Prasad v. Sessions CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 2015
DocketH039167
StatusUnpublished

This text of Prasad v. Sessions CA6 (Prasad v. Sessions CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prasad v. Sessions CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 1/22/15 Prasad v. Sessions CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

ABHIJIT PRASAD, H039167 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. CV203380)

v.

GINA SESSIONS, as Director of Department of Social Services, etc.,

Defendant and Respondent.

Abhijit Prasad appeals from the trial court’s judgment denying his petition for writ of administrative mandamus against the Santa Clara County Department of Social Services (the Department), in which he challenged the Department’s determination that the child abuse allegations made against Prasad were substantiated, rather than unfounded. The trial court upheld the administrative decision, finding it was supported by substantial evidence. As we will explain, we conclude the trial court applied the wrong standard in reviewing the Department’s determination, and accordingly we remand this matter to the trial court to apply the correct standard. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND In 2009, Prasad was in the midst of a contentious separation from his (now ex-) wife Komal Rattan. The two had separated in 2007 and eventually divorced in June 2010. Throughout their separation, Prasad and Rattan shared legal custody of their two young daughters and Prasad had visitation rights. On November 16, 2009, the Department received a report that Prasad had possibly sexually abused his daughters, who were then aged six and four years old. The alleged abuse took place at Prasad’s home sometime between September 2008 and July 2009. One of the girls had rashes and yeast infections in her genital area, and both girls told Rattan that Prasad pinched their “private area” and bathed with them. Around this same period of time Rattan observed her daughters kissing each other and laying on top of each other while naked. Rattan also reported that Prasad has a history of committing domestic violence. The matter was referred to a Department social worker, Nana Chancellor, for investigation. On November 23, 2009, Chancellor met with Rattan and the two girls. While the girls played, Chancellor and Rattan spoke quietly so that they would not overhear. Rattan described past incidents of domestic violence by Prasad, many of which were committed in their daughters’ presence. Rattan said the older daughter recently told her that Prasad takes baths with them and pinches them in “their privates.” Rattan thinks the older daughter told her this because the girls were supposed to resume visitations with Prasad and they do not want to do so. Chancellor then met with the older daughter at one end of the room while Rattan and the younger daughter played at the other end. Chancellor reported the older daughter maintained “good eye contact, communicated clearly, and appeared to be answering questions openly.” She told Chancellor she understood what it meant to tell the truth and promised to do so. The older daughter said she does not like visiting with Prasad because he hits them in the head with his fist when they get in trouble. She saw him hit their mother in the head and bump her mother’s head into the wall. While visiting her father, he makes them take baths and climbs into the bathtub with them. He pinches their bottoms while in the bath, which hurts and makes them cry. The older daughter denied that he pinched their vaginas. However, on more than one occasion, her father told them

2 to touch his privates but they refused because “[i]t’s disgusting.” He would get mad and kept saying “touch my butt” repeatedly.1 Chancellor next met with the younger daughter, who “appeared to understand everything asked of her but at times appeared to have a difficult time providing clear answers to the questions asked.” The younger daughter said she was scared of her father, who spanks her with her pants off when she gets in trouble. He is always mad at her mother. At her father’s house, he makes her take baths and gets in the bathtub with her, which she does not like. At this point of the interview, the younger daughter walked to the other side of the room and climbed into her mother’s arms. Chancellor began talking to Rattan again who told her she did sometimes see small bruises on the girls’ bottoms, but they never said that Prasad had pinched them. In the last year, her younger daughter kept coming home with severe rashes in her vaginal area after visiting with Prasad. The pediatrician found that the girl had a yeast infection and urinary tract infection. On December 30, 2009, Rattan contacted Chancellor because Prasad was scheduled to pick up their daughters that afternoon. Chancellor called Detective Nathan Cogburn with the Tracy Police Department, who was in charge of the criminal investigation into the allegations against Prasad. Chancellor wanted to discuss contacting Prasad so she could ask him to forego visitation until the next court hearing, scheduled for January 13, 2010. Detective Cogburn agreed that Chancellor could do so, so long as she did not inform Prasad of the specific allegations or advise him he was being investigated by police as well as the Department. Chancellor spoke with Prasad, who agreed not to seek visitation with his daughters until the next hearing in family court or until he heard otherwise from Chancellor. He

1 According to Chancellor’s report, the older daughter said this phrase to her in Hindi, with Rattan providing the translation.

3 was polite and stressed his desire to cooperate, but also spent more than 30 minutes on the phone telling Chancellor how Rattan was mentally ill and was brainwashing their older daughter. Prasad sent Chancellor nearly 100 pages of documents prior to the January 13, 2010 family court hearing. These documents included some of Rattan’s medical records, multi-page letters from Prasad describing his fitness as a father, his concerns about Rattan’s mental stability and propensity to lie, as well as many photos depicting his daughters engaged in various activities such as swim lessons, birthday parties, etc., during their visits with him. Chancellor testified at the January 13 hearing and repeated what she had been told by Rattan and the two girls during their November 23, 2009 interview. However, because the Tracy Police Department had asked her not to interview Prasad due to the ongoing police investigation, Chancellor found the allegations of abuse to be inconclusive at that time. Once police are involved in an investigation of child sexual abuse, Chancellor would not ask the children detailed questions about the claims unless law enforcement personnel were present. Detective Cogburn scheduled a multi-disciplinary interview (MDI) with Rattan and the older daughter for February 1, 2010, but Chancellor did not attend that interview. Detective Cogburn subsequently informed Chancellor the older daughter had provided information consistent with what she had told Chancellor and the “forensic interviewer had found her to be reliable.” The older daughter told Detective Cogburn her father got “in the bathtub with her and her sister, that he has touched her bottom and vagina, and that he has asked that she touch his privates.”

4 Based on this information, Chancellor found the allegation of sexual abuse by Prasad against the older daughter was substantiated.2 She found the allegation of sexual abuse by Prasad against the younger daughter to be inconclusive.

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