Mom Who Let Child Play at a Park Finally Removed From Unfit Parent Registry
It's about time.

The Tucson mom found guilty of neglect for letting her 7-year-old son play at the park has finally had her name removed from Arizona's Central Registry, a government blacklist of unfit parents that is maintained by the Department of Child Safety (DCS).
While this is obviously a victory for the mom—and for common sense—the constitutional rights of countless other people are still at stake.
The appeal by Sarra (whose full name is being withheld to protect her identity) was handled by the Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) and the Goldwater Institute, two nonprofit organizations that help defend individual rights. They argued that Arizona's actions were unconstitutional.
"But instead of responding to this brief, DCS decided to just permanently remove Sarra's name from the list," says Adi Dynar, an attorney at the PLF. "We suspect they didn't want this kind of ruling on the books, because that affects the other 81,000 names."
Perhaps the state thought it was better to lose one battle than to deal with an army of parents demanding justice.
The case against Sarra was this: In November 2020, as COVID-19 raged, she let her son and his friend, age 5, play at the park while she shopped for a Thanksgiving turkey.
This seemed prudent. The grocery was asking shoppers not to bring in kids, and the park was one that Sarra had played in herself as a child, about five blocks from the store. What's more, a friend happened to be teaching a tai chi class there. After about 20 minutes, the friend called Sarra about a police officer who was talking to her son.
When Sarra arrived at the park, the officer told her that she had committed negligence by leaving the kids alone, even for a short length of time in a safe, public place.
County prosecutors dropped all charges after Sarra agreed to take a "life skills" class. (Said class included advice on how to avoid angering a cop; truly, a worthwhile life skill.) But the folks at the DCS were not as easily appeased.
The agency ruled that Sarra had put her son at "unreasonable risk of harm for abduction, injury, harm from a stranger, exposure to drugs and death." That meant Sarra's name would go on Arizona's Central Registry—and remain there for 25 years.
Employers can access this registry, which essentially functions as a blacklist. People whose names are on the registry cannot get jobs involving children. This was a big problem for Sarra, who worked with refugees, helping them to find jobs and often providing child care.
Sarra took the Central Registry to court. I testified on her behalf, as a subject-matter expert. When the state argued that Sarra's son could have been abducted—a huge talking point for them—I asked the prosecutor if she knew how long it would take for a child to become statistically likely to be kidnapped by a stranger.
The answer: 750,000 years.
Nevertheless, Sarra lost out, and her name was added to the Central Registry. That's when the PLF and Goldwater Institute swooped in to help her with an appeal.
They drew up a brief arguing that the case against Sarra was unconstitutional because the court used a low standard of proof despite the high stakes. The DCS is allowed to operate off of "probable cause" rather than a "preponderance of evidence" standard for placement on the registry. Typically, "probable cause" is reserved for the opening of an investigation, not the determination of guilt.
The Goldwater Institute and the PLF also argued that the agency's system for determining guilt was manifestly unfair. The DCS brings the case against a parent, and if the parent is found guilty, they can then appeal, as Sarra did, to an administrative law judge. But if they're found guilty and want to appeal again, the next hearing is in front of the director of the DCS. Ultimately, the department ends up adjudicating itself.
"This means no judge, no jury, no nothing," says Dynar.
Thankfully, a new director took over the DCS at the start of 2023. This change in administration became the ostensible reason the agency dropped its case against Sarra. But her attorneys aren't buying it.
"Although we argued that the department was merely trying to escape a decision on the constitutionality of its actions—something that is not usually allowed—the Superior Court judge agreed to let the department abandon the lawsuit," writes Timothy Sandefur, vice president of legal affairs at the Goldwater Institute.
"Obviously our hope was that we would have had a ruling from the court on the constitutional aspects of the case," says Dynar.
Without that, the DCS is free to return to business as usual.
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In a case like this, once the State has acted it should have ask the 'victim' for permission to withdraw. This dismissal is allowing the State to violate the woman's rights on the way in and on the way out. The decision by the Court (linked) is beyond stupid. The law says once they put someone on the 25 year list, the agency has x days to change and remove it and all agree that was not done within x days. The idiot Judge then writes his own law saying, '....The Legislature is not required to expressly set forth all authority granted to an agency....' when in fact the Legislature set the time to withdraw in stone. Judge is stupid or was pressured into this ridiculous opinion.
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Pretty standard, really. Most judges will absolutely bend over backwards to defer to the legislative and especially executive branches. They'll twist logic and plain language into pretzels, and cheerfully invent endless exceptions to laws and constitutions that appear nowhere in the text. Some call it judicial restraint. I call it laziness at best, plain cowardice at worst. Reining in overreach by the other two branches of government is akey part of the judicial branch's job.
Two notions occur to me from the article and the above posts:
(1) When one is dealing with an entity such as our present judicial system that is completely lacking in honor or honesty, one is not “honor bound”, and is foolish to allow notions of “honor” to compromise or limit his actions when dealing with/within that system.
(2) Are CPS employees never presented with the question “What makes you think you can take my child and . . . . (fill in blank as desired)?
Personal Family Experience (also in Arizona): wife left 15 y/o son in pickup while she went into store for minor shopping. Cop shows up. Pulls son out of truck. Waits with him for her to return.. Threatens enforcement action for child endangerment. She pointed out he was old enough to drive the pickup - much less get out of it if he got too hot, and old/big enough that if he got "too hot" he could lock the truck and come into the store where she was. Cop insisted it made no difference! At that point she just stood there and silently looked at him till he decided he had walked himself out onto the thin end of a limb where a bluff was not going to work and taking action would make him look like a fool. He decided to "do her a favor" and just make it warning.
Driving home son commented to wife "You know if he'd arrested you, CPS would have come to get me!" When they got home and I heard the story, I pointed out to son that his mother had just provided him with the second best civics lesson she could have given him, and that the absolute best civics lesson would have been the cop arresting her and calling CPS for him - from that he would have learned more about "reasonableness" and government force that a dozen textbooks could teach him.
Said class included advice on how to avoid angering a cop; truly, a worthwhile life skill.
Oh please.
It isn't just worthwhile; if you are Black it may be a life saving skill. And don't pretend otherwise.
That meant Sarra's name would go on Arizona's Central Registry—and remain there for 25 years.
So if that kid does anything before he's 30, it's right into the foster system with him!
Did you miss the part where she's barred from pretty much any job involving children? Like her work with resettling refugees, including providing child care?
"hough we argued that the department was merely trying to escape a decision on the constitutionality of its actions—something that is not usually allowed—the Superior Court judge agreed to let the department abandon the lawsuit," writes Timothy Sandefur, vice president of legal affairs at the Goldwater Institute.
"Obviously our hope was that we would have had a ruling from the court on the constitutional aspects of the case," says Dynar."
I don't get it: attempts to moot cases by changing an obviously unconstitutional law have been overruled since jurisdictions where that has been done have reinstated the law after the suits have been dropped. And the cycle begins again. Because of this, some plaintiffs have kept appealing to higher courts and succeeded. Seems to me that, unless the lady agreed not to appeal it, it's ripe for exactly that: taking the bastards to court for defamation of character and libel.
In this case, they didn't even change the law, they just dropped the case against this one woman.
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My parents would have been on such a registry. I grew up in the days before helicopter parenting. I wasn't just free range, I was totally unsupervised and didn't even tell them where I was going. I literally would ride my bicycle well into the next state, 15 miles or more away. I just had to be home for dinner on time. (Once ever I was late and regretted that as I was pretty severely punished.)
I turned out okay. The independence I had forced me to make minor and important decisions and to fend for myself. Helicoptered kids end up immature, uncreative, and unable to make independent decisions.
And THIS child wasn't even unsupervised! The authorities were way out of line. Sarra was totally appropriate.
Good work Lenore. You do more for individual rights than the rest of the Reason contributors put together.
All these registries are unconstitutional and an affront to Americana freedom. It is embarrassing and eventually almost all of us will be on one.
Eventually?? If you think you're not already on a bunch of government lists...
Arizona used to be a common sense state. But now it is Californicated. I watched the same process in Oregon over 40 years.
Sorry to say, but once great Arizona is descending to "shithole" status just like CA, OR & WA.
Intelligent people should be asking why "anti free range" laws exist. But libtards have firmly infested AZ state government - same pathology as OR.
Her first mistake is being in AZ a hive of Leftist ideology. The state knows better than the individual according to the left.
On a side note, why are illegals not trying to cross in AZ? I'm sure Gov. Hobbs has no issue with millions of illegals taxing the resources of her state.
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Has DCS ever saved a child really in danger? It seems they always go after petty stuff while the kid next door is beaten to death.
It's safer and easier to take children from relatively meek middle class citizens who are unlikely to strike back and not rich enough for a real legal fight. Middle class folks have "something to lose" and limited funds for hiring lawyers. There are some people that it's pretty clear that child grabbing would entail unsatisfactory "risks". And Warren Buffet (and his peers) have legal backup that make such exercises too expensive and frankly low percentage.
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