Wood County DHS v. P.R.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJune 24, 2021
Docket2020AP000947
StatusUnpublished

This text of Wood County DHS v. P.R. (Wood County DHS v. P.R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood County DHS v. P.R., (Wis. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. June 24, 2021 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Sheila T. Reiff petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2020AP947 Cir. Ct. No. 2020JC27

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT IV

IN THE INTEREST OF K.M.R., A PERSON UNDER THE AGE OF 18:

WOOD COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SERVICES,

PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,

V.

P. R.,

RESPONDENT-APPELLANT.

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Wood County: GREGORY J. POTTER, Judge. Affirmed.

¶1 KLOPPENBURG, J.1 P.R. appeals the circuit court’s order placing her daughter outside P.R.’s home. P.R. argues that the court’s following two

1 This appeal is decided by one judge pursuant to WIS. STAT. § 752.31(2)(e) (2019-20). All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2019-20 version unless otherwise noted. No. 2020AP947

findings are clearly erroneous: (1) that continued placement of the child in P.R.’s home was contrary to the child’s welfare; and (2) that the Wood County Department of Health Services made reasonable efforts to prevent the removal of the child from her home. The evidence in the record amply supports these findings. Accordingly, the order is affirmed.

BACKGROUND

¶2 On February 11, 2020, representatives of the Wood County Department of Health Services (Department) and the Wisconsin Rapids Police Department received a referral indicating that K., an eight-year-old child who lived with her mother and her stepfather, had been sexually abused by her stepfather in the family’s home. A representative from each organization interviewed the child that same day at the child’s school, and the child reported to them that her stepfather, M.R., had sexual contact with her. The Department representative, a social worker, met with the child’s mother, P.R., when P.R. arrived at school to pick up the child at the end of the day. The social worker “tried to develop” a plan with P.R. so that the child “would [have] no contact with” M.R., offering “a protective plan having either [M.R.] leave the residence so [the child] and [P.R.] could go home or having [P.R.] and [the child] leave the residence.” P.R. indicated to the social worker that “neither of those options would be appropriate” for several reasons: she had neither “a driver’s license nor a car,” M.R. was her “main transportation,” she “didn’t have the money” for M.R. to leave, and she “had no friends or family in the area.” When the social worker offered a shelter as an “alternative place for the mother and [the child] to go”, P.R. refused that plan. The Department removed the child from the family’s home that day and subsequently filed a Petition for Protection or Service (CHIPS petition) under WIS. STAT. ch. 48.

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¶3 The next day, the circuit court held a fact-finding hearing on the CHIPS petition and found that the child was in need of protection or services and that placement in her mother’s home was contrary to the child’s welfare. The court appointed a guardian ad litem, ordered the child’s temporary placement in a foster home, and granted P.R. supervised visits with the child. The court scheduled a dispositional hearing for March 24, 2020.

¶4 The Department submitted to the circuit court, as required by WIS. STAT. § 48.33, a disposition report that contained an account of a forensic interview conducted with the child in which she described the duration and details of M.R.’s sexual abuse, the Department’s assessment of the serious risks to the physical safety and physical health of the child, and the Department’s recommendations for continued placement at the foster home and conditions for the child to be returned to P.R.’s home.

¶5 By the time of the March 24 hearing, M.R. had been arrested in connection with the child’s reports of sexual abuse and was held in the Wood County Jail. At the hearing, P.R. agreed that the child was in need of protection and services but contested the child’s placement outside P.R.’s home. The circuit court considered the disposition report described above and testimony from the Department social worker, the detective investigating criminal charges against M.R., P.R., and the guardian ad litem. I present in some detail this evidence presented at the dispositional hearing because it relates to both of the issues raised by P.R. on appeal.

¶6 At the dispositional hearing, the Department social worker responsible for the child’s case testified that P.R. had made statements that she did believe her child was victimized but also that P.R. did not believe that M.R. was

3 No. 2020AP947

“the victimizer.” The social worker recommended that the child “remain in foster care at this time” and that P.R. continue to have supervised visitation with the child because such recommendations were “in [the child’s] best interest at this time.” On cross-examination, the social worker testified that she did not believe returning to P.R.’s home with M.R. out of the home was in “[the child’s] best interest due to [P.R.] not believing that this has occurred between [the child and M.R.]. [The child] needs support and the help getting through this and her mother doesn’t understand or believe that that has occurred.” She testified that her recommendations included a list of conditions contained in her disposition report to the court.

¶7 The detective responsible for investigating the criminal charges against M.R. related to the child’s reports of sexual abuse testified that, as part of his investigation, he interviewed P.R., who “stated that she did believe that something had happened [to the child] but that she was unsure of who had done it.” The detective testified that after M.R.’s arrest and placement in the Wood County Jail he monitored M.R.’s phone calls. He testified that “over the last two weeks [M.R. and P.R. have] had an average of 40 to 50 phone calls a day,” adding up to a total “average of five hours a day,” that “they most often discuss the [criminal] case” against M.R., and that M.R. directed P.R. to tell the child that she “needs to tell the truth so this can be over with” and discussed “what questions she should ask” the child during visitation. The detective testified that M.R. continued, while incarcerated, to exert control over P.R.’s life, including matters such as “when to put money on what accounts and what to pay for, where is she going, who is she with, what is she dressed in, et cetera.”

¶8 P.R. testified that she had not agreed to move with the child to a shelter because:

4 No. 2020AP947

in my past I was in a shelter and I was told that shelter was safe for me and I was raped by a staff member there. So when I just moved here, we didn't know nobody, I didn't know anything or any places and I didn't want to put me and my daughter in danger until I knew if that was a safe place for us to go.

P.R. testified that if M.R. were to be released on bail, she would not “allow him back into [her] life” “unless the courts say it was all right.” On cross-examination, P.R. stated, “I believe [the child’s] been abused but I can’t say who has done it.” When asked whether M.R. controls her life, P.R. stated “No, he does not.”

¶9 The child’s guardian ad litem testified that it was in the child’s best interest to remain placed with foster parents and that he did not recommend placement with P.R. because “you’ve got to stand up for your child.

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Bluebook (online)
Wood County DHS v. P.R., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-county-dhs-v-pr-wisctapp-2021.