IN RE TA.C.; T.C., APPELLANT
No. 19-FS-380
District of Columbia Court of Appeals
September 10, 2020
Aрpeal from the Superior Court of the District of Columbia (NEG-375-18) (Hon. Tara J. Fentress, Magistrate Judge); (Hon. Julie H. Becker, Trial Judge)
Before GLICKMAN and MCLEESE, Associate Judges, and FISHER, Senior Judge.
Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Atlantic and Maryland Reporters. Users are requested to notify the Clerk of the Court of any formal errors so that corrections may be made before the bound volumes go to press.
(Submitted March 26, 2020 Decided September 10, 2020)
Kwame Willingham was on the brief for appellant T.C.
Karl A. Racine, Attоrney General for the District of Columbia, Loren L. AliKhan, Solicitor General, Caroline S. Van Zile, Deputy Solicitor General, and David J. Stark, Assistant Attorney General, were on the brief for appellee the District of Columbia.
(2012 Repl. & 2020 Supp.). Appellant contends the trial court had insufficient evidence to support either of its alternative neglect findings, that Ta.C. was without proper parental care or control, and that Ta.C. was regularly exposed to illegal drug-related activity in the home.1 We agree with T.C. that the proof was insufficient to support a finding of neglect on the latter ground. However, we uphold the finding that Ta.C. was without proper parental care or control. We therefore affirm the adjudication of neglect.
I.
Ta.C was born on February 8, 2016, to appellant and S.R. For reasons not material
On the morning of November 7, 2018, Metropolitan Police officers responded to a report of gunshots at an apartment located at 39 Galveston Place, S.W. They were met at the apartment by Kenneth Flood, who had been wounded but was able to tell them what happened. A second man, Eugene Johnson, was lying dead from a gunshot wound to his chest. Stepping over Mr. Johnson‘s body, the police found Ta.C. The child was asleep on the floor and uninjured, though he was covered with spattered blood on his face, hair, and clothing. Ta.C.‘s father, appellant, was not present when the police arrived and did not appear in the next few hours befоre the child was taken into CFSA custody. Appellant was located later that morning.
Two days later, the District filed a petition to have Ta.C. adjudicated a neglected child within the meaning of
Appellant testified that when Ta.C. was in his care, they lived in the one-bedroom apartment at 39 Galveston Place with Johnson and Flood. Johnson, who held the lease on the apartment, slept in the living room with Flood, while appellant and Ta.C. shared the bedroom. Appellant testified that he regularly left Ta.C. in Johnson‘s sole care when he was at work or otherwise out of the home. Appellant described Johnson as a good person and a co-parent; the two were friends and had been raising Ta.C. “as partners,” he stated.
On November 7, 2018, appellаnt testified, he left the Galveston Place apartment at approximately 3:40 a.m. to bring soap and toiletries to a female friend of his who was staying in a vacant apartment that appellant used with the permission of another friend. Appellant left Ta.C. in the care of Johnson (who was sleeping) while he went on this errand. When asked where he went that morning after making the delivery to his friend, appellant invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and declined to answer. He continued to assert his right to remain silent when asked whether there were firearms or ammunition in the Galveston Street apartment; whether he had been in possession of a gun within the last six months; whether he had possessed or sold illegal drugs within the last six months; and about Johnson‘s source of income. The magistrate judge drew “all permissible negative inferences” from appellant‘s assertions of the privilege.3
Dr. Bernadette Carroll, a CFSA investigative social worker, testified that she
The police interviewed appellant later that morning. Dr. Carroll was allowed to listen in. She testified that in the interview, appellant admitted to using marijuana, stated that Johnson sold marijuana, and that there might be a rifle in the apartment.
Detective Stephanie Garner testified that in executing the warrant to search the Galveston Place apartment, she discovered a rifle on the floor in an open closet in the bedroom. The rifle was unsecured and accessible to anyone who went into the closet. Detective Garner also found two types of ammunition on the highest shelf of the closet, and one empty ammunition magazine. There was no testimony regarding whether the rifle was operable or was loaded. No drugs or drug paraphernalia, nor other evidence of drug usage or distribution, were found in the apartment.
Officer Calvin Branch testified that he was one of the рolice officers who responded to the shooting at Galveston Place. When he arrived at the apartment, he knocked on the door, and Mr. Flood answered. Flood had been shot in the head and was scared, but he was able to give a statement. He told police that someone had knocked at the back door and when he and Johnson went to open it, the person kicked in the door and drew a gun. A struggle followed, during which thе intruder fired the shots that injured Flood and killed Johnson. Counsel for the District represented that a suspect (not appellant) had been charged with Johnson‘s murder. No other evidence was presented regarding the suspect or the motive for the intrusion and the killing.
Officer Branch was one of several police officers who testified about their familiarity with appellant and their recent interactions with him in the community before and after the November shooting. Branch knew him well and frequently saw appellant during the nighttime and early morning hours at a 7-11 convenience store and a Shell gas station located on South Capitol Street S.E. When Branch encountered him there, appellant usually appeared to be under the influence of a mind-altering substance, with bloodshot eyes and “hyped, but coherent.” On one occasion, which took place in June 2018, Branch found apрellant at the gas station in a highly intoxicated state and out of control. When appellant saw the police, he stripped completely naked and started running towards them. Appellant was taken to the hospital following that incident. Another officer testified
Two other officers testified to their knowledge of appellant‘s arrests following Ta.C.‘s removal. In the month preceding the neglect hearing, appellant was arrested twice—once for selling marijuana to an undercover police officer,4 and again when the police officer saw a pistol fаll out of appellant‘s pants after he ran heedlessly into the street to avoid the police and was hit by a car.5
Finally, Kameko Johnson-Styles, a social worker assigned to Ta.C. and his siblings, testified that she had supervised four visits between appellant and his children following Ta.C.‘s removal.6 On one of the visits, appellant was required to dispose of a pocketknife before he was allowed to enter CFSA, and he appeared to be under the influence of marijuana.
Based on the foregoing evidence, Magistrate Judge Fentress concluded that the District had proved by a preponderance of the evidence that Ta.C. was a neglected child within the meaning of
After a disposition hearing, the magistrate judge concluded that, despite reasonable efforts toward reunification, returning Ta.C. to appellant‘s custody would be “contrary to the welfare оf the child.”7 Ta.C. was committed to the legal custody of CFSA.
On review, Associate Judge Becker reversed the finding of neglect under
members of the household dealt drugs and others ‘tacitly approved’ of that drug-selling,” in which there was an unsecured firearm, and in which there had been a shooting that in all likеlihood was drug-related.
II.
The District bears the burden of proving a child neglected by a preponderance
Accordingly, our review of the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting a finding of neglect is deferential to the prerogatives of the trier of fact and the broad ambit of the triаl judge‘s discretionary judgment. We “‘will reverse a finding of neglect only if it is plainly wrong or without evidence to support it,’ and only after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the court‘s ruling.”12 But consistent with that deference, we must ensure that a finding of neglect “embod[ies] a correct understanding of the relevant statutory terms.”13 The proper construction of the neglect statute is a legal question, as to which our review is not deferential, but de novo.
III.
A child may be found to be neglected within the meaning of
We do not have comparable evidence of drug-related activity in or emanating from the Galveston Place apartment where appellant and Ta.C. were residing. There was evidence that appellant and his roommate Johnson used and sold drugs, but no evidence or reports that they did so in or from that apartment. The witnesses to appellant‘s apparent use or sale of drugs only observed it on occasions when they encountered him outside the apartment. The police search of the aрartment turned up no drugs, drug paraphernalia, or drug distribution materials of any kind, and no apparent monetary proceeds or records of
there, regularly or otherwise. We cannot rely on speculation to establish that necessary finding; the paucity of the evidence on these issues does not permit us to affirm the finding that Ta.C. was a neglected child under
We do not, however, dismiss the relevance of appellant‘s and Johnson‘s drug activities. That a child has been knowingly exposed to violence or risks thereof attendant with a caregiver‘s illegal activities outside of the home may be sufficient for a finding of neglect under other definitions of neglect in the statute. In our view, this case presents such a scenario. It was the basis for Magistrate Judge Fentress and Judge Becker‘s agreement that Ta.C. was a neglected child because he was “without proper parental care or control” under
the child; “such a finding can rest on a risk of physical or emotional injury that has not yet occurred.”21
Appellant argues that Johnson‘s murder was the only evidence before the trial court that tended to show Ta.C. was exposed to a substаntial risk of harm, and that the trial court improperly based its neglect determination on this “single snapshot of the family‘s existence.”22 We do not agree that the court‘s focus was so narrow; the trial court‘s finding took into account evidence covering several months of the child‘s life before and after the homicide that showed an increasingly unsafe living situation for the child.
whom appellant knew to be a drug dealer. To say that Ta.C., a two-year-old child, was at a substantial risk of serious harm while placed in such company is an understatement, as the November 7 events proved. Drug trafficking is inherently dangerous, and while the record does not reveal the motive behind Johnson‘s murder, we agree with the trial court that it is reasonable to infer it was related to Johnson‘s (or, perhаps, appellant‘s) illegal drug-related activity. The apartment at 39 Galveston Place was demonstrably an unsafe environment for Ta.C., and the presence of an illegal and unsecured firearm and ammunition in Ta.C.‘s bedroom closet only confirmed and added to the very real dangers surrounding him.23 In the
wake of Johnson‘s murder, appellant‘s further criminal activity, unlawful handgun possession, and apparently unalleviated history of substance abuse, cоmbined with Ta.C.‘s loss of his alternative caregiver, shows that the risk of harm to Ta.C. if he remained in his father‘s custody was substantial and not at all speculative or temporary.24 Viewing the “entire mosaic of the child‘s history and experience,” the court did not err in concluding Ta.C. was without proper parental
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court‘s order adjudicating Ta.C. a neglected child.
