CHILD PROTECTIVE SERVICES
AND THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM
A guide to protect the constitutional rights of both parents and
children.
“Know your rights before you talk to anyone from CPS/DCF or let them in
your house, they won’t tell you your rights.
CPS/DCF can’t do anything without your consent, demand a warrant and
speak with an attorney first before speaking with anyone from CPS/DCF, it could
cost you your children.”
The United States Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit said it best, “The government’s interest in the welfare of
children embraces not only protecting children from physical abuse, but also
protecting children’s interest in the privacy and dignity of their homes and in
the lawfully exercised authority of their parents.”
Calabretta
v. Floyd, 189 F.3d 808 (9th Cir. 1999).
Permanent termination of parental rights has been
described as “the family law equivalent of the death penalty in a criminal
case.” Therefore, parents “must be
afforded every procedural and substantive protection the law allows.” Smith (1991), 77 Ohio App.3d 1, 16, 601
N.E.2d 45, 54.
“There is no system ever devised by mankind that is
guaranteed to rip husband and wife or father, mother and child apart so
bitterly than our present Family Court System.”
Judge Brian Lindsay
Retired Supreme Court Judge
New York, New York
“There is something bad happening to our children in
family courts today that is causing them more harm than drugs, more harm than
crime and even more harm than child molestation.”
Judge Watson L. White
Superior Court Judge
Cobb County, Georgia
Written by:
Thomas M. Dutkiewicz, President
Connecticut DCF Watch
P.O. Box 3005
Bristol, CT 06011-3005
860-833-4127
WE AT CONNECTICUT DCF
WATCH ARE NOT ATTORNEYS AND ARE UNABLE TO OFFER ANY LEGAL ADVICE. ANY
INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS DOCUMENT IS FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY.
IF YOU CHOOSE TO USE ANY OF THIS INFORMATION, YOU DO SO BY YOUR OWN CHOICE,
CONVICTION AND RISK. WE ONLY OFFER UP AN OPINION FROM OUR POINT OF
VIEW. WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DECISIONS YOU CHOOSE TO MAKE OR FAIL
TO MAKE. BEFORE MAKING ANY DECISIONS, SEEK LEGAL ADVISE FROM AN ATTORNEY
IN THE AREA OF LAW YOU WISH TO PURSUE.
IT’S UNCONSTITUTIONAL FOR CPS TO CONDUCT
AN INVESTIGATION AND INTERVIEW A CHILD ON PRIVATE PROPERTY WITHOUT EXIGENT
CIRCUMSTANCES OR PROBABLE CAUSE.
The decision in the case of Doe et al, v. Heck et al (No. 01-3648,
2003 US App. Lexis 7144) will affect the manner in which law
enforcement and Child Protective Services (“CPS”) investigations of alleged
child abuse or neglect are conducted.
The decision of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals found that
the practice of a “no prior consent” interview of a child, will ordinarily
constitute a “clear violation” of the constitutional rights of parents under
the 4th and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. According to the Court, the investigative interview of a child
constitutes a “search and seizure” and, when conducted on private property
without “consent, a warrant, probable cause, or exigent circumstances,” such an
interview is an unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the rights of the
parent, child, and, possibly the owner of the private property.
The mere possibility or risk of danger
does not constitute an emergency or exigent circumstance that would justify a
forced warrantless entry and a warrantless seizure of a child. Hurlman v. Rice, (2nd Cir. 1991)
A
due-process violation occurs when a state-required breakup of a natural family
is founded solely on a “best interests” analysis that is not supported by the
requisite proof of parental unfitness. Quilloin v. Walcott, 434 U.S. 246, 255,
(1978)
HEARSAY STATEMENTS INADMISSIBLE FROM CASE
WORKERS OR POLICE
A.G.G.
v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
The Court of Appeals of Kentucky vacated and remanded
a decision by the Barren Circuit Court which terminated parental rights because
of sexual abuse. The court found that a
child's statements to a counselor during therapy and a physician during a
physical examination were hearsay and inadmissible at trial under the U.S.
Supreme Court case, Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 124 S. Ct.
1354, 158 L. Ed. 2d 177 (2004), because the child
did not testify at trial and there was no opportunity for cross-examination of
the child. Because the child's
statements were inadmissible, the child welfare agency failed to present clear
and convincing evidence that the child had been sexually abused. Cite: NO. 2004-CA-001979-ME and NO.
2004-CA-002032-ME, 2005 Ky. App. LEXIS 163 (Ky. Ct. App 2005)
DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA: In re TY.B & In re TI.B
The District of Columbia Court of Appeals reversed a
lower court's order terminating a father's parental rights to his children,
based on that court's finding of neglect; the appeals court holding that the
erroneous termination order was based on inadmissible hearsay testimony. The Court of Appeals concluded that the
father adequately preserved his objection to admission of the testimony, and
consequently reversed the termination order and remanded the case for further
proceedings consistent with its opinion. Cite: No. 01-FS-1307; No. 01-FS-1320;
2005 D.C. App. LEXIS 390 (D.C. July 21, 2005)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION 1 - Never Ever Trust Anyone from CPS/DCF
SECTION 2 - Are All CPS Workers in the United States Subject to the 4th
And 14th Amendment?
SECTION 3 - The Fourth Amendment’s Impact on Child Abuse Investigations
SECTION 4 - When Is Consent Not Consent?
SECTION 7 - Summary of Family Rights (Family Association)
SECTION 10
- Seizures (Child
Removals)
SECTION 12 - Decisions of the United States Supreme Court Upholding Parental Rights
as “Fundamental”
This is only a guide to your
constitutional protections in the context of an investigation of alleged child
abuse and neglect by Child Protective Services (“CPS”). Every state has variances of CPS in one form
or another. Some are called DCF, DHS,
DSS, DCYS, DCFS, HRS, CYS and FIA, collectively known as “CPS” for the purposes
of this handbook. The material in this
handbook should be supplemented by your own careful study of the 4th
and 14th Amendments and other Constitutional protections that are
guaranteed even in the context of dealing with CPS.
The intent of this handbook is to inform
parents, caregivers and their attorneys that they can stand up against CPS and
Juvenile Judges when they infringe upon the rights of both parents and
children. As you read this handbook,
you will be amazed what your rights are and how CPS conspires with the
Assistant Attorney General (“AAG”) who then in turn has the Judge issue
warrant/orders that are unlawful and unconstitutional under the law. Contrary to what any CPS officials, the AAG,
Juvenile Judge or any social workers may say, they are all subject to and must
yield to the 4th and 14th Amendment just like police officers according to the
Circuit and District Courts of the United States and the Supreme Court. CPS workers can be sued for violations of
your 4th and 14th Amendments, they lose their “immunity” by those “Deprivation
of Rights Under the Color of Law” and must be sued in their “Official and
Individual” capacity in order to succeed in a §§ 1983 and 1985 civil right’s
lawsuit. If the police assisted CPS in
that deprivation of rights, they also lose immunity and can be sued for
assisting CPS in the violation of both yours and your child’s rights when they
illegally abduct your children or enter your home without probable cause or
exigent circumstances, which are required under the warrant clause of the 14th
Amendment.
The authors of this handbook are not
attorneys and do not pretend to be attorneys.
The authors were victims of a false report and were falsely accused by
DCF in Connecticut without a proper investigation being conducted. The authors fought back for 8 months against
this corrupt organization whose order of the day was to deny them their 4th,
6th and 14th Amendment rights and to fabricate false
charges without evidence.
The author’s goals are to not have another
child illegally abducted from their family; that CPS and juvenile judges start
using common sense before rushing to judgment and to conduct their
investigations the same as police in order to be constitutionally correct and
legal; and that CPS MUST by law comply with the “Warrant Clause” as
required by the Constitution and the Federal Courts whereas they are
“governmental officials” and are subject to the Constitution as are the
police. There are NO EXCEPTIONS
to the Constitution for CPS.
You as a parent or caregiver MUST know
your rights and be totally informed of what you have a legal right to have and
to express, whether you are a parent caught up in the very oppressive, abusive
and many times unlawful actions of CPS or if you have never been investigated
by CPS. Many individuals come to the
wrong conclusion that the parents must have been abusive or neglectful for CPS
to investigate, this is just a myth.
The fact of the matter is that over 80% of the calls phoned into CPS are
false and bogus.
Another myth is that CPS can conduct an
investigation in your home without your consent and speak to your child without
your consent. CPS employees will lie to
you and tell you they do not need your consent. The fact of the matter is they absolutely need your consent to
come into your home and speak with your children. If there is no “exigent circumstances” (imminent danger) to your
children with “probable cause” (credible witness) to support a warrant, CPS
anywhere in the United States cannot lawfully enter your home and speak with
you and your children. In fact, it is
illegal. You can sue the social worker
and the police who assist them and they both lose immunity from being sued.
If CPS lies to the AAG and the Judge to
get a warrant/order and you can prove it, that also is a 4th and 14th
Amendment rights violation which is a civil rights violation under § 1983 and
conspiracy against rights covered under § 1985. If a CPS official knocks on your door, has no legal
warrant, you refuse them entry, and the worker then threatens you with calling
the police, this is also illegal and unlawful and both lose immunity. This is coercion, threatening and
intimidation tactics even if the police only got the door open so CPS official
can gain entry. Both can be sued.
Remember, CPS officials will not tell you
your rights. In fact, they are going to
do everything in their power including lying to you and threatening you with
police presence telling you that you have to let them in. The police may even threaten you to let CPS
in because you are obstructing an investigation. Many police officers do not realize that CPS MUST comply with the
warrant clause of the 14th Amendment or be sued for violating it.
CPS does not have a legal right to conduct
an investigation of alleged child abuse or neglect in a private home without
your consent. In fact removing a child
from your home without your consent even for several hours is a “seizure” under
federal law. Speaking to your children
without your consent is also a “seizure” under the law. If CPS cannot support a warrant and show
that the child is in immanent danger along with probable cause, CPS cannot
enter your home and speak with your children.
Remember, anonymous calls into CPS are NEVER probable
cause under the Warrant Clause. And
even if they got a name and number from the reporter on the end of the phone,
that also does not support probable cause under the law. CPS must by law, investigate the caller to
determine if he or she is the person who they say they are and that what they
said is credible. The call alone,
standing by itself, is insufficient to support probable cause under the
law. Many bogus calls are made by
disgruntle neighbors, ex-spouses, or someone wanting to get revenge. So CPS needs to show the same due diligence
as the police to obtain sworn statements.
All CPS agencies across the country have an exaggerated view of their
power. What you think is or is not
abuse or neglect, CPS has a totally different definition. The definition is whatever they want it to
be. DCF will lie to you, mark my word, and
tell you that they can do anything they want and have total immunity. Tell that to the half dozen social workers currently
sitting in jail in California, they lied to the judge. We will discuss in further detail what CPS
and the police can and can not do.
You MUST understand that CPS will not give
you or your spouse a Miranda warning nor do they have too. If CPS shows up at your door and tells you
they need to speak with you and your children, you have the legal right to deny
them entry under the 4th and 14th Amendment. But before they leave, you should bring your
children to the door but never open it, instead show them the children are not
in imminent danger and that they are fine.
If you do not at least show them your children, they could come back
with an unlawful and unconstitutional warrant even though your children are not
in imminent danger.
Everything CPS sees and hears is written
down and eventually given to the AAG for your possible prosecution. You also need to know that if the focus of
the investigation is on your spouse or significant other you may think you may
not be charged with anything and that you are the non-offending spouse,
wrong. If your spouse gets charged with
anything, you are probably going to get charged with allowing it to
happen. So if a spouse lies and makes
things up, he/she is also confessing that he allowed whatever he/she alleges.
What you say will more then likely not be
written down the way you said it or meant it.
For example, a female CPS worker asks the wife, “Does your husband yell
at the children?” your response could be once in a while. Then they ask, “Does he yell at you and
argue with you. Your response could be
“yes we argue sometimes and he may raise his voice.” The next question is, “Does your husband drink alcohol?” Your response could be “yes he has several
drinks a week.” Now let’s translate
those benign responses and see what CPS may write in her paperwork. “When the father drinks, he yells at
children and wife and wife is a victim of domestic violence.” This is a far cry on what really took place
in that conversation. CPS routinely
will take what you say out of context and actually lie in their reports in
order to have a successful prosecution of their case. They have an end game in mine and they will misrepresent the
facts and circumstances surrounding what may or may not have happened.
Something similar happened to the authors
where DCF employees lied in front of the judge. They said the husband was a victim of domestic violence even
though all five members of the family stated clearly that there was never any
domestic violence. The husband would
like to know when this occurred because it did not happen when he was there. They will also misrepresent the condition of
your home even if you were sick or injured and did not have a chance to
straighten anything out. CPS will not
put anything exculpatory in the record so anyone that reads her notes will read
that the house was a mess and cluttered.
Never give them a chance to falsify the record or twist your words. The best advice we can offer is before
letting any CPS official in your home, if you choose to do so, is to tell them
you want your attorney there when they come and schedule a time for the meeting.
Remember, CPS could care less about your
rights or your children’s constitutional rights. Removing a child from a safe home is more harmful then most
alleged allegations as stated by many judges.
They will lie and say they have to come in and you have to comply. Remember CPS has no statutory authority to
enter your home when no crime has been committed. They are trained to lie to you to get in any way they can and
this comes from interviewing employees at DCF.
Do not sign anything or agree to anything even if you are not guilty and
you agree to go through some horse and pony show. That will be used against you as if you admitted to it. The case plan or whatever they call it in
your state is essentially a plea of guilty to the charges. If you agree to it and sign it, you are admitting
to the abuse and/or neglect allegations and to the contents of the record. You are assisting them in their case against
you and in your own prosecution if you sign their agreements, case plan or menu. Demand a trial at the very first hearing and
never stipulate to anything. Force them
to prove you are guilty. Do not willingly
admit to it by signing a case plan. Due
to ignorance and/or incompetence, your attorney may tell you to sign their
agreement so you can get your children back sooner. Do not believe it. This
will only speed up the process of terminating your parental rights.
Yes they are. The Fourth Amendment is applicable to DCF
investigators in the context of an investigation of alleged abuse or neglect as
are all “government officials.” This issue
is brought out best in Walsh v. Erie
County Dept. of Job and Family Services, 3:01-cv-7588. If it is unlawful and unconstitutional for
the police who are government officials, likewise it is for CPS employees who
are also government officials.
The social workers, Darnold and Brown, argued
that “the Fourth Amendment was not applicable to the activities of their social
worker employees.” The social workers
claimed, “entries into private homes by child welfare workers involve neither
searches nor seizures under the Fourth Amendment, and thus can be conducted
without either a warrant or probable cause to believe that a child is at risk
of imminent harm.” The court disagreed
and ruled: “Despite the defendant’s exaggerated view of their powers,
the Fourth Amendment applies to them, as it does to all other officers and
agents of the state whose request to enter, however benign or well-intentioned,
are met by a closed door.” The Court
also stated “The Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on unreasonable searches and
seizures applies whenever an investigator, be it a police officer, a DCF
employee, or any other agent of the state, responds to an alleged instance of
child abuse, neglect, or dependency.” (Emphasis added) Darnold and Brown’s first argument, shot down
by the court. The social workers then
argued that there are exceptions to the Fourth Amendment, and that the
situation with the Walsh children was an “emergency.” Further, the “Defendants argue their entry into the home, even
absent voluntary consent, was reasonable under the circumstances.” They point to the anonymous complaint about
clutter on the front porch; and the plaintiff’s attempt to leave.
These circumstances, the
defendants argue, created an ‘emergency situation’ that led Darnold and Brown reasonably
to believe the Walsh children were in danger of imminent harm. (This is the old “emergency” excuse that has
been used for years by social workers.)
The Court again disagreed and ruled: “There is nothing inherently
unusual or dangerous about cluttered premises, much less anything about such
vaguely described conditions that could manifest imminent or even possible
danger or harm to young children. If
household ‘clutter’ justifies warrantless entry and threats of removal of
children and arrest or citation of their parents, few families are secure and
few homes are safe from unwelcome and unjustified intrusion by state officials
and officers.” The Court went on to
rule, “They have failed to show that any exigency that justifies warrantless
entry was necessary to protect the welfare of the plaintiff’s children. In this case, a rational jury could find
that ‘no evidence points to the opposite conclusion’ and a lack of ‘sufficient
exigent circumstances to relieve the state actors here of the burden of
obtaining a warrant.’ The social
workers’ second argument, shot down by the court.
The social workers, Darnold and
Brown, then argued that they are obligated under law to investigate any
reported case of child abuse, and that supersedes the Fourth Amendment. The social workers argued, “Against these
fundamental rights, the defendants contend that Ohio’s statutory framework for
learning about and investigation allegations of child abuse and neglect
supersede their obligations under the Fourth Amendment. They point principally to § 2151.421 of the
Ohio Revised code as authority for their warrantless entry into and search of
the plaintiff’s home. That statute
imposes a duty on certain designated professionals and persons who work with
children or provide child care to report instances of apparent child abuse or
neglect.” This is the old “mandatory
reporter” excuse.
The Court disagreed and ruled: “The
defendant’s argument that the duty to investigate created by § 2151.421(F)(1)
exempts them from the Fourth Amendment misses the mark because, not having
received a report described in § 2151.421(A)(1)(b), they were not, and could
not have been, conducting an investigation pursuant to § 2151.421(F)(1).” The social worker’s third argument, shot
down by the court.
The Court continues with their chastisement of the social
workers: “There can be no doubt that the state can and should protect the
welfare of children who are at risk from acts of abuse and neglect. There likewise can be no doubt that occasions
arise calling for immediate response, even without prior judicial
approval. But those instances are the
exception. Otherwise child welfare
workers would have a free pass into any home in which they have an anonymous
report or poor housekeeping, overcrowding, and insufficient medical care and,
thus perception that children may be at some risk.” The Court continues: “The anonymous phone call in this case did
not constitute a ‘report’ of child abuse or neglect.” The social workers, Darnold and Brown, claimed that they were
immune from liability, claiming qualified immunity because “they had not had
training in Fourth Amendment law.” In
other words, because they thought the Fourth Amendment did not bind them, they could
not be sued for their “mistake.”
The police officers, Chandler and Kish, claimed that they
could not be sued because they thought the social workers were not subject to
the Fourth Amendment, and they were just helping the social workers. The Court disagreed and ruled: “That
subjective basis for their ignorance about and actions in violation of the Fourth
Amendment does not relieve them of the consequences of that ignorance and those
actions.” The Court then lowers the
boom by stating: “The claims of defendants Darnold, Brown, Chandler and Kish of
qualified immunity are therefore denied.”
THE 9TH CIRCUIT COURT SAID,
PARENTS HAVE THE CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT
TO BE LEFT ALONE BY CPS AND THE POLICE.
The 9th Circuit
Court of Appeals case, Calabretta v.
Floyd, 9th Cir. (1999) “involves whether a social worker and
a police officer were entitled to qualified immunity, for a coerced entry into
a home to investigate suspected child abuse, interrogation of a child, and
strip search of a child, conducted without a search warrant and without a
special exigency.”
The court did not agree that the
social worker and the police officer had “qualified immunity” and said, “the
facts in this case are noteworthy for the absence of emergency.” No one was in distress. “The police officer was there to back up the
social worker’s insistence on entry against the mother’s will, not because he
perceived any imminent danger of harm.”
And he should have known better.
Furthermore, “had the information been more alarming, had the social
worker or police officer been alarmed, had there been reason to fear imminent
harm to a child, this would be a different case, one to which we have no
occasion to speak. A reasonable
official would understand that they could not enter the home without consent or
a search warrant.”
The 9th Circuit Court of
Appeals defines the law and states “In our circuit, a reasonable official would
have known that the law barred this entry.
Any government official (CPS) can be held to know that their office does
not give them unrestricted right to enter people’s homes at will. We held in White v. Pierce County (797 F. 2d 812 (9th Cir. 1986),
a child welfare investigation case, that ‘it was settled constitutional law
that, absent exigent circumstances, police could not enter a dwelling without a
warrant even under statutory authority where probable cause existed.’ The principle that government officials
cannot coerce entry into people’s houses without a search warrant or
applicability of an established exception to the requirement of a search
warrant is so well established that any reasonable officer would know it.”
And there we have it: “Any
government official can be held to know that their office does not give
them an unrestricted right to enter peoples’ homes at will. … The fourth
Amendment preserves the ‘right of the people to be secure in their persons,
houses … ’ without limiting that right to one kind of government official.” (emphasis added)
In other words, parents have the
constitutional right to exercise their children’s and their 4th and
5th Amendment’s protections and should just say no to social workers
especially when they attempt to coerce or threaten to call the police so they
can conduct their investigation. “A
social worker is not entitled to sacrifice a family’s privacy and dignity to
her own personal views on how parents ought to discipline their children.” (The Constitution and the Bill of Rights
were written to protect the people from the government, not to protect the
government from the people. And within
those documents, the people have the constitutional right to hold the
government accountable when it does deny its citizens their rights under the
law even if it is CPS, the police, or government agency, or local, state, or
federal government.)
The Court’s reasoning for this ruling was
simple and straight forward: “The reasonable expectation of privacy of
individuals in their homes includes the interests of both parents and children
in not having government officials coerce entry in violation of the Fourth
Amendment and humiliate the parents in front of the children. An essential aspect of the privacy of the
home is the parent’s and the child’s interest in the privacy of the
relationship with each other.”
PARROTING OF THE PHRASE “BEST INTEREST OF THE CHILD” WITHOUT
SUPPORTING FACTS OR A LEGAL BASIS IS LEGALLY INSUFFICIENT TO SUPPORT A WARRANT
OR COURT ORDER TO ENTER A HOME.
In North Hudson DYFS v. Koehler Family, filed December 18, 2000,
the Appellate court granted the emergency application on February 6, 2001, to
stay DYFS illegal entry that was granted by the lower court because DYFS in
their infinite wisdom thought it was their right to go into the Koehler home
because the children were not wearing socks in the winter or sleep in
beds. After reviewing the briefs of all
the parties, the appellate court ruled that the order to investigate the
Koehler home was in violation of the law and must be reversed. The Court explained, “[a]bsent some tangible
evidence of abuse or neglect, the Courts do not authorize fishing expeditions
into citizens’ houses.” The Court went
on to say, “[m]ere parroting of the phrase ‘best interest of the child’ without
supporting facts and a legal basis is insufficient to support a Court order
based on reasonableness or any other ground.”
February 14, 2001.
In other words, a juvenile judge’s
decision on whether or not to issue a warrant is a legal one, it is not based
on “best interest of the child” or personal feeling. The United States Supreme Court has held that courts may not
use a different standard other than probable cause for the issuance of such
orders. Griffin v. Wisconsin, 483 U.S. 868 (1987). If a court issues a warrant based on an
uncorroborated anonymous tip, the warrant will not survive a judicial challenge
in the higher courts. Anonymous tips
are never probable cause. “[I]n context
of a seizure of a child by the State during an abuse investigation . . . a court order is the equivalent of a
warrant.” (Emphasis added) Tenenbaum
v. Williams, 193 F.3d 581, 602 (2nd Cir. 1999). F.K. v. Iowa district Court for Polk
County, Id.”
THE U.S COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE 7TH CIRCUIT RECENTLY
RULED THAT CHILD ABUSE INVESTIGATIONS HELD ON PRIVATE PROPERTY
AND INTERVIEW OF A CHILD WITHOUT CONSENT UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
The decision in the case of Doe et al, v. Heck et al (No. 01-3648,
2003 US App. Lexis 7144) will affect the manner in which law
enforcement and child protective services investigations of alleged child abuse
or neglect are conducted. The decision
of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals found that this practice, that
is “no prior consent” interview of a child, will ordinarily constitute a “clear
violation” of the constitutional rights of parents under the 4th and
14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. According to the Court, the investigative interview of a child
constitutes a “search and seizure” and, when conducted on private property
without “consent, a warrant, probable cause, or exigent circumstances,” such an
interview is an unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the rights of
the parent, child, and, possibly the owner of the private property.
Considering that one
critical purpose of the early stages of an investigation is to determine
whether or not the child is in danger, and if so, from who seems to require a
high threshold level of evidence to commence the interview of a child, whether
the child is on private or public property.
“In our circuit, a reasonable official
would have known that the law barred this entry. Any government official can be held to know that their office
does not give them an unrestricted right to enter peoples’ homes at will. We held in White v. Pierce County a child welfare investigation case,
that ‘it was settled constitutional law that, absent exigent circumstances,
police could not enter a dwelling without a warrant even under statutory
authority where probable cause existed.’
The principle that government officials cannot coerce entry into
peoples’ houses without a search warrant or applicability of an established
exception to the requirement of a search warrant is so well established that
any reasonable officer would know it.”
“We conclude that the Warrant Clause must be complied with. First, none of the exceptions to the Warrant
Clause apply in this situation, including ‘exigent circumstances coupled with
probable cause,’ because there is, by definition, time enough to apply to a
magistrate for an ex parte removal order.
See State v. Hatter, 342N.W.2d
851, 855 (Iowa 1983) (holding the exigent circumstances exception to
the Warrant Clause only applies when ‘an immediate major crisis in the
performance of duty afforded neither time nor opportunity to apply to a
magistrate.’). Second, as noted by the
Second Circuit, ‘[I]n context of a seizure of a child by the State during an
abuse investigation . . . a court order is the equivalent of a warrant.’ Tenenbaum
v. Williams, 193 F.3d 581, 602 (2nd Cir. 1999). F.K. v. Iowa
district Court for Polk County, Id.”
Another recent 9th Circuit case
also held that there is no exception to the warrant requirement for social
workers in the context of a child abuse investigation. ‘The [California] regulations they cite
require social workers to respond to various contacts in various ways. But none of the regulations cited say that
the social worker may force her way into a home without a search warrant in the
absence of any emergency.’ Calabretta
v. Floyd, 189 F.3d 808 (9th Cir. 1999) Calabretta also cites
various cases form other jurisdictions for its conclusion. Good
v. Dauphin County Social Servs., 891 F.2d 1087 (3rd Cir. 1989)
held that a social worker and police officer were not entitled to qualified
immunity for insisting on entering her house against the mother’s will to
examine her child for bruises. Good holds that a search warrant or
exigent circumstances, such as a need to protect a child against imminent
danger of serious bodily injury, was necessary for an entry without consent,
and the anonymous tip claiming bruises was in the case insufficient to
establish special exigency.
The 9th Circuit further opined
in Wallis v. Spencer, 202 F.3d 1126 (9th
Cir. 2000), that ‘[b]ecause the swing of every pendulum brings with it
potential adverse consequences, it is important to emphasize that in the area
of child abuse, as with the investigation and prosecution of all crimes, the
state is constrained by the substantive and procedural guarantees of the
Constitution. The fact that the
suspected crime may be heinous – whether it involves children or adults – does
not provide cause for the state to ignore the rights of the accused or any
other parties. Otherwise, serious
injustices may result. In cases of
alleged child abuse, governmental failure to abide by constitutional constraints
may have deleterious long-term consequences for the child and, indeed, for the
entire family. Ill-considered and
improper governmental action may create significant injury where no problem of
any kind previously existed.’ Id. at 1130-1131.”
This was the case involving DCF in
Connecticut. Many of their policies are
unlawful and contradictory to the Constitution. DCF has unlawful polices giving workers permission to coerce,
intimidate and to threatened innocent families with governmental intrusion and
oppression with police presences to squelch and put down any citizen who
asserts their 4th Amendment rights by not allowing an unlawful
investigation to take place in their private home when no imminent danger is
present.
DCF is the “moving force” behind the on-going
violations of federal law and violations of the Constitution. This idea of not complying with the 4th
and 14th Amendments is so impregnated in their statutes, policies,
practices and customs. It affects all
and what they do. DCF takes on the
persona of the feeling of exaggerated power over parents and that they are totally
immune. Further, that they can do
basically do anything they want including engaging in deception,
misrepresentation of the facts and lying to the judge. This happens thousands of times every day in
the United States where the end justifies the mean even if it is unlawful,
illegal and unconstitutional.
We can tell you stories for hours
where CPS employees committed criminal acts and were prosecuted and went to
jail and/or were sued for civil rights violations. CPS workers have lied in reports and court documents, asked
others to lie, and kidnapped children without court orders. They even have crossed state lines
impersonating police, kidnapping children and then were prosecuted for their
actions. There are also a number of documented
cases where the case worker killed the child.
It is sickening how many children are subject to abuse, neglect
and even killed at the hands of Child Protective Services. The following statistics represent the
number of cases per 100,000 children in the United States and includes DCF in
Connecticut. This information is from
The National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect (NCCAN) in Washington.
Perpetrators of Maltreatment
|
|
Physical Abuse |
Sexual Abuse |
Neglect |
Medical Neglect |
Fatalities |
|
CPS |
160 |
112 |
410 |
14 |
6.4 |
|
Parents |
59 |
13 |
241 |
12 |
1.5 |
Imagine that, 6.4 children die at the
hands of the very agencies that are supposed to protect them and only 1.5 at
the hands of parents per 100,000 children.
CPS perpetrates more abuse, neglect, and sexual abuse and kills more
children then parents in the United States.
If the citizens of this country hold CPS to the same standards that they
hold parents too. No judge should ever
put another child in the hands of ANY government agency because CPS nationwide
is guilty of more harm and death than any human being combined. CPS nationwide is guilty of more human
rights violations and deaths of children then the homes from which they were
removed. When are the judges going to
wake up and see that they are sending children to their death and a life of
abuse when children are removed from safe homes based on the mere opinion of a
bunch of social workers.
The United States Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit said it best, “The government’s interest in the welfare of
children embraces not only protecting children from physical abuse, but also
protecting children’s interest in the privacy and dignity of their homes and in
the lawfully exercised authority of their parents.” Calabretta v. Floyd, 189 F.3d 808 (1999).
This statement came in a case, which held
that social workers who, in pursuit of a child abuse investigation, invaded a
family home without a warrant violating the Fourth Amendment rights of both
children and parents. Upon remand for
the damages phase of the trial, the social workers, police officers, and
governments that employed them settled this civil rights case for $150,000.00.
Contrary to the assumption of hundreds of social workers,
the Ninth Circuit held that the Fourth Amendment applies just as much to a
child abuse investigation as it does to any criminal or other governmental
investigation. Social workers are not
exempt from the requirements of the Fourth Amendment when they act alone. They are not exempt from its rules if they
are accompanied by a police officer. Police
officers are not exempt from the requirement even if all they do is get the
front door open for the social worker; this would be intimidation, coercion and
threatening. The general rule is that
unreasonable searches and seizures are banned.
But the second part of the rule is the most important in this
context. All warrantless searches are
presumptively unreasonable.
If a police officer says, “If you don’t
let us in your home we will break down your door” –a parent who then opens the
door has not given free and voluntary consent.
If a social worker says, “if you don’t let me in the home, I will take
your children away” –a parent who then opens the door has not given free and
voluntary consent. If a social worker
says, “I will get a warrant from the judge or I will call the police if you do
not let me in” negate consent. ANY type of communication,
which conveys the idea to the parent that they have no realistic alternative,
but to allow entry negates any claim that the entry was lawfully gained through
the channel of consent. DCF’s
policy clearly tells the social worker that they can threaten parents even if
the parents assert their 4th Amendment rights.
Consent to warrantless entry must be voluntary and not
the result of duress or coercion. Lack
of intelligence, not understanding the right not to consent, or trickery
invalidate voluntary consent. Schneckloth
v. Bustamonte, 412 US 218 (1973).
One’s awareness of his or her right to refuse consent to warrantless
entry is relevant to the issue of voluntariness of alleged content. Lion Boulos v. Wilson, 834 F. 2d 504 (9th
Cir. 1987). “Consent” that is the
product of official intimidation or harassment is not consent at all. Citizens do not forfeit their constitutional
rights when they are coerced to comply with a request that they would prefer to
refuse. Florida v. Bostick, 501 US
429 (1991). Coercive or
intimidating behavior supports a reasonable belief that compliance is compelled. Cassady v. Tackett, 938 F. 2d (6th
Cir. 1991). Coercion can be mental
as well as physical. Blackburn v.
Alabama, 361 US (1960)
PROBABLE CAUSE & EXIGENT CIRCUMSTANCES
The Fourth Amendment does not put a
barrier in the way of a social worker who has reliable evidence that a child is
in imminent danger. For example, if a
hot line call comes in and says, “My name is Mildred Smith, here is my address
and phone number. I was visiting my
grandchildren this morning and I discovered that one of my grandchildren,
Johnny, age 5, is being locked in his bedroom without food for days at a time,
and he looked pale and weak to me” – the social worker certainly has evidence
of exigent circumstances and is only one step away from having probable cause.
Since the report has been received over
the telephone, it is possible that the tipster is an imposter and not the
child’s grandmother. A quick
verification of the relationship can be made in a variety of ways and once verified,
the informant, would satisfy the legal test of reliability, which is necessary
to establish probable cause. Anonymous
phone calls fail the second part of the two-prong requirement of “exigent
circumstances” and “probable cause” for a warrant or order. Anonymous phone calls cannot stand the test
of probable cause as defined within the 14th Amendment and would
fail in court on appeal. The social
worker(s) would lose their qualified immunity for their deprivation of rights
and can be sued. Many social workers
and Child Protection Services (“CPS”) lose their cases in court because their
entry into homes was in violation of the parents civil rights because the
evidence in their possession did not satisfy the standard of probable cause.
It is not enough to have information that
the children are in some form of serious danger. The evidence must also pass a test of reliability that our
justice system calls probable cause. In
H.R. v. State Department of Human
Resources, 612 So.2d 477 (Ala. Ct. App. 1992); the court held that an
anonymous tip standing alone never amounts to probable cause. The Calabretta court held the same thing, as
have numerous other decisions, which have faced the issue directly. The Fourth Amendment itself spells out the
evidence required for a warrant or entry order. No warrant shall be issued but on probable cause. The United States Supreme Court has held
that courts may not use a different standard other than probable cause for the
issuance of such orders. Griffin v. Wisconsin, 483 U.S. 868 (1987). If a court issues a warrant based on an
uncorroborated anonymous tip, the warrant will not survive a judicial challenge
in the higher courts. Anonymous tips
are never probable cause.
Children are not well served if they are
subjected to investigations base on false allegations. Little children can be traumatized by
investigations in ways that are unintended by the social worker. However, to a small child all they know is
that a strange adult is taking off their clothing while their mother is sobbing
in the next room in the presence of an armed police officer. This does not seem to a child to be a proper
invasion of their person –quite different, for example, from an examination by
a doctor when their mother is present and cooperating. The misuse of anonymous tips is well
known. Personal vendettas, neighborhood
squabbles, disputes on the Little League field, child custody battles, revenge,
nosey individuals who are attempting to impose their views on others are turned
into maliciously false allegations breathed into a hotline.
“Decency, security and liberty alike demand that government
officials shall be subject to the rules of conduct that are commands to the
citizen. In a government of laws, existence
of government will be imperiled if it fails to observe the law
scrupulously. Our government is the
potent, omnipresent teacher. For good
or ill, it teaches the whole people by example. Crime is contagious. If
the government becomes a law-breaker, it breeds contempt for the law. It invites every man to become a law unto
himself. It invites anarchy. U.S.
v. Olmstead, 277 U.S. 438 (1928), Justice Brandeis.
We the people of the United States are
ruled by law, not by feelings. If the
courts allow states and their agencies to rule by feelings and not law, we
become a nation without law that makes decisions based on subjectivity and
objectivity. CPS has been allowed to
bastardize and emasculate the Constitution and the rights of its citizens to be
governed by the rule of men rather then the rule of law. It is very dangerous when governmental
officials are allowed to have unfettered access to a citizen’s home. It is also very dangerous to allow CPS to
violate the confrontation clause in the 6th Amendment were CPS
hides, conceals and covers up the accuser/witness who makes the report.
It allows those individuals to have a safe haven to file fraudulent
reports and CPS aids and abets in this violation of fundamental rights. All citizens have the right to know their
accuser/witness in order to preserve the sanctity of the rule of law and that
the Constitution is the supreme law of the land.
Yes it is illegal and an unconstitutional practice to
remove children which results in punishing the children and the non-offending
parent as stated. In a landmark class
action suit in the U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York, U.S.
District Judge Jack Weinsein ruled on Nicholson
v. Williams, Case No.: 00-cv-2229, the suit challenged the practice of
New York’s City’s Administration for Children’s Services of removing the
children of battered mothers solely because the children saw their mothers
being beaten by husbands or boyfriends.
Judge Weistein ruled that the practice is unconstitutional and he
ordered it stopped.
ARE PARENTS GUILTY OF MALTREATMENT OR EMOTIONAL NEGLECT
IF THE CHILD WITNESSES DOMESTIC VIOLENCE?
“Not
according to Judge Weistein’s ruling and to the leading national experts.”
During the trial, several leading national experts
testified on the impact on children of witnessing domestic violence, and the
impact on children of being removed from the non-offending parent. Views of Experts on Effects of Domestic
Violence on Children, and defining witnessing domestic violence by children as
maltreatment or emotional neglect is a mistake. A “great concern [regarding] how increased awareness of
children’s exposure [to domestic violence] and associated problems is being
used. Concerned about the risk adult
domestic violence poses for children, some child protection agencies in the
United States appear to be defining exposure to domestic violence as a form of
child…Defining witnessing as maltreatment is a mistake. Doing so ignores the fact that large numbers
of children in these studies showed no negative development problems and some
showed evidence of strong coping abilities.
Automatically defining witnessing as maltreatment may also ignore
battered mother’s efforts to develop safe environments for their children and
themselves.” Ex. 163 at 866.
EFFECTS OF REMOVALS ON CHILDREN AND NON-OFFENDING PARENT.
Dr. Wolf testified that disruptions in the
parent-child relationship might provoke fear and anxiety in a child and
diminish his or her sense of stability and self. Tr. 565-67. He described
the typical response of a child separated from his parent: “When a young child
is separated from a parent unwillingly, he or she shows distress … At first,
the child is very anxious and protests vigorously and angrily. Then he falls into a sense of despair,
though still hyper vigilant, looking, waiting, and hoping for her return …” A
child’s sense of time factors into the extent to which a separation impacts his
or her emotional well-being. Thus, for
younger children whose sense of time is less keenly developed, short periods of
parental absence may seem longer than for older children. Tr 565-65. See also Ex. 141b.
For those children who are in homes where
there is domestic violence, disruption of that bond can be even more traumatic
than situations where this is no domestic violence. Dr. Stark (Yale New Haven Hospital researcher) asserted that if a
child is placed in foster care as a result of domestic violence in the home,
then he or she may view such removal as “a traumatic act of punishment … and
[think] that something that [he] or she has done or failed to do has caused
this separation.” Tr. 1562-63. Dr.
Pelcovitz stated that “taking a child whose greatest fear is separation from
his or her mother and in the name of ‘protecting’ that child [by] forcing on
them, what is in effect, their worst nightmare, … is tantamount to pouring salt
on an open wound.” Ex. 139 at 5.
Another serious implication of removal is
that it introduces children to the foster care system, which can be much more
dangerous and debilitating than the home situation. Dr. Stark testified that foster homes are rarely screened for the
presence of violence, and that the incidence of abuse and child fatality in
foster homes is double that in the general population. Tr 1596; Ex. 122 at 3-4. Children in foster care often fail to receive
adequate medical care. Ex. 122 at
6. Foster care placements can disrupt the
child’s contact with community, school and siblings. Ex. 122 at 8.
Yes
they do, children have standing to sue for their removal after they reach the
age of majority. Parents also have
legal standing to sue if CPS violated their 4th and 14th
Amendment rights. Children have a
Constitutional right to live with their parents without government interference. Brokaw
v. Mercer County, 7th Cir. (2000) A child has a constitutionally protected interest in the
companionship and society of his or her parents. Ward v. San Jose, 9th
Cir. (1992) State employees who
withhold a child from her family infringe on the family’s liberty of familial
association. K.H. through Murphy v. Morgan, 7th Cir. (1990)
The forced separation of parent from
child, even for a short time, represents a serious infringement upon the rights
of both. J.B. v. Washington county, 10th Cir. (1997) Parent’s interest is of “the highest order.”
And the court recognizes “the vital importance of curbing overzealous suspicion
and intervention on the part of health care professionals and government
officials.” Thomason v. Scan Volunteer
Services, Inc., 8th Cir. (1996)
You must protect you and your child’s
rights. CPS has no legal right to enter
your home or speak to you and your child when there in no imminent danger
present. Know your choices; you can
refuse to speak to any government official whether it is the police or CPS as
long as there is an open criminal investigation. They will tell you that what they are involved in is a civil
matter not a criminal matter. Don’t you
believe it. There is nothing civil
about allegations of child abuse or neglect.
It is a criminal matter disguised as a civil matter. Police do not get involved in civil matters
if it truly is one. You will regret
letting them in your home and speaking with them like the thousands of other
parents who have gone through this. When
you ask a friend, family member or someone at work what to do, they will tell
you if you agree to services, CPS will leave you alone or you can get your kids
back. That is an incorrect assumption.
Refusing them entry is NOT hindering an
investigation, it is a Fourth Amendment protection. CPS or the juvenile judge cannot abrogate that right as long as
your children are not in imminent danger.
Tell them to go packing. DO NOT sign anything, it will come back
to be used against you in any possible kangaroo trial. Your children’s records are protected by
FERPA and HIPAA regarding your children’s educational and medical records. They need a lawful warrant like the police
under the “warrant clause” to seize any records. If your child’s school records contain medical records, then
HIPAA also applies. When the school or
doctor sends records to CPS or allows them to view them without your
permission, both the sender and receiver violated the law. You need to file a HIPAA complaint on the
sender and the receiver. (See PDF
version http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/howtofileprivacy.pdf and a Microsoft Word version http://www.hhs.gov/ocr/howtofileprivacy.doc.)
Remember, you only have 180 days from the time you found out about
it. Tell them they need a lawful
warrant to make you do anything. CPS
has no power; do not agree to a drug screen or a psychological evaluation.
The state may not interfere in child
rearing decisions when a fit parent is available. Troxel v. Granville, 530
U.S. 57 (2000).
A child has a constitutionally protected
interest in the companionship and society of his or her parent. Ward
v. San Jose (9th Cir. 1992)
Children have standing to sue for their
removal after they reach the age of majority.
Children have a constitutional right to live with their parents without
government interference. Brokaw v. Mercer County (7th
Cir. 2000)
The private, fundamental liberty interest
involved in retaining custody of one’s child and the integrity of one’s family
is of the greatest importance. Weller v. Dept. of Social Services for
Baltimore (4th Cir. 1990)
A state employee who withholds a child
from her family may infringe on the family’s liberty of familial
association. Social workers can not
deliberately remove children from their parents and place them with foster
caregivers when the officials reasonably should have known such an action would
cause harm to the child’s mental or physical health. K.H. through Murphy v.
Morgan (7th Cir. 1990)
The forced separation of parent from
child, even for a short time (in this case 18 hours); represent a serious
infringement upon the rights of both. J.B. v. Washington County (10th
Cir. 1997)
Absent extraordinary circumstances, a
parent has a liberty interest in familial association and privacy that cannot
be violated without adequate pre-deprivation procedures. Malik
v. Arapahoe Cty. Dept. of Social Services (10 Cir. 1999)
Parent interest is of “the highest order,”
and the court recognizes “the vital importance of curbing overzealous suspicion
and intervention on the part of health care professionals and government
officials.” Thomason v. Scan Volunteer Services, Inc. (8th Cir. 1996)
Police officers and social workers are not
immune from coercing or forcing entry into a person’s home without a search
warrant. Calabretta v. Floyd (9th Cir. 1999)
The mere possibility of danger does not
constitute an emergency or exigent circumstance that would justify a forced
warrantless entry and a warrantless seizure of a child. Hurlman
v. Rice (2nd Cir. 1991)
A police officer and a social worker may
not conduct a warrantless search or seizure in a suspected child abuse case
absent exigent circumstances.
Defendants must have reason to believe that life or limb is in immediate
jeopardy and that the intrusion is reasonable necessary to alleviate the
threat. Searches and seizures in
investigation of a child neglect or child abuse case at a home are governed by
the same principles as other searches and seizures at a home. Good
v. Dauphin County Social Services (3rd Cir. 1989)
The Fourth Amendment protection against
unreasonable searches and seizures extends beyond criminal investigations and
includes conduct by social workers in the context of a child neglect/abuse
investigation. Lenz v. Winburn (11th Cir. 1995)
The protection offered by the Fourth
Amendment and by our laws does not exhaust itself once a warrant is
obtained. The concern for the privacy,
the safety, and the property of our citizens continues and is reflected in
knock and announce requirements. United States v. Becker, 929 F.2d 9th
Cir.1991)
Making false statements to obtain a
warrant, when the false statements were necessary to the finding of probable
cause on which the warrant was based, violates the Fourth Amendment’s warrant
requirement. The Warrant Clause
contemplates that the warrant applicant be truthful: “no warrant shall issue,
but on probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation.” Deliberate falsehood or reckless disregard
for the truth violates the Warrant Clause.
An officer who obtains a warrant through material false statements which
result in an unconstitutional seizure may be held liable personally for his
actions under § 1983. This warrant
application is materially false or made in reckless disregard for the Fourth
Amendment’s Warrant Clause. A search
must not exceed the scope of the search authorized in a warrant. By limiting the authorization to search to
the specific areas and things for which there is probable cause to search, the
Fourth Amendment’s requirement ensures that the search will be carefully
tailored to its justifications.
Consequently, it will not take on the character of the wide-ranging
exploratory searches the Framers of the Constitution intended to prohibit. There is a requirement that the police
identify themselves to the subject of a search, absent exigent circumstances. Aponte
Matos v. Toledo Davilla (1st Cir. 1998)
Child’s four-month separation from his
parents could be challenged under substantive due process. Sham procedures don’t constitute true
procedural due process. Brokaw v. Mercer County (7th
Cir 2000)
Post-deprivation remedies do not provide
due process if pre-deprivation remedies are practicable. Bendiburg
v. Dempsey (11th Cir. 1990)
Children placed in a private foster home
have substantive due process rights to personal security and bodily integrity. Yvonne
L. v. New Mexico Dept. of Human Services (10th Cir. 1992)
When the state places a child into
state-regulated foster care, the state has duties and the failure to perform
such duties may create liability under § 1983.
Liability may attach when the state has taken custody of a child,
regardless of whether the child came to stay with a family on his own which was
not an officially approved foster family.
Nicini v. Morra (3rd
Cir. 2000)
A social worker who received a telephone
accusation of abuse and threatened to remove a child from the home unless the
father himself left and who did not have grounds to believe the child was in
imminent danger of being abused engaged in an arbitrary abuse of governmental
power in ordering the father to leave. Croft v. Westmoreland Cty. Children and
Youth Services (3rd Cir. 1997)
Plaintiff’s were arguable deprived of
their right to procedural due process because the intentional use of fraudulent
evidence into the procedures used by the state denied them the fight to
fundamentally fair procedures before having their child removed, a right
included in Procedural Due Process. Morris v. Dearborne (5th Cir.
1999)
When the state deprives parents and
children of their right to familial integrity, even in an emergency situation,
the burden is on the state to initiate prompt judicial proceedings for a
post-deprivation hearing, and it is irrelevant that a parent could have hired
counsel to force a hearing. K.H. through Murphy v. Morgan, (7th
Cir. 1990)
When the state places a child in a foster
home it has an obligation to provide adequate medical care, protection, and
supervision. Norfleet v. Arkansas Dept. of Human Services, (8th Cir.
1993)
Children may not be removed from their
home by police officers or social workers without notice and a hearing unless
the officials have a reasonable belief that the children were in imminent
danger. Ram v. Rubin, (9th Cir. 1997)
Absent extraordinary circumstances, a
parent has a liberty interest in familial association and privacy that cannot
be violated without adequate pre-deprivation procedures. An ex parte hearing based on
misrepresentation and omission does not constitute notice and an opportunity to
be heard. Procurement of an order to
seize a child through distortion, misrepresentation and/or omission is a
violation of the Forth Amendment.
Parents may assert their children’s Fourth Amendment claim on behalf of
their children as well as asserting their own Fourteenth Amendment claim. Malik
v.Arapahoe Cty. Dept. of Social Services, (10th Cir. 1999)
Plaintiff’s clearly established right to
meaningful access to the courts would be violated by suppression of evidence
and failure to report evidence. Chrissy v. Mississippi Dept. of Public
Welfare, (5th Cir. 1991)
Mother had a clearly established right to
an adequate, prompt post-deprivation hearing.
A 17-day period prior to the hearing was not prompt hearing. Whisman
V. Rinehart, (8th Cir. 1997)
Police officers or social workers may not
“pick up” a child without an investigation or court order, absent an
emergency. Parental consent is required
to take children for medical exams, or an overriding order from the court after
parents have been heard. Wallis v. Spencer, (9th Cir
1999)
Child removals are “seizures” under the
Fourth Amendment. Seizure is
unconstitutional without court order or exigent circumstances. Court order obtained based on knowingly false
information violates Fourth Amendment. Brokaw v. Mercer County, (7th
Cir. 2000)
Defendant should’ve investigated further
prior to ordering seizure of children based on information he had
overheard. Hurlman v. Rice, (2nd Cir. 1991)
Police officer and social worker may not
conduct a warrantless search or seizure in a suspected abuse case absent
exigent circumstances. Defendants must
have reason to believe that life or limb is in immediate jeopardy and that the
intrusion is reasonably necessary to alleviate the threat. Searches and seizures in investigation of a
child neglect or child abuse case at a home are governed by the same principles
as other searches and seizures at a home.
Good v. Dauphin County Social
Services, (3rd Cir. 1989)
Defendants could not lawfully seize a child
without a warrant or the existence of probable cause to believe the child was
in imminent danger of harm. Where
police were not informed of any abuse of the child prior to arriving at
caretaker’s home and found no evidence of abuse while there, seizure of the
child was not objectively reasonable and violated the clearly established
Fourth Amendment rights of the child. Wooley v. City of Baton Rouge, (5th
Cir. 2000)
For purposes of the Fourth Amendment, a
“seizure” of a person is a situation in which a reasonable person would feel
that he is not free to leave, and also either actually yields to a show of
authority from police or social workers or is physically touched by
police. Persons may not be “seized”
without a court order or being placed under arrest. California v. Hodari,
499 U.S. 621 (1991)
Where the standard for a seizure or search
is probable cause, then there must be particularized information with respect
to a specific person. This requirement
cannot be undercut or avoided simply by pointing to the fact that coincidentally
there exists probable cause to arrest or to search or to seize another person
or to search a place where the person may happen to be. Yabarra
v. Illinois, 44 U.S. 85 (1979)
An officer who obtains a warrant through
material false statements which result in an unconstitutional seizure may be
held liable personally for his actions under § 1983. Aponte Matos v. Toledo
Davilla, 1st Cir. 1998)
Social workers (and other government
employees) may be sued for deprivation of civil rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983
if they are named in their ‘official and individual capacity’. Hafer
v. Melo, (S.Ct. 1991)
State law cannot provide immunity from
suit for Federal civil rights violations.
State law providing immunity from suit for child abuse investigators has
no application to suits under § 1983. Wallis v. Spencer, (9th Cir.
1999)
If the law was clearly established at the
time the action occurred, a police officer is not entitled to assert the
defense of qualified immunity based on good faith since a reasonably competent
public official should know the law governing his or her conduct. Harlow
v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818 (1982)
Immunity is defeated if the official took
the complained of action with malicious intention to cause a deprivation of
rights, or the official violated clearly established statutory or
constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known. McCord
v. Maggio, (5th Cir. 1991)
A defendant in a civil rights case is not
entitled to any immunity if he or she gave false information either in support
of an application for a search warrant or in presenting evidence to a
prosecutor on which the prosecutor based his or her charge against the
plaintiff. Young v. Biggers, (5th Cir. 1991)
Police officer was not entitled to
absolute immunity for her role in procurement of a court order placing a child
in state custody where there was evidence officer spoke with the social worker
prior to social worker’s conversation with the magistrate and there was
evidence that described the collaborative worker of the two defendants in
creating a “plan of action” to deal with the situation. Officer’s acts were investigative and
involved more that merely carrying out a judicial order. Malik
v. Arapahoe Cty. Dept. of Social Services, (10th Cir. 1999)
Individuals aren’t immune for the results
of their official conduct simply because they were enforcing policies or
orders. Where a statute authorizes
official conduct which is patently violation of fundamental constitutional principles,
an officer who enforces that statute is not entitled to qualified immunity. Grossman
v. City of Portland, (9th Cir. (1994)
Social workers were not entitled to
absolute immunity for pleadings filed to obtain a pick-up order for temporary
custody prior to formal petition being filed.
Social workers were not entitled to absolute immunity where department
policy was for social workers to report findings of neglect or abuse to other
authorities for further investigation or initiation of court proceedings. Social workers investigating claims of child
abuse are entitled only to qualified immunity.
Assisting in the use of information known to be false to further an
investigation is not subject to absolute immunity. Social workers are not entitled to qualified immunity on claims
they deceived judicial officers in obtaining a custody order or deliberately or
recklessly incorporated known falsehoods into their reports, criminal
complaints and applications. Use of information
known to be false is not reasonable, and acts of deliberate falsity or reckless
disregard of the truth are not entitled to qualified immunity. No qualified immunity is available for
incorporating allegations into the report or application where official had no
reasonable basis to assume the allegations were true at the time the document
was prepared. Snell v. Tunnel, (10 Cir. 1990)
Police officer is not entitled to absolute
immunity, only qualified immunity, to claim that he caused plaintiff to be
unlawfully arrested by presenting judge with an affidavit that failed to
establish probable cause. Malley v. Briggs, S.Ct. 1986)
Defendants were not entitled to
prosecutorial immunity where complaint was based on failure to investigate,
detaining minor child, and an inordinate delay in filing court proceedings,
because such actions did not aid in the presentation of a case to the juvenile
court. Whisman v. Rinehart, (8th Cir. 1997)
Case worker who intentionally or
recklessly withheld potentially exculpatory information from an adjudicated
delinquent or from the court itself was not entitled to qualified immunity. Germany
v. Vance, (1st Cir. 1989)
Defendant was not entitled to qualified
immunity or summary judgment because he should’ve investigated further prior to
ordering seizure of children based on information he had overheard. Hurlman
v. Rice, (2nd Cir. 1991)
Defendants were not entitled to qualified
immunity for conducting warrantless search of home during a child abuse
investigation where exigent circumstances were not present. Good
v. Dauphin County Social Services, (3rd Cir 1989)
Social workers were not entitled to
absolute immunity where no court order commanded them to place plaintiff with
particular foster caregivers. K.H through Murphy v. Morgan, (7th
Cir. 1991)
Paris Adult Theater v. Slaton, 413 US 49, 65 (1973)
In
this case, the Court includes the right of parents to rear children among
rights “deemed fundamental.” Our prior
decisions recognizing a right to privacy guaranteed by the 14th Amendment
included only personal rights that can be deemed fundamental or implicit
in the concept of ordered liberty . . . This privacy right encompasses and
protects the personal intimacies of the home, the family, marriage, motherhood,
procreation, and child rearing . . . cf . . . Pierce v. Society of
Sisters; Meyer v. Nebraska . . . nothing, however, in this Court’s
decisions intimates that there is any fundamental privacy right implicit in the
concept of ordered liberty to watch obscene movies and places of public
accommodation. [emphasis supplied]
Carey v. Population Services International, 431 US 678, 684-686 (1977)
Once again, the Court includes the right
of parents in the area of “child rearing and education” to be a liberty
interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, requiring an application of the
“compelling interest test.” Although
the Constitution does not explicitly mention any right of privacy, the Court
has recognized that one aspect of the liberty protected by the Due
Process Clause of the 14th Amendment is a “right of personal privacy or a
guarantee of certain areas or zones of privacy . . . This right of personal
privacy includes the interest and independence in making certain kinds of
important decisions . . . While the outer limits of this aspect of privacy have
not been marked by the Court, it is clear that among the decisions that an
individual may make without unjustified government interference are personal
decisions relating to marriage . . . family relationships, Prince v.
Massachusetts, 321 US 158 (1944); and child rearing and
education, Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 US 510 (1925);
Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 US 390 (1923).’ [emphasis supplied]
The Court continued by explaining that
these rights are not absolute and, certain state interests . . . may at some
point become sufficiently compelling to sustain regulation of the factors that
govern the abortion decision . . . Compelling is, of course, the key word; where
decisions as fundamental as whether to bear or beget a child is involved,
regulations imposing a burden on it may be justified only by a compelling
state interest, and must be narrowly drawn to express only those interests. [emphasis supplied]
Maher v. Roe, 432 US 464, 476-479 (1977)
We conclude that the Connecticut
regulation does not impinge on the fundamental right recognized in Roe
... There is a basic difference between direct state interference with a
protected activity and state encouragement of an alternative activity consonant
with legislative policy ... This distinction is implicit in two cases cited in Roe
in support of the pregnant woman’s right under the 14th Amendment. In Meyer v. Nebraska. . . the Court
held that the teacher’s right thus to teach and the right of parents to engage
in so to instruct their children were within the liberty of the 14th
Amendment . . . In Pierce v. Society of Sisters . . . the Court
relied on Meyer . . . reasoning that the 14th Amendment’s concept of
liberty excludes any general power of the State to standardize its children
by forcing them to accept instruction from public teachers only. The Court held that the law unreasonably
interfered with the liberty of parents and guardians to direct the
upbringing and education of the children under their control ...
Both cases
invalidated substantial restrictions of constitutionally protected liberty
interests: in Meyer, the parent’s right to have his child taught a
particular foreign language; in Pierce, the parent’s right to choose
private rather than public school education.
But neither case denied to a state the policy choice of encouraging the
preferred course of action ... Pierce casts no shadow over a state’s
power to favor public education by funding it — a policy choice pursued in some
States for more than a century ... Indeed in Norwood v. Harrison,
413 US 455, 462, (1973), we explicitly rejected the argument that Pierce
established a “right of private or parochial schools to share with the public
schools in state largesse,” noting that “It is one thing to say that a state
may not prohibit the maintenance of private schools and quite another to say
that such schools must as a matter of equal protection receive state aid” ...
We think it abundantly clear that a state is not required to show a compelling
interest for its policy choice to favor a normal childbirth anymore than a
state must so justify its election to fund public, but not private education. [emphasis supplied]
Although the Maher decision unquestionably
recognizes parents’ rights as fundamental rights, the Court has clearly
indicated that private schools do not have a fundamental right to state aid,
nor must a state satisfy the compelling interest test if it chooses not to
give private schools state aid. The
Parental Rights and Responsibilities Act simply reaffirms the right of parents
to choose private education as fundamental, but it does not make the right to
receive public funds a fundamental right.
The PRRA, therefore, does not in any way promote or strengthen the
concept of educational vouchers.
Parham v. J.R., 442 US 584, 602-606 (1979).
This case involves parent’s rights to make
medical decisions regarding their children’s mental health. The lower Court had ruled that Georgia’s
statutory scheme of allowing children to be subject to treatment in the state’s
mental health facilities violated the Constitution because it did not
adequately protect children’s due process rights. The Supreme Court reversed this decision upholding the legal
presumption that parents act in their children’s best interest. The Court ruled:
Our jurisprudence historically has
reflected Western civilization concepts of the family as a unit with broad
parental authority over minor children. Our cases have consistently followed
that course; our constitutional system long ago rejected any notion that a
child is “the mere creature of the State” and, on the contrary, asserted that parents
generally “have the right, coupled with the high duty, to recognize and prepare
[their children] for additional obligations.” Pierce v. Society of
Sisters, 268 U.S. 510, 535 (1925) ... [other citations omitted]
. . . The law’s concept of the family rests on a presumption that parents
possess what a child lacks in maturity, experience, and capacity for judgment
required for making life’s difficult decisions. More important,
historically it has been recognized that natural bonds of affection lead
parents to act in the best interests of their children. 1 W. Blackstone,
Commentaries 447; 2 J. Kent, Commentaries on American Law 190. As with so many other legal presumptions,
experience and reality may rebut what the law accepts as a starting point; the
incidence of child neglect and abuse cases attests to this. That some parents
“may at times be acting against the interests of their children” ... creates a
basis for caution, but it is hardly a reason to discard wholesale those pages
of human experience that teach that parents generally do act in the child’s
best interest ... The statist notion that governmental power should supersede
parental authority in all cases because some parents abuse and
neglect children is repugnant to American tradition. [emphasis supplied]
Parental rights
are clearly upheld in this decision recognizing the rights of parents to make
health decisions for their children. The
Court continues by explaining the balancing that must take place:
Nonetheless, we have recognized that a state is not
without constitutional control over parental discretion in dealing with
children when their physical or mental health is jeopardized (See Wisconsin
v. Yoder; Prince v. Massachusetts).
Moreover, the Court recently declared unconstitutional a state statute
that granted parents an absolute veto over a minor child’s decisions to have an
abortion, Planned Parenthood of Central Missouri v. Danforth,
428 US 52 (1976), Appellees urged that these precedents limiting the
traditional rights of parents, if viewed in the context of a liberty interest
of the child and the likelihood of parental abuse, require us to hold that
parent’s decision to have a child admitted to a mental hospital must be
subjected to an exacting constitutional scrutiny, including a formal,
adversary, pre-admission hearing.
Appellees’ argument, however, sweeps too
broadly. Simply because the decision of
a parent is not agreeable to a child, or because it involves risks does not
automatically transfer power to make that decision from the parents to some
agency or officer of the state. The
same characterizations can be made for a tonsillectomy, appendectomy, or other
medical procedure. Most children, even
in adolescence, simply are not able to make sound judgments concerning many
decisions, including their need for medical care or treatment. Parents can and must make those judgments
... we cannot assume that the result in Meyer v. Nebraska, supra, and Pierce
v. Society of Sisters, supra, would have been different if the children
there had announced or preference to go to a public, rather that a church
school. The fact that a child may balk
at hospitalization or complain about a parental refusal to provide cosmetic
surgery does not diminish the parent’s authority to decide what is best for the
child (See generally Goldstein, Medical Case for the Child at Risk: on State
Supervention of Parental Autonomy, 86 Yale LJ 645, 664-668 (1977); Bennett,
Allocation of Child Medical Care Decision — Making Authority: A Suggested
Interest Analyses, 62 Va LR ev 285, 308 (1976). Neither state officials nor federal Courts are equipped to review
such parental decisions. [emphasis
supplied]
Therefore, it is clear that the Court is
recognizing parents as having the right to make judgments concerning their
children who are not able to make sound decisions, including their need for
medical care. A parent’s authority to
decide what is best for the child in the areas of medical treatment cannot be
diminished simply because a child disagrees.
A parent’s right must be protected and not simply transferred to some
state agency.
City of Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health Inc.,
462 US 416, 461 (1983)
This
case includes, in a long list of protected liberties and fundamental rights,
the parental rights guaranteed under Pierce and Meyer. The Court indicated a compelling interest
test must be applied. Central among
these protected liberties is an individual’s freedom of personal choice in
matters of marriage and family life ... Roe ... Griswold ... Pierce
v. Society of Sisters ... Meyer v. Nebraska ... But restrictive
state regulation of the right to choose abortion as with other fundamental
rights subject to searching judicial examination, must be supported by a
compelling state interest. [emphasis
supplied]
Santosky v. Kramer, 455 US 745, 753 (1982)
This case involved the Appellate Division
of the New York Supreme Court affirming the application of the preponderance of
the evidence standard as proper and constitutional in ruling that the parent’s
rights are permanently terminated. The
U.S. Supreme Court, however, vacated the lower Court decision, holding that due
process as required under the 14th Amendment in this case required proof by
clear and convincing evidence rather than merely a preponderance of the
evidence.
The
Court, in reaching their decision, made it clear that parents’ rights as outlined
in Pierce and Meyer are fundamental and specially protected under
the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court
began by quoting another Supreme Court case:
In Lassiter [Lassiter v.
Department of Social Services, 452 US 18, 37 (1981)], it was
“not disputed that state intervention to terminate the relationship between a
parent and a child must be accomplished by procedures meeting the requisites of
the Due Process Clause”. . . The absence of dispute reflected this Court’s
historical recognition that freedom of personal choice in matters of family
life is a fundamental liberty interest protected by the 14th Amendment
... Pierce v. Society of Sisters ... Meyer v. Nebraska.
The
fundamental liberty interest of natural parents in the care, custody,
and management of their child does not evaporate simply because they have not
been model parents or have lost temporary custody of their child to the state
... When the state moves to destroy weakened familial bonds, it must provide
the parents with fundamentally fair procedures. [emphasis supplied]
Lehr v. Robertson, 463 US 248, 257-258 (1983)
In this case, the U.S. Supreme Court
upheld a decision against a natural father’s rights under the Due Process and
Equal Protection Clauses since he did not have any significant custodial,
personal, or financial relationship with the child. The natural father was challenging an adoption. The Supreme Court stated: In some cases,
however, this Court has held that the federal constitution supersedes state law
and provides even greater protection for certain formal family relationships. In those cases ... the Court has emphasized
the paramount interest in the welfare of children and has noted that the rights
of the parents are a counterpart of the responsibilities they have assumed. Thus, the liberty of parents to control
the education of their children that was vindicated in Meyer v. Nebraska
... and Pierce v. Society of Sisters ... was described as a “right
coupled with the high duty to recognize and prepare the child for additional obligations”
... The linkage between parental duty and parental right was stressed again in Prince
v. Massachusetts ... The Court declared it a cardinal principle “that the
custody, care and nurture of the child reside first in the parents whose
primary function and freedom include preparation for obligations the state can
neither supply nor hinder.” In these cases, the Court has found that the
relationship of love and duty in a recognized family unit is an interest in liberty
entitled to Constitutional protection ... “State intervention to terminate
such a relationship ... must be accomplished by procedures meeting the
requisites of the Due Process Clause” Santosky v. Kramer ...
[emphasis supplied]
It
is clear by the above case that parental rights are to be treated as
fundamental and cannot be taken away without meeting the constitutional
requirement of due process.
Board of Directors of Rotary International v. Rotary Club of
Duarte, 481 US 537 (1987)
In
this case, a Californian civil rights statute was held not to violate the First
Amendment by requiring an all male non-profit club to admit women to membership. The Court concluded that parents’ rights in
child rearing and education are included as fundamental elements of liberty
protected by the Bill of Rights.
The Court has recognized that the freedom
to enter into and carry on certain intimate or private relationships is a fundamental
element of liberty protected by the Bill of Rights ... the intimate
relationships to which we have accorded Constitutional protection include
marriage ... the begetting and bearing of children, child rearing and
education. Pierce v. Society of
Sisters ... [emphasis supplied]
Michael
H. v. Gerald, 491 U.S. 110 (1989)
In
a paternity suit, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled: It is an established part of
our constitution jurisprudence that the term liberty in the Due Process Clause
extends beyond freedom from physical restraint. See, e.g. Pierce v. Society of Sisters ... Meyer
v. Nebraska ... In an attempt to limit and guide interpretation of the
Clause, we have insisted not merely that the interest denominated as a
“liberty” be “fundamental” (a concept that, in isolation, is hard to
objectify), but also that it be an interest traditionally protected by our
society. As we have put it, the Due
Process Clause affords only those protections “so rooted in the traditions and
conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental” Snyder v.
Massachusetts, 291 US 97, 105 (1934). [emphasis supplied] The
Court explicitly included the parental rights under Pierce and Meyer
as “fundamental” and interests “traditionally protected by our society.”
Employment
Division of Oregon v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872 (1990)
One
of the more recent decisions which upholds the right of parents is Employment
Division of Oregon v. Smith, which involved two Indians who were fired
from a private drug rehabilitation organization because they ingested “peyote,”
a hallucinogenic drug as part of their religious beliefs. When they sought unemployment compensation,
they were denied because they were discharged for “misconduct.”
The
Indians appealed to the Oregon Court of Appeals who reversed on the grounds
that they had the right to freely exercise their religious beliefs by taking
drugs. Of course, as expected, the U.S.
Supreme Court reversed the case and found that the First Amendment did not
protect drug use. So what does the case
have to do with parental rights?
After
the Court ruled against the Indians, it then analyzed the application of the
Free Exercise Clause generally. The
Court wrongly decided to throw out the Free Exercise Clause as a defense to any
“neutral” law that might violate an individual’s religious convictions. In the process of destroying religious
freedom, the Court went out of its way to say that the parents’ rights to
control the education of their children is still a fundamental right. The Court declared that the “compelling
interest test” is still applicable, not to the Free Exercise Clause alone:
[B]ut
the Free Exercise Clause in conjunction with other constitutional
protections such as ... the right of parents, acknowledged in Pierce
v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510 (1925), to direct the
education of their children, see Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406
U.S.205 (1972) invalidating compulsory-attendance laws as applied to Amish
parents who refused on religious grounds to send their children to school.19 [emphasis supplied]
In
other words, under this precedent, parents’ rights to control the education of
their children is considered a “constitutionally protected right” which
requires the application of the compelling interest test. The Court in Smith quoted its
previous case of Wisconsin v. Yoder:
Yoder said that “The Court’s holding in Pierce
stands as a charter for the rights of parents to direct the religious
upbringing of their children. And when
the interests of parenthood are combined with a free exercise claim ... more
than merely a reasonable relationship to some purpose within the competency
of the State is required to sustain the validity of the State’s requirement
under the First Amendment.” 406 U.S., at 233.20 [emphasis supplied]
Instead of merely showing that a
regulation conflicting with parents’ rights is reasonable, the state must,
therefore, reach the higher standard of the “compelling interest test,” which
requires the state to prove its regulation to be the least restrictive means.
Hodgson v. Minnesota, 497 U.S. 417 (1990)
In
Hodgson the Court found that parental rights not only are protected
under the First and Fourteenth Amendments as fundamental and more important
than property rights, but that they are “deemed essential.”
The
family has a privacy interest in the upbringing and education of children and
the intimacies of the marital relationship which is protected by the
Constitution against undue state interference.
See Wisconsin v Yoder,
7 406 US 205 ... The statist
notion that governmental power should supersede parental authority in all cases
because some parents abuse and neglect children is repugnant to American
tradition.” In other words, under this precedent, parents’ rights to control
the education of their children is considered a “constitutionally protected
right” which requires the application of the compelling interest test. The Court in Smith quoted its
previous case of Wisconsin v. Yoder:
Yoder said that “The Court’s holding in Pierce
stands as a charter for the rights of parents to direct the religious
upbringing of their children. And when
the interests of parenthood are combined with a free exercise claim ... more than merely a reasonable
relationship to some purpose within the competency of the State is required
to sustain the validity of the State’s requirement under the First Amendment.”
406 U.S., at 233.20 [emphasis supplied]
Instead of merely showing that a
regulation conflicting with parents’ rights is reasonable, the state must,
therefore, reach the higher standard of the “compelling interest test,” which
requires the state to prove its regulation to be the least restrictive means.
Parham, 442 US, at 603, [other citations omitted]. We have long held that there exists a
“private realm of family life which the state cannot enter.” Prince v
Massachusetts ...
A
natural parent who has demonstrated sufficient commitment to his or her
children is thereafter entitled to raise the children free from undue state
interference. As Justice White
explained in his opinion of the Court in Stanley v Illinois,
405 US 645 (1972) [other cites omitted]:
“The
court has frequently emphasized the importance of the family. The rights to conceive and to raise
one’s children have been deemed ‘essential,’ Meyer v Nebraska,
... ‘basic civil rights of man,’ Skinner v Oklahoma, 316 US
535, 541 (1942), and ‘[r]ights far more precious ... than property rights,’
May v Anderson, 345 US 528, 533 (1953) ... The integrity of the family unit has found
protection in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, Meyer v
Nebraska, supra.” [emphasis supplied]
The
Court leaves no room for doubt as to the importance and protection of the
rights of parents.
H.L. v. Matheson, 450 US 398, 410 (1991)
In this case, the Supreme Court recognized
the parents’ right to know about their child seeking an abortion. The Court stated: In addition,
constitutional interpretation has consistently recognized that the parents’
claim to authority in their own household to direct the rearing of their
children is basic in the structure of our society.
Ginsberg v. New York, 390 US 629 (1968) ...
We have recognized on numerous occasions that the relationship between
the parent and the child is Constitutionally protected (Wisconsin v. Yoder,
Stanley v. Illinois, Meyer v. Nebraska) ... “It is cardinal with us that the custody, care, and nurture of
the child reside first in the parents, whose primary function and freedom
includes preparation for obligations the state can neither supply, nor hinder.”
[Quoting Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 US 158, 166, (1944)]. See also Parham v. J.R.; Pierce v.
Society of Sisters ... We have
recognized that parents have an important “guiding role” to play in the
upbringing of their children, Bellotti II, 443 US 633-639 ... which
presumptively includes counseling them on important decisions.
This
Court clearly upholds the parent’s right to know in the area of minor children
making medical decisions.
Vernonia School District 47J v. Acton, 132 L.Ed.2d 564, 115
S.Ct. 2386 (1995)
In
Vernonia the Court strengthened parental rights by approaching the issue
from a different point of view. They
reasoned that children do not have many of the rights accorded citizens, and in
lack thereof, parents and guardians possess and exercise those rights and
authorities in the child’s best interest:
Traditionally
at common law, and still today, unemancipated minors lack some of the most
fundamental rights of self-determination—including even the right of liberty in
its narrow sense, i.e., the right to come and go at will. They are subject, even as to their physical
freedom, to the control of their parents or guardians. See Am Jur 2d, Parent and Child § 10 (1987).
Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57 (2000)
In this case, the United States Supreme
Court issued a landmark opinion on parental liberty. The case involved a Washington State statute which provided that
a "court may order visitation rights for any person when visitation may
serve the best interests of the child, whether or not there has been any change
of circumstances." Wash. Rev. Code § 26.10.160(3). The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the
Washington statute "unconstitutionally interferes with the fundamental
right of parents to rear their children." The Court went on to examine its
treatment of parental rights in previous cases: In subsequent cases also, we
have recognized the fundamental right of parents to make decisions concerning
the care, custody, and control of their children…Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406
U.S. 205, 232, 32 L. Ed. 2d 15, 92 S. Ct. 1526 (1972) ("The
history and culture of Western civilization reflect a strong tradition of
parental concern for the nurture and this case clearly upholds parental rights. In essence, this decision means that the
government may not infringe parents' right to direct the education and
upbringing of their children unless it can show that it is using the least
restrictive means to achieve a compelling governmental interest.
Crawford
v. Washington No. 02-9410. Argued November 10, 2003
Decided March 8, 2004
certiorari to the Supreme Court of Washington
Petitioner
was tried for assault and attempted murder.
The State sought to introduce a recorded statement that petitioner's
wife Sylvia had made during police interrogation, as evidence that the stabbing
was not in self-defense. Sylvia did not
testify at trial because of Washington's marital privilege. Petitioner argued that admitting the
evidence would violate his Sixth Amendment right to be "confronted with
the witnesses against him." Under Ohio v. Roberts,
448 U. S. 56, that right does not bar
admission of an unavailable witness's statement against a criminal defendant if
the statement bears "adequate 'indicia of reliability,' " a test
met when the evidence either falls within a "firmly rooted hearsay
exception" or bears "particularized guarantees of
trustworthiness." Id., at 66.
The trial court admitted the statement on the latter ground. The State Supreme Court upheld the
conviction, deeming the statement reliable because it was nearly identical to, i.e.,
interlocked with, petitioner's own statement to the police, in that both
were ambiguous as to whether the victim had drawn a weapon before petitioner
assaulted him.
Held: The State's use of Sylvia's statement violated
the Confrontation Clause because, where testimonial statements are at issue,
the only indicium of reliability sufficient to satisfy constitutional demands
is confrontation. Pp. 5-33.
(a) The
Confrontation Clause's text does not alone resolve this case, so this Court
turns to the Clause's historical background.
That history supports two principles.
First, the principal evil at which the Clause was directed was the
civil-law mode of criminal procedure, particularly the use of ex parte
examinations as evidence against the accused.
The Clause's primary object is testimonial hearsay, and interrogations
by law enforcement officers fall squarely within that class. Second, the Framers would not have allowed
admission of testimonial statements of a witness who did not appear at trial
unless he was unavailable to testify and the defendant had had a prior
opportunity for cross-examination. English
authorities and early state cases indicate that this was the common law at the
time of the founding. And the
"right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him," Amdt. 6,
is most naturally read as a reference to the common-law right of confrontation,
admitting only those exceptions established at the time of the founding. See Mattox v. United
States, 156 U. S. 237, 243. Pp. 5-21.
(b) This
Court's decisions have generally remained faithful to the Confrontation
Clause's original meaning. See, e.g.,
Mattox, supra. Pp. 21-23.
(c) However,
the same cannot be said of the rationales of this Court's more recent decisions. See Roberts, supra, at 66. The Roberts test departs from
historical principles because it admits statements consisting of ex parte
testimony upon a mere reliability finding.
Pp. 24-25.
(d) The
Confrontation Clause commands that reliability be assessed in a particular
manner: by testing in the crucible of cross-examination. Roberts allows a jury to hear
evidence, untested by the adversary process, based on a mere judicial
determination of reliability, thus replacing the constitutionally prescribed
method of assessing reliability with a wholly foreign one. Pp. 25-27.
(e) Roberts'
framework is unpredictable. Whether
a statement is deemed reliable depends on which factors a judge considers and
how much weight he accords each of them.
However, the unpardonable vice of the Roberts test is its
demonstrated capacity to admit core testimonial statements that the
Confrontation Clause plainly meant to exclude.
Pp. 27-30.
(f) The
instant case is a self-contained demonstration of Roberts'
unpredictable and inconsistent application.
It also reveals Roberts' failure to interpret the Constitution
in a way that secures its intended constraint on judicial discretion. The Constitution prescribes the procedure
for determining the reliability of testimony in criminal trials, and this
Court, no less than the state courts, lacks authority to replace it with one of
its own devising. Pp. 30-32.
147 Wash. 2d 424,
54 P. 3d 656, reversed and remanded.
Scalia,
J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Stevens, Kennedy,
Souter, Thomas, Ginsburg, and Breyer, JJ., joined. Rehnquist, C. J., filed an
opinion concurring in the judgment, in which O'Connor, J., joined.
THE
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO BE A PARENT
Below are excerpts
of case law from state appellate and federal district courts and up to the U.S. Supreme Court, all of which affirm, from one
perspective or another, the absolute Constitutional right of parents to
actually BE parents to their children.
The
rights of parents to the care, custody and nurture of their children is of such
character that it cannot be denied without violating those fundamental
principles of liberty and justice which lie at the base of all our civil and
political institutions, and such right is a fundamental right protected by this
amendment (First) and Amendments 5, 9, and 14.
Doe v. Irwin, 441 F Supp 1247;
U.S. D.C. of Michigan, (1985).
The several states have no greater
power to restrain individual freedoms protected by the First Amendment than
does the Congress of the United States.
Wallace v. Jaffree, 105 S Ct
2479; 472 US 38, (1985).
Loss of First Amendment Freedoms, for
even minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury. Though First Amendment rights are not
absolute, they may be curtailed only by interests of vital importance, the
burden of proving which rests on their government. Elrod v. Burns, 96 S Ct
2673; 427 US 347, (1976).
Law and court procedures that are
"fair on their faces" but administered "with an evil eye or a
heavy hand" was discriminatory and violates the equal protection clause of
the Fourteenth Amendment. Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 US 356, (1886).
Even when blood relationships are
strained, parents retain vital interest in preventing irretrievable destruction
of their family life; if anything, persons faced with forced dissolution of
their parental rights have more critical need for procedural protections than
do those resisting state intervention into ongoing family affairs. Santosky
v. Kramer, 102 S Ct 1388; 455 US 745, (1982).
Parents have a fundamental
constitutionally protected interest in continuity of legal bond with their
children. Matter of Delaney, 617 P 2d 886, Oklahoma (1980). .
The liberty interest of the family
encompasses an interest in retaining custody of one's children and, thus, a
state may not interfere with a parent's custodial rights absent due process
protections. Langton v. Maloney, 527 F Supp 538, D.C. Conn. (1981).
Parent's right to custody of child is a
right encompassed within protection of this amendment which may not be
interfered with under guise of protecting public interest by legislative action
which is arbitrary or without reasonable relation to some purpose within
competency of state to effect. Regenold v. Baby Fold, Inc., 369 NE 2d
858; 68 Ill 2d 419, appeal dismissed 98 S Ct 1598, 435 US 963, IL, (1977).
Parent's interest in custody of her
children is a liberty interest which has received considerable constitutional
protection; a parent, who is deprived of custody of his or her child, even
though temporarily, suffers thereby grievous loss and such loss deserves
extensive due process protection. In the Interest of Cooper, 621 P 2d 437;
5 Kansas App Div 2d 584, (1980).
The Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment requires that severance in the parent-child relationship
caused by the state occur only with rigorous protections for individual liberty
interests at stake. Bell v. City of Milwaukee, 746 F 2d 1205;
US Ct App 7th Cir WI, (1984).
Father enjoys the right to associate
with his children which is guaranteed by this amendment (First) as incorporated
in Amendment 14, or which is embodied in the concept of "liberty" as
that word is used in the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment and Equal
Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.
Mabra v. Schmidt, 356 F Supp
620; DC, WI (1973).
"Separated as our issue is from
that of the future interests of the children, we have before us the elemental
question whether a court of a state, where a mother is neither domiciled,
resident nor present, may cut off her immediate right to the care, custody,
management and companionship of her minor children without having jurisdiction
over her in person. Rights far more
precious to appellant than property rights will be cut off if she is to be
bound by the Wisconsin award of custody." May v. Anderson, 345 US 528, 533; 73 S Ct 840, 843, (1952).
A parent's right to care and
companionship of his or her children are so fundamental, as to be guaranteed
protection under the First, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments of the United
States Constitution. In re: J.S. and C., 324 A 2d 90; supra 129 NJ
Super, at 489.
The Court stressed, "the
parent-child relationship is an important interest that undeniably warrants
deference and, absent a powerful countervailing interest, protection." A
parent's interest in the companionship, care, custody and management of his or
her children rises to a constitutionally secured right, given the centrality of
family life as the focus for personal meaning and responsibility. Stanley
v. Illinois, 405 US 645, 651; 92 S Ct 1208, (1972).
Parent's rights have been recognized
as being "essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free man."
Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 US 390; 43 S Ct
625, (1923).
The U.S. Supreme Court implied that
"a (once) married father who is separated or divorced from a mother and is
no longer living with his child" could not constitutionally be treated
differently from a currently married father living with his child. Quilloin
v. Walcott, 98 S Ct 549; 434 US 246, 255^Q56, (1978).
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th
Circuit (California) held that the parent-child relationship is a
constitutionally protected liberty interest.
(See; Declaration of Independence --life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness and the 14th Amendment of the United States Constitution -- No state
can deprive any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law
nor deny any person the equal protection of the laws.) Kelson v. Springfield, 767 F 2d 651; US Ct App 9th Cir, (1985).
The parent-child relationship is a
liberty interest protected by the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment. Bell
v. City of Milwaukee, 746 f 2d 1205, 1242^Q45; US Ct App 7th Cir WI, (1985).
No bond is more precious and none
should be more zealously protected by the law as the bond between parent and
child." Carson v. Elrod, 411 F
Supp 645, 649; DC E.D. VA (1976).
A parent's right to the preservation
of his relationship with his child derives from the fact that the parent's
achievement of a rich and rewarding life is likely to depend significantly on
his ability to participate in the rearing of his children. A child's corresponding right to protection
from interference in the relationship derives from the psychic importance to
him of being raised by a loving, responsible, reliable adult. Franz
v. U.S., 707 F 2d 582, 595^Q599; US Ct App (1983).
A parent's right to the custody of his
or her children is an element of "liberty" guaranteed by the 5th
Amendment and the 14th Amendment of the United States Constitution. Matter
of Gentry, 369 NW 2d 889, MI App Div (1983).
Reality of private biases and possible
injury they might inflict were impermissible considerations under the Equal
Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment.
Palmore v. Sidoti, 104 S Ct
1879; 466 US 429.
Legislative classifications which
distributes benefits and burdens on the basis of gender carry the inherent risk
of reinforcing stereotypes about the proper place of women and their need for
special protection; thus, even statutes purportedly designed to compensate for
and ameliorate the effects of past discrimination against women must be
carefully tailored. The state cannot be
permitted to classify on the basis of sex.
Orr v. Orr, 99 S Ct 1102; 440
US 268, (1979).
The United States Supreme Court held
that the "old notion" that "generally it is the man's primary responsibility
to provide a home and its essentials" can no longer justify a statute that
discriminates on the basis of gender. No
longer is the female destined solely for the home and the rearing of the
family, and only the male for the marketplace and the world of ideas. Stanton
v. Stanton, 421 US 7, 10; 95 S Ct 1373, 1376, (1975).
Judges must maintain a high standard
of judicial performance with particular emphasis upon conducting litigation
with scrupulous fairness and impartiality.
28 USCA § 2411; Pfizer v. Lord,
456 F.2d 532; cert denied 92 S Ct 2411; US Ct App MN, (1972).
State Judges, as well as federal, have
the responsibility to respect and protect persons from violations of federal
constitutional rights. Gross v. State of Illinois, 312 F 2d 257;
(1963).
The Constitution also protects
"the individual interest in avoiding disclosure of personal matters."
Federal Courts (and State Courts), under Griswold can protect, under the
"life, liberty and pursuit of happiness" phrase of the Declaration of
Independence, the right of a man to enjoy the mutual care, company, love and
affection of his children, and this cannot be taken away from him without due
process of law. There is a family right
to privacy which the state cannot invade or it becomes actionable for civil
rights damages. Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 US 479, (1965).
The right of a parent not to be
deprived of parental rights without a showing of fitness, abandonment or
substantial neglect is so fundamental and basic as to rank among the rights
contained in this Amendment (Ninth) and Utah's Constitution, Article 1 § 1. In
re U.P., 648 P 2d 1364; Utah, (1982).
The
rights of parents to parent-child relationships are recognized and upheld. Fantony
v. Fantony, 122 A 2d 593, (1956); Brennan v. Brennan, 454 A 2d 901, (1982). State's power to legislate, adjudicate and
administer all aspects of family law, including determinations of custodial;
and visitation rights, is subject to scrutiny by federal judiciary within reach
of due process and/or equal protection clauses of 14th Amendment...Fourteenth
Amendment applied to states through specific rights contained in the first
eight amendments of the Constitution which declares fundamental personal
rights...Fourteenth Amendment encompasses and applied to states those
preexisting fundamental rights recognized by the Ninth Amendment. The Ninth Amendment acknowledged the prior
existence of fundamental rights with it: "The enumeration in the
Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage
others retained by the people."
The
United States Supreme Court in a long line of decisions has recognized that
matters involving marriage, procreation, and the parent-child relationship are
among those fundamental "liberty" interests protected by the
Constitution. Thus, the decision in Roe v. Wade, 410 US 113; 93 S Ct 705; 35
L Ed 2d 147, (1973), was recently described by the Supreme Court as
founded on the "Constitutional underpinning of ... a recognition that the
"liberty" protected by the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment
includes not only the freedoms explicitly mentioned in the Bill of Rights, but
also a freedom of personal choice in certain matters of marriage and family
life." The non-custodial divorced parent has no way to implement the
constitutionally protected right to maintain a parental relationship with his
child except through visitation. To
acknowledge the protected status of the relationship as the majority does, and
yet deny protection under Title 42 USC § 1983, to visitation, which is the
exclusive means of effecting that right, is to negate the right completely. Wise
v. Bravo, 666 F.2d 1328, (1981).
FROM
THE COLORADO SUPREME COURT, 1910
In
controversies affecting the custody of an infant, the interest and welfare of
the child is the primary and controlling question by which the court must be
guided. This rule is based upon the theory that the state must perpetuate
itself, and good citizenship is essential to that end. Though nature
gives to parents the right to the custody of their own children, and such right
is scarcely less sacred than the right to life and liberty, and is manifested
in all animal life, yet among mankind the necessity for government has forced
the recognition of the rule that the perpetuity of the state is the first
consideration, and parental authority itself is subordinate to this supreme
power. It is recognized that: 'The moment a child is born it owes
allegiance to the government of the country of its birth, and is entitled to the
protection of that government. And such government is obligated by its
duty of protection, to consult the welfare, comfort and interest of such child
in regulating its custody during the period of its minority.' Mercein
v. People, 25 Wend. (N. Y.) 64, 103, 35 Am. Dec. 653; McKercher v. Green,
13 Colo. App. 271, 58 Pac. 406. But as government should never
interfere with the natural rights of man, except only when it is essential for
the good of society, the state recognizes, and enforces, the right which nature
gives to parents [48 Colo. 466] to the custody of their own children, and only
supervenes with its sovereign power when the necessities of the case require
it.
The
experience of man has demonstrated that the best development of a young life is
within the sacred precincts of a home, the members of which are bound together
by ties entwined through 'bone of their bone and flesh of their flesh'; that it
is in such homes and under such influences that the sweetest, purest, noblest,
and most attractive qualities of human nature, so essential to good
citizenship, are best nurtured and grow to wholesome fruition; that, when a
state is based and build upon such homes, it is strong in patriotism, courage,
and all the elements of the best civilization. Accordingly these
recurring facts in the experience of man resulted in a presumption establishing
prima facie that parents are in every way qualified to have the care, custody,
and control of their own offspring, and that their welfare and interests are best
subserved under such control. Thus, by natural law, by common law, and,
likewise, the statutes of this state, the natural parents are entitled to the
custody of their minor children, except when they are unsuitable persons to be entrusted
with their care, control, and education, or when some exceptional circumstances
appear which render such custody inimicable to the best interests of the
child. While the right of a parent to the custody of its infant child is
therefore, in a sense, contingent, the right can never be lost or taken away so
long as the parent properly nurtures, maintains, and cares for the child. Wilson
v. Mitchell, 111 P. 21, 25-26, 48 Colo. 454 (Colo. 1910)
CONCLUSION
The
U.S. Supreme Court has consistently protected parental rights, including it
among those rights deemed fundamental. As
a fundamental right, parental liberty is to be protected by the highest
standard of review: the compelling interest test. As can be seen from the cases described above, parental rights
have reached their highest level of protection in over 75 years. The Court decisively confirmed these rights
in the recent case of Troxel v. Granville, which should serve to
maintain and protect parental rights for many years to come.
As long as CPS is allowed to have an
exaggerated view of their power andis allowed by state officials and the courts to exploit that power
and abuse it against both children and parents, they will both be continually
harmed. The constitution is there for
two primary reasons, 1) to restrict the power of the government and 2) to
protect the people from the government, not the government from the
people. And the constitution is there
to prohibit certain activity from government officials and that prohibition
does not apply to one type or kind of official but to ANY government official
whether it is the police, CPS or FBI.
ARE SUPERVISORS LIABLE FOR HIS OR HER CULPABLE ACTION
OR INACTION IN THE SUPERVISION, OR CONTROL OF HIS OR HER SUBORDINATES; FOR HIS
OR HER ACQUIESCENCE IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEPRIVATION OR FOR CONDUCT THAT
SHOWED A RECKLESS OR CALLOS INDIFFERENCE TO THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS?
Section
1983 places liability on ANY person who "subjects, or causes to be
subjected" another to a constitutional deprivation. See 42 U.S.C. § 1983. This language suggests that there are two
ways a defendant may be liable for a constitutional deprivation under § 1983:
(1) direct, personal involvement in the alleged constitutional violation on the
part of the defendant, or (2) actions or omissions that are not constitutional
violations in themselves, but foreseeably leads to a constitutional violation. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
offered a most cogent discussion of this issue in Arnold v. International Bus. Machines Corp., 637 F.2d 1350 (9th
Cir. 1981):
A
person 'subjects' another to the deprivation of a constitutional right, within
the meaning of section 1983, if he does an affirmative act, participates in
another's affirmative acts, or omits to perform an act which he is legally
required to do that causes the deprivation of which complaint is made....
Moreover, personal participation is not the only predicate for section 1983
liability. Anyone who "causes"
any citizen to be subjected to a constitutional deprivation is also liable. The requisite causal connection can be established
not only by some kind of direct personal participation in the deprivation, but
also by setting in motion a series of acts by others which the actor knows or
reasonably should know would cause others to inflict the constitutional
injury. Id. at 1355 (emphasis added) (quoting
Johnson v. Duffy, 588 F.2d 740, 743-44 (9th Cir. 1978)).
A
supervisor is liable under § 1983 if s/he “does an affirmative act,
participates in another’s affirmative acts, or omits to perform an act which
[s/]he is legally required to do.” Causing constitutional injury. Johnson
v. Duffy, 588 F. 2d 740, 743-44 (9th Cir. 1978). A supervisor is liable for “his own culpable
action or inaction in the training, supervision, or control of his subordinates;
for his acquiescence in the constitutional deprivation …; for conduct that
showed a reckless or callous indifference to the rights of others.” Watkins v. City of Oakland, 145 F. 3d
1087, 1093 (9th Cir. 1997)
A
supervisor can be liable in his individual capacity if “he set in motion a
series of acts by others, or knowingly refused to terminate a series of acts by
others, which he knew or reasonably should have known would cause others to
inflict the constitutional injury.” Larez
v. City of Los Angeles, 946 F. 2d 630, 646 (9th Cir. 1991). “Supervisory indifference or tacit
authorization of subordinates’ misconduct may be a causative factor in
constitutional injuries they inflict.” Slakan
v. Porter, 737 F. 2d 368, 373 (4th Cir. 1984). “We have explained the nature of the
causation required in cases of this kind in Johnson
v. Duffy, 588 F. 2d 740 (9th Cir. 1978). There, we held that for purposes of § 1983
liability the requisite causal chain can occur through the ‘setting in motion
[of] a series of acts by others which the actor knows or reasonably should know
would cause others to inflict the constitutional injury.’ Id. at 743-44. There is little question here that Cooper
and Roderick should have known that falsely placing the blame for the initial
Ruby Ridge incident on Harris would lead to the type of constitutional injuries
he suffered.” Harris v.
Roderick, 126 F. 3d 1189 (9th Cir. 1997).
CAN
A PRIVATE CITIZEN BE HELD LIABLE UNDER § 1983 EVEN THOUGH PRIVATE CITIZENS
CANNOT ORDINARILY BE HELD LIABLE UNDER § 1983?
While a private citizen cannot
ordinarily be held liable under § 1983 because that statute requires action
under color of state law, if a private
citizen conspires with a state actor, then the private citizen is subject to §
1983 liability. Brokaw v. Mercer County, 235 F.3d 1000 (7th
Cir 2001) quoting Bowman v. City of Franklin, 980 F.2d 1104, 1107 (7th
Cir. 1992) “To establish § 1983
liability through a conspiracy theory, a plaintiff must demonstrate that: (1) a
state official and private individual(s) reached an understanding to deprive
the plaintiff of his constitutional rights, and (2) those individual(s) were
willful participants in joint activity with the State or its agents.” Fries v. Helsper, 146 F.3d 452, 457 (7th
Cir. 1998) (internal quotation and citations omitted). Not only did both Bonnie Maskery and the
state Defendants conspire to harm Mrs. Dutkiewicz because she practiced Wicca,
Maskery continued to conspire with state Defendants by manufacturing evidence
and lying in order to deny the Plaintiffs their due process rights to a fair
trial. Plaintiff told state Defendants
in writing and over the phone that Maskery was a fraud and impersonating a
therapist prior to submitting the petition to the court yet the state
Defendants willfully filed the fraudulent petition.
“In
this case, C.A. alleged just such a conspiracy between Weir and Karen, and
Deputy Sheriff James Brokaw.
Specifically, C.A. asserted that Weir and Karen conspired with James,
who was a deputy sheriff, in July 1983 to file false allegations of child
neglect in order to cause the DCFS to remove C.A. from his home and to thereby
cause C.A.’s parents to divorce, because of the religious beliefs and practices
of C.A’s family. [FN 12] While Weir and
Karen claim that C.A.’s allegations are too vague to withstand dismissal under
12(b)(6), C.A has alleged all of the necessary facts: the who, what, when, why
and how. No more is required at this
stage.” Brokaw v. Mercer County, 235 F.3d 1000 (7th Cir 2001)
“Alternatively,
Weir and Karen seek cover in the various proceedings instituted as a result of
their complaint: a formal petition for adjudication of wardship, a court
hearing, investigatory conferences held by the DCFS, adjudication of wardship
by the court, and a dispositional hearing by the court, seemingly arguing that
because a court determined that C.A. should remain in foster care, that
demonstrates that their complaints of neglect were justified. But, assuming that Weire, Karen and Deputy
Sheriff James Brokaw knew the allegations of child neglect were false, then
these proceedings actually weaken their case because that means they succeeded
in the earlier stages of their conspiracy –they created upheaval in C.A’s
family by having him removed from his home and by subjected his family to
governmental interference. Moreover, as
we have held in the criminal context, ‘[i]f police officers have been
instrumental in the plaintiff’s continued confinement or prosecution, they
cannot escape liability by pointing to the decisions of prosecutors or grand
jurors or magistrates to confine or prosecute him.’ Jones v. City of Chicago, 856 F.2d 985, 994 (7th Cir.1988).”
Brokaw
v. Mercer County, 235 F.3d 1000 (7th Cir 2001)
IS
WICCA / WICCAN A CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED RELIGION?
Government
recognition
Wiccan and other Neopagan groups have
been recognized by governments in the US and Canada and given tax-exempt
status. Wiccan priests and priestesses
have been given access to penitentiaries in both countries, and the privilege
of performing handfastings/marriages.
On 2001-MAR-15, the list of religious preferences in the U.S. Air Force
Personnel Data System (MilMod) was augmented to include: Dianic Wicca,
Druidism, Gardnerian Wicca, Pagan, Seax Wicca, Shamanism, and Wicca.
Judge J. Butzner of the Fourth Circuit
Federal Appeals Court confirmed the Dettmer
v Landon decision (799F 2nd 929) in 1986. He said: "We agree with the District Court that the
doctrine taught by the Church of Wicca is a religion." Butzner J.
1986 Fourth Circuit. A case was brought
in 1983 in the U.S. District Court in Michigan. The court found that 3 employees of a prison had
restricted an inmate in the performance of his Wiccan rituals. This "deprived
him of his First Amendment right to freely exercise his religion and his
Fourteenth Amendment right to equal protection of the laws." Dettmer
vs. Landon: concerns the rights of a Wiccan inmate in a
penitentiary. Lamb's chapel v. Center Moriches Union Free School District:
concerns the rental of school facilities after hours by a religious group. It is abundantly clear that none of the
State Defendants can claim that one’s First Amendment right was not clearly
established.
ARE
“MANDATED REPORTERS” STATE ACTORS AND CAN THE STATE SHIELD STATE ACTORS FROM A
42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985 COMPLAINT?
“As the district court correctly found,
insofar as the Hospital was acting in the latter capacity – as part of the reporting and enforcement
machinery for CWA, a government agency charged with detection and
prevention of child abuse and neglect – the
Hospital was a state actor.” “[C]onduct that is formally ‘private’ may
become so entwined with governmental policies or so impregnated with a
governmental character as to become subject to the constitutional limitations
placed upon state action . . . In certain instances the actions of private
entities may be considered to be infused with ‘state action’ if those private
parties are performing a function public or governmental in nature and which
would have to be performed by the Government but for the activities of the
private parties. Perez v. Sugarman, 499 F2d 761, 764-65 (2d Cir. 1974)(quoting Evans
v. Newton, 382 U.S. 296, 299 (1966)” Mora P. v. Rosemary McIntyre, (Case
No.: 98-9595) 2nd Cir (1999).
CAN THE STATE SHIELD A “STATE ACTOR” FROM LIABILITY
UNDER SECTION 1983?
No they cannot. State-conferred immunity cannot shield a
state actor form liability under § 1983.
See Martinez v. California, 444
U.S. 277, 284 n. 8 (1980) (“Conduct by persons acting under color of
state law which is wrongful under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 … cannot be immunized by
state law.”) [cite omitted]. Indeed, a
regime that allowed a state immunity defense to trump the imposition of
liability under § 1983 would emasculate the federal statute.
Section 1983 imposes liability on anyone who, under color of state
law, deprives a person of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the
Constitution and laws. K & A Radiologic Tech. Servs., Inc.
v. Commissioner of the Dep’t of Health, 189 F.3d 273, 280 (2nd Cir 1999)
(quoting Blessing v. Freestone, 520 U.S. 329, 340 !997). “[T]he core purpose of § 1983 is ‘to provide
compensatory relief to those deprived of their federal rights by state
actors’.” Hardy v. New York City
Health & Hosps. Corp., 164 F.3d 789, 795 (2nd Cir. 1999)
(quoting Felder v. Casey, 487 U.S. 131, 141 (1988)). “The traditional definition of acting under
color of state law requires that the defendant in a § 1983 action have
exercised power possessed by virtue of state law and made possible only because
the wrongdoer is clothed with the authority of state law.” Id. (quoting,
inter alia, West v. Atkins, 487
U.S. 42, 49 (1988)) (other citations and internal quotation marks
omitted).
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