Suzanne Hughes v. DSS Arlington County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 6, 1996
Docket2345944
StatusUnpublished

This text of Suzanne Hughes v. DSS Arlington County (Suzanne Hughes v. DSS Arlington County) 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
Suzanne Hughes v. DSS Arlington County, (Va. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Baker, Willis and Annunziata Argued at Alexandria, Virginia

SUZANNE HUGHES

v. Record No. 2345-94-4 MEMORANDUM OPINION * BY JUDGE JOSEPH E. BAKER DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES FEBRUARY 6, 1996 ARLINGTON COUNTY

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ARLINGTON COUNTY William T. Newman, Jr., Judge Deborah E. Kramer, for appellant.

Mary E. Craig, Assistant County Attorney, for appellee.

Suzanne Hughes (appellant) appeals from a judgment of the

Circuit Court of Arlington County (trial court) that terminated

her parental rights to her daughter (the child). Appellant

contends that she was denied due process; that the trial court

erred in permitting her to be cross-examined concerning her

experiences with a cult, and in finding that her neglect and

abuse of the child had not and could not be substantially

corrected or eliminated within a reasonable period of time. She

further alleges that the trial court, in arriving at its

conclusion, wrongfully considered evidence that appellant's

"father yelled at her when she was a young girl" and that "the

man who repeatedly raped [her] when she was a young girl and

again in 1993" was still at large. * Pursuant to Code § 17-116.010 this opinion is not designated for publication. On September 29, 1990, the child, then five months old, was

placed in foster care as the result of an emergency removal. On

October 1, 1990, the county filed an abuse and neglect petition.

It alleged that appellant physically assaulted the child and

could not cope with caring for her. Appellant has been diagnosed

as suffering from myoclonus, a movement disorder, an eating

disorder, a substance abuse problem, borderline personality

disorder, and emotional problems later diagnosed as multiple

personality disorder. Dr. Janieth Wise treated appellant for her

multiple personality disorder and eventually reported to the

county that appellant was capable of parenting the child. The

county retained Dr. M. Kathryne Jacobs, a psychologist with

expertise in early childhood development, to work with appellant

and the child. On February 3, 1992, the child was returned to

appellant. On May 29, 1992, the child was returned to foster

care after further incidents of neglect and abuse. After the

child was removed from appellant's custody, Dr. Jacobs described

the child as suffering from separation anxiety disorder, temper

tantrums, an inability to eat and sleep, and clinical depression.

Following the second removal of the child from appellant,

the Department of Social Services' (DSS) goal was still to return

the child to appellant; however, concern for the child's

well-being caused the DSS to change its goal from the return of

the child to appellant to adoption. 1 1 The child's father, Bruce Stewart, voluntarily surrendered his parental rights on May 3, 1993.

- 2 - In July 1992, at a hearing, Dr. Wise testified that

appellant had told her of appellant's interactions with a satanic

cult. Appellant and Dr. Wise elaborated, describing incidents

appellant witnessed in which cult members killed adults and

babies, times when multiple perpetrators had sex with appellant,

and times when she experienced death threats and the like.

Appellant did not deny these occurrences.

Appellant said that the abuse started when she was seven

years old. Marianne O'Connell, a social worker, testified that

in October 1992, appellant told her that "the night that you

removed [the child], I returned to the cult." Throughout the latter part of 1992 and into 1993, appellant

was repeatedly in and out of hospitals. Appellant testified that

during a break between hospital stays, during Christmas 1992,

Dwight McMillan, a relative by marriage who had previously abused

her for years as a member of the satanic cult, and other cult

members, abducted and raped her and then dropped her back at the

site where she had been abducted. Appellant believed McMillan to

be hiding from authorities in Canada.

Between March 2, 1993 and June 23, 1993, a judge of the

Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court for the County of

Arlington (district court), over a four-day period, heard

evidence relating to the termination of appellant's parental

rights, after which the court ordered a continuance of the case

to allow for more time to evaluate appellant's progress and the

- 3 - impact of her mental condition on her parenting skills. On

January 31, 1994, after a six-month continuance, appellant's

residual parental rights were terminated by the district court.

Appellant filed notice of appeal to the circuit court where the

child's foster parents filed a motion to be notified of and for

leave to participate in all proceedings. The motion was granted.

At the circuit court trial, Dr. Jacobs testified that

following the termination hearings in district court, the child,

who had been confused and uncertain about where she would live

and who would be her mommy, began to recover from her separation

anxiety disorder. She slept through the night and for the first

time began to take an interest in other children and in the toys

during therapy sessions. Dr. Jacobs described her as "no longer

clinically depressed. She was no longer showing the symptoms of

the reactive attachment disorder." When queried at trial

concerning the child's own desires about her living

circumstances, Dr. Jacobs stated "[The child] has never been

ambivalent about what she wants. . . . She has a momma and a

dadda, that she lives with, the [foster parents], and she has a

person that she calls mommie Suzie that she is attached to." Dr.

Jacobs described the child's bond with her foster parents as "a

primary, primitive, primal attachment of a child to the first

human beings that gave her consistent, appropriate nurturing and

care. They are her psychological parents. . . . They're her

mother and father and that's how she feels toward them."

- 4 - The trial court, over appellant's objections permitted the

county to cross-examine appellant about her involvement/

victimization by the satanic cult and about her parents'

knowledge of the cult's abuse of her when she was a little girl

and her parents' failure to contact the police at that time. At

the time of the trial court hearings, appellant lived at her

father's house on the weekends.

A psychological evaluation to assess appellant's prognosis,

as to her ability to parent, was conducted in September and

October 1992, by Dr. Mary L. Froning, an expert in the areas of

psychology, multiple-personality disorders, and child psychology.

The doctor testified at the circuit court that she concluded from

those evaluations that appellant was not able to parent at that

point and recommended that she continue therapy and be re-evaluated within one year. Dr. Froning stated that a person

with a complicated multiple personality disorder would typically

take five to seven years to recover from the disorder.

On October 18, 1994, the trial court ruled that appellant's

residual parental rights should be terminated. In making this

ruling, the trial judge addressed his concern over the continued

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