Sharp v. Kansas Dept. for Children & Families

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedOctober 23, 2015
Docket110504
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sharp v. Kansas Dept. for Children & Families (Sharp v. Kansas Dept. for Children & Families) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp v. Kansas Dept. for Children & Families, (kanctapp 2015).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 110,504

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

ODALIS SHARP, Appellant,

v.

KANSAS DEPARTMENT FOR CHILDREN AND FAMILIES, Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Shawnee District Court; REBECCA W. CROTTY, judge. Opinion filed October 23, 2015. Affirmed.

Odalis Sharp, appellant pro se.

LeAnn M. Cochran, of Kansas Department for Children and Families, for appellee.

Before HILL, P.J., BUSER, J., and WILLIAM R. MOTT, District Judge, assigned.

Per Curiam: A state agency, the Kansas Department for Children and Families, decided that the reports of Odalis Sharp abusing and neglecting her son were "substantiated." In a judicial review of this agency determination, she asked the district court to overturn this finding. The court did not. She now asks us to reverse the district court's denial of relief. We see no reason to do so. We affirm.

1 One of her children ran away from home.

On April 9, 2011, C.V. ran away from his family home in Auburn. He hitchhiked to Topeka. He spent the next 2 days at either Wal-Mart or the Topeka Public Library. He slept behind buildings at night. C.V. had no money, so he begged for spare change for food. On April 11, Timothy Sharp, C.V.'s stepfather, reported to law enforcement officers that C.V. was a juvenile runaway.

Shawnee County Sheriff's Deputy Kyle Cochran went to the Sharp residence, where he met with Odalis, as Timothy was at work at the time. Odalis claimed that she believed C.V. ran away because he and Timothy "[did] not get along that great" and C.V. was "struggling with teenager stuff, basically his curiosity." Odalis maintained that she last saw C.V. on the evening of April 8 at approximately 10 p.m. when he came into her room and stated, "'Goodnight. I love you. You're the best.'" She believed C.V. left the property sometime between 5:50 and 6:45 a.m. the following day, as Timothy told her that he saw C.V. that morning. According to Odalis, Timothy then received a phone call from C.V. on April 9 at approximately 5 p.m.; but when Timothy attempted to call the number back, his call connected with a fax machine.

Deputy Cochran filled out a missing person form and a request for assistance and authorization of medical treatment form. As he was doing so, Odalis indicated that she was "very hesitant to sign" the form, as she did not want this information distributed to the media, and she stated "several times she did not believe her son was missing and the 'good Lord knows where he's at and he's fine.'" When Deputy Cochran explained that the form merely allowed law enforcement officers to search for her son who had been missing for 2 days, Odalis finally agreed to sign it.

Officers found C.V. at the Topeka Public Library shortly thereafter. Matthew Johnston, a Shawnee County Sheriff's deputy, drove him home. While in route to C.V.'s

2 residence, C.V. told Deputy Johnston that he would run away again if was returned home and "if he was forced to stay home, he would kill himself by cutting his wrists." Deputy Johnston then asked C.V. about his suicidal comments in an attempt to assess the level of sincerity behind them, and C.V. "continued to be adamant that, if he had to stay home, he was going to kill himself." Deputy Johnston drove instead to the psychiatric department at Stormont-Vail West.

While at Stormont-Vail West, C.V. told Deputy Johnston that he "doesn't really have a normal life," as he cannot watch television, peruse the Internet, or have a cell phone, and he indicated that he did not want to return home because "he is so controlled there that he feels that living out on the street is better." C.V. then told him that as a form of discipline, Odalis had placed him on a bread and water diet for the past 2 weeks. While he acknowledged that Odalis did allow him to eat one meal a day if he behaved himself, he maintained that he had been "primarily on bread and water" except for the few times he was able to sneak food. Significantly, Odalis later confirmed that because C.V. stole a cell phone and incurred "outrageous phone bills" for calls and Internet usage related to pornography, she limited his food consumption to bread and water and one meal of his choosing; an idea she obtained from an encyclopedia which indicated that in the early 1900's the prison system fed inmates this diet.

Sterling Hunter, a pastor familiar with the family, and Timothy both verified C.V.'s claim; in fact, Hunter told Deputy Johnston that C.V.'s "home life is very toxic," as Odalis controls the entire household, and Timothy indicated that Odalis "controls him as well and doesn't allow him to interject as being a parent." Timothy and Hunter also advised that due to C.V.'s errant behavior, Odalis was forcing C.V. to sleep on the floor upstairs so she could "keep a closer eye on him."

Later, during an interview with hospital staff, C.V. further alleged that Odalis disciplines him by spanking him with a "metal paddle on his butt." When Deputy

3 Johnston asked C.V. why he had not informed him of this fact earlier, C.V. indicated that while Odalis and Timothy keep the paddle hidden, which had led him to believe they knew it was wrong to strike their children with it, he did not mention the abuse because Odalis and Timothy told him not to say anything. C.V. then informed Deputy Johnston that he still had bruising from his last spanking. C.V. agreed to show Deputy Johnston the bruising. The two of them went into a bathroom where the deputy observed C.V. He stated later, "I saw that on the right side of his rear there was—it looked like an older bruise. It didn't look recent. It looked like it was just a healing bruise on the right side." Deputy Johnston acknowledged, however, that while the bruising appeared consistent with C.V.'s claims, circumstances other than a spanking could have caused his bruising. Similar to C.V.'s bread and water allegation, Odalis subsequently confirmed that she disciplines her children, with the exception of the younger ones, by spanking them in a "'reasonable manner'" with a paddle known as "the rod."

After C.V.'s evaluation at Stormont-Vail West was complete, the deputy drove C.V. to the Juvenile Intake and Assessment Center. In addition to detailing C.V.'s allegations and history, the Juvenile Intake officer indicated that C.V. had a "larger agenda" that he was not willing, at that time, to fully disclose:

"This intake officer believes [C.V.] has a larger agenda but he was not willing to disclose that tonight. He wants to go to public school and have peers for friends. He wants to be able to go to pornographic sites and talk on the phone and he wants to try to locate his birth father."

Because the Shawnee County Sheriff's Office determined that C.V. would not be in imminent danger if he was returned home and the Juvenile Intake officer ultimately found that there were "many things about [C.V.'s] situation that could be fixed, changed or negotiated differently but not [that evening]," the Juvenile Intake Center released C.V. to Odalis' custody.

4 The Kansas Department for Children and Families launched a physical abuse investigation concerning Odalis. During that investigation, the agency decided that it was appropriate to conduct a lack of supervision investigation as well. Brenda Henry, the social work specialist assigned to both investigations, interviewed Odalis, Timothy, and 9 of their 10 children (the youngest child was too young to talk). During his interview, C.V.

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Sharp v. Kansas Dept. for Children & Families, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-kansas-dept-for-children-families-kanctapp-2015.