Norfolk Department of Human Services v. Joshua Goldberg

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedAugust 20, 2024
Docket1382231
StatusPublished

This text of Norfolk Department of Human Services v. Joshua Goldberg (Norfolk Department of Human Services v. Joshua Goldberg) 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
Norfolk Department of Human Services v. Joshua Goldberg, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA PUBLISHED

Present: Judges Fulton, Lorish and White Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

NORFOLK DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES OPINION BY v. Record No. 1382-23-1 JUDGE LISA M. LORISH AUGUST 20, 2024 JOSHUA GOLDBERG

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK Robert B. Rigney, Judge

Christopher W. Palermo-Re (Office of the Norfolk City Attorney, on brief), for appellant.

No brief or argument for appellee.

The Norfolk Department of Human Services (“the Department”) appeals the decision of

the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk allowing Joshua Goldberg to access documents related to

an unfounded report of child sexual assault against him under Code § 63.2-1514(D) (the “bad

faith disclosure exception”). The Department argues that Goldberg should not be able to access

the report because the bad faith disclosure exception only covers a report made directly to the

Department by a bad faith actor. Here, the purported bad faith actor made the complaint to a

mandatory reporter who then relayed the allegations to the Department. We agree with the

circuit court that the statute permits the disclosure of the records, and so we affirm. BACKGROUND1 Joshua Goldberg (“Goldberg”) is married to Dr. Ali Goldberg (“Ali”), and the couple has

two young children. A report was made to the Department that Goldberg was sexually abusing

their daughter, L.G.2 The Department investigated and implemented a safety plan that required

Ali to supervise all contact between her husband and L.G. L.G. also had to undergo a forensic

interview as part of the investigation. Because Goldberg is a member of the U.S. Navy, the

Naval Criminal Investigative Services also investigated the report. The Department determined

that the accusation against Goldberg was unfounded and closed the investigation.

Goldberg and his wife suspected that Ali’s mother, Linda MacKrell, made the report based

on MacKrell’s long history of interfering with how they raised their children and prior false

allegations against Goldberg. They also suspected her because the report contained information

Goldberg believed was only known to MacKrell.

Acting on these suspicions, Goldberg petitioned the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk to

release the records of the Department’s investigation to him under the bad faith disclosure

exception in Code § 63.2-1514(D). The petition outlined the above facts and alleged that

Goldberg “believes that the complaint was made by Linda MacKrell, made anonymously by

Linda MacKrell, or made by a family member of Linda MacKrell based on false information

provided to them by Linda MacKrell.” It also alleged that the complaint was made “in bad faith

1 The record in this case was sealed. Nevertheless, the appeal necessitates unsealing relevant portions of the record to resolve the issues appellant has raised. Evidence and factual findings below that are necessary to address the assignments of error are included in this opinion. Consequently, “[t]o the extent that this opinion mentions facts found in the sealed record, we unseal only those specific facts, finding them relevant to the decision in this case. The remainder of the previously sealed record remains sealed.” Levick v. MacDougall, 294 Va. 283, 288 n.1 (2017). We recite all facts in the light most favorable to Goldberg, the prevailing party below. Konadu v. Commonwealth, 79 Va. App. 606, 610 n.1 (2024). 2 As L.G. is a minor, we abbreviate her name to protect her identity. -2- and maliciously in order to end the relationship between Mr. Goldberg and his Wife to create a

situation where [Ali] would need Ms. MacKrell’s assistance with the children and thus be

allowed to be integrated in their lives.” The petition asked the court to review the documents in

camera and determine whether Goldberg satisfied the bad faith disclosure exception.

The court issued a writ of certiorari asking the Department to provide the documents

related to the unfounded report of abuse against Goldberg and ordered a hearing on the matter.

The Department opposed the petition, making the same argument it now makes on appeal—that

the report was made without bad faith by a mandatory reporter and therefore did not qualify

under the statute. According to the Department, the allegedly malicious report or complaint must

be conveyed to the Department directly by someone acting in bad faith to be eligible for release

under Code § 63.2-1514(D); where a malicious or bad faith allegation is made to a mandatory

reporter who then innocently communicates that information to the Department, the statute does

not permit disclosure. The Department also contended that Goldberg had not met his burden of

showing that there existed a “reasonable question of fact as to whether the report or complaint

was made in bad faith or with malicious intent.”

At the hearing, Goldberg and his wife testified about why they believed that MacKrell was

the originator of the report and why she would have made the allegation maliciously or in bad

faith. Goldberg asserted that MacKrell had never supported his marriage to her daughter and that

before the investigation, “MacKrell had been limited in her interactions with the family due to

prior false allegations” against him and the children’s nannies, as well as “general interference

with” the Goldbergs’ parenting. He opined that MacKrell made the report “in order to limit [his]

access to his children and make herself needed to care for the children.” He added that some of

the information reported could only have been known to MacKrell. He also assured the court

-3- that he would take no action to threaten the life or safety of MacKrell and that he has no history

of violence in general or with respect to MacKrell specifically.

Ali testified that she too believed that her mother had made the report. She said that, in

the past, her mother had “attempted to pay one of their children’s nannies to unexpectedly quit

providing childcare” and that her mother does not get along with Goldberg. She also testified

that her brother had sent her videos that MacKrell had taken of L.G. in which she tried to make

L.G. behave “in a way that would support the allegations” made to the Department and that the

behavior in the video was abnormal for her daughter. She also said that her brother had “alluded

to the idea that their mother had made the complaint.”

After hearing this evidence, the circuit court determined that Goldberg had satisfied the

requirements of the bad faith disclosure exception and issued a letter opinion explaining its

decision to allow Goldberg to access the requested records. The court, while acknowledging the

Department’s arguments, focused on the legislative intent of the statute, “to provide the records

of ill-founded abuse or neglect charges to individuals who have been targeted maliciously or in

bad faith.” Finding that Goldberg was in the exact situation that the statute was designed to

address, the court ruled that Code § 63.2-1514(D) applied and that Goldberg had satisfied the

requirements to obtain relief under the statute.

The Department moved to stay the verdict until this appeal could be completed. The

court ordered another hearing to consider arguments on the motion to stay and, following the

hearing and consideration of the parties’ briefs, suspended the execution of its final order

allowing Goldberg access to the documents until after this appeal was resolved. The Department

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