on the same allegations.

Around that time, mother took the child to a hospital emergency room, complaining that

child frequently wet the bed, felt “burning” while urinating, and was “complaining of vaginal pain.”

She told staff that CPS was investigating father for sexually assaulting the child. Mother reported

that the child told her that father “kisses [the child] down there,” “blows up a balloon and puts it on

his penis [and] then puts the contents of the balloon on [the child’s] face,” and urinates and

defecates on the child. The child’s genital exam was “[u]nremarkable,” and there were no lesions,

abrasions, redness, rash, or trauma. S.B.’s urinalysis was abnormal, and she was treated for a

urinary tract infection. The child tested negative for sexually transmitted infections.

In mid-August 2023, father also moved to amend custody and visitation, contending that

mother was coaching the child to make false statements about sexual abuse. Shortly afterwards,

father moved to Maryland.

In September 2023, the JDR court heard mother’s petition for a protective order. After

mother testified, she attempted to call the child to testify but eventually “conceded that the child was

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