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May Court Suspend Father's Supervised Parenting Time Until Father Gives Password to Thumb Drives That Might (or Might Not) Contain Child Pornography?
The father had an earlier history of sexually assaulting children.
From Dekarske v. Lopez, decided Dec. 28 by the Michigan Court of Appeals (Judges Redford, Shapiro, and Yates), which holds that the suspension of supervised parenting time on these grounds was improper:
In 2000, plaintiff was convicted, by a plea of no contest, of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-IV), for which he served five years of probation and completed a sexual rehabilitation program. The parties met in 2016 through an online dating site. Plaintiff disclosed his prior conviction to defendant on their first date, but misrepresented the underlying circumstances. Plaintiff told defendant that, when he was 17 years old, he had sexually abused an 11-year-old girl. In fact, plaintiff sexually abused his half-sister, who was three years old at the time, approximately 30 times.
The parties moved in together in 2017. At that time, defendant had a nine-year-old son, BL, who also resided with the parties. The parties have one child together, CAD, who was born in 2019.
In 2022, defendant discovered the "presentencing report documents" describing the true nature of plaintiff's CSC-IV conviction, and also sexual assaults that he committed on two other children before his conviction in 2000. Defendant, who was concerned that plaintiff had sexually abused CAD and BL, took pictures of those documents and three USB thumb drives to the police, and also contacted Children's Protective Services. The parties' cohabitation and relationship ended around that time.
Detective Kelly Ebersole testified that she was told the drives were encrypted or password-protected, and she contacted plaintiff to obtain the passwords to ensure there was nothing illegal on them before returning them. Plaintiff made approximately 60 attempts to communicate with Ebersole, and, when they finally communicated, plaintiff "became very irate" and refused to provide any passwords, telling Ebersole that she needed to contact his lawyer and to get a search warrant.
Ebersole testified that there was no criminal investigation regarding the thumb drives, and she did not have probable cause for a warrant. Ebersole attempted to forensically interview CAD and BL, but was unable to forensically interview CAD, then four years old, because he became too scared upon walking into the interview room. Ebersole did successfully interview BL, however, who made no disclosures of any sexual assault or physical abuse.
Plaintiff initiated this current action to establish custody and parenting time for CAD. The trial court held an evidentiary hearing where it heard testimony from the parties and Ebersole. Defendant testified that she became concerned about CAD and plaintiff when she observed CAD "cupping himself," i.e., reaching his hands in front of his pants. This occurred when CAD was one year old, and defendant did not believe it was normal behavior. Defendant described another occasion when, after the last time plaintiff watched CAD, she went "to change his diaper, [but he was] tossing and turning, his legs stiff as a board, tilted to the side[,]" explaining she "literally had to pry [her] son's legs apart to change his diaper." …
Plaintiff denied sexually assaulting CAD or BL, and testified that he did not desire a sexual relationship with a minor. Plaintiff admitted that, according to the rehabilitation program he completed, he was still considered a risk to young children. As for the thumb drives, plaintiff admitted that one of the drives was the backup for his computer, but he denied having the passwords or telling the police that he had the passwords….
The trial [court] could not find by a preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff had assaulted CAD or BL. However, given the trial court's observations that plaintiff posed a potential risk to CAD, the trial court ordered that his parenting time be supervised. The trial court acknowledged that plaintiff had good reason not to divulge any passwords to law enforcement, but concluded that plaintiff knew what was on the drives, knew the passwords to the drives, and believed there was something on the drives that he did not want the police to see.
After having made these statements, the trial court further concluded that it needed "to know whether or not there's child pornography" on the drives, "because if there is I don't think you deserve any contact with your child." It also opined that it would "make us feel better about going forward as to when we decided it's going to be safe to allow you to have unsupervised time with your son." The trial court therefore ordered that plaintiff's parenting time be suspended until plaintiff surrendered access to the contents of the drives and no criminal activity or pornography was found….
"It is presumed to be in the best interests of a child for the child to have a strong relationship with both of his or her parents." Accordingly, "parenting time shall be granted to a parent in a frequency, duration, and type reasonably calculated to promote a strong relationship between the child and the parent granted parenting time." … [A Michigan statute] provides that "[a] child has a right to parenting time with a parent unless it is shown on the record by clear and convincing evidence that it would endanger the child's physical, mental, or emotional health." …
The trial court was unable to find by a preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff had assaulted CAD or BL. Further, the trial court unambiguously determined that it was in CAD's best interest to maintain an ongoing bond with plaintiff, so it ordered that plaintiff must receive four hours of parenting time a week. However, the trial court nonetheless believed there was a risk that plaintiff might harm CAD if left alone with the child, and therefore ordered that plaintiff's parenting time be supervised. The record evidence supports the trial court's finding that plaintiff should not have unsupervised parenting time, and plaintiff does not challenge on appeal whether his parenting time should be supervised.
Instead, this appeal concerns whether the trial court erred by suspending plaintiff's supervised parenting time until he turns over the passcodes for the three thumb drives. In suspending plaintiff's parenting time, the trial court failed to identify any harm plaintiff could perpetrate on CAD under close supervision.
The trial court did refer to an incident when plaintiff failed to "follow the ground rules" at a supervised parenting time visit by taking CAD to the bathroom alone. There is no indication, however, that anything inappropriate took place in the bathroom. Further, that parenting time visit was supervised by plaintiff's brother, and under the trial court's order, plaintiff's parenting time will now be supervised by an unrelated, third-party parenting time agency.
The trial court expressed its belief that it had "to know whether or not there's child pornography on there because if there is [the trial court did not] think [plaintiff] deserve[d] any contact with [his] child." However, the inquiry is what is in CAD's best interests, not what a parent "deserves."
The trial court also opined that knowing the contents of the thumb drives would "make us feel better about going forward as to when we decided it's going to be safe to allow you to have unsupervised time with your son." It is true that the contents of the thumb drives might be relevant to the question of whether plaintiff's parenting time could ever be unsupervised. However, in the absence of a threat of harm posed by supervised parenting time, the suspension of plaintiff's parenting time appears to be intended as an impermissible sanction or an impermissible attempt to compel compliance with a court order….
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At what point does Section 1983 come in here?
The cop is trying to make an end run around getting a warrant -- and while I think that the appeals court got it right, I would like to see some penalty for the cop's intentional violation of his rights.
Suspension of supervised visits are clearly punitive in nature.
Judges have absolute immunity for erroneous decisions. If the court had jurisdiction over custody disputes, not even the most corrupt and evil decision about custody is grounds to sue under section 1983.
I was thinking about the officer who knew she needed a warrant.
Never. This has been yet another episode of Simple Answers to Stupid Questions.
What cop?
I'm pretty sure that "Detective" is not Kelly Ebersole's given name, so probably that one? Literally the only cop in the blog post?
Ed's off in the weeds as usual, but it's not because there isn't a cop. It's the part where the cop completely didn't violate his civil rights -- and if she had, 1983 isn't a remedy for a bad search.
Yes, I realize there’s a police officer involved in the story (indeed, I didn’t realize it would be possible not to realize that). My question was more as to what Dr. Ed thinks she or any other police officer did to “try[] to make an end run around getting a warrant”.
It’s not a Civil Rights violation to argue or provide evidence in court for a position that ends up being overturned on appeal. Arguing ones position in court and having a judge rule in ones favor is not a conspiracy with the judge to do something illegal.
If the police officer had lied to the court, that would be a different case. But nothing in the case suggests the police officer did anything other than testify truthfully. Yes, the State’s theory of the law got overturned on appeal. But that doesn’t mean the police officer did anything wrong by participating in the trial and giving evidence on the State’s behalf.
"1983 isn’t a remedy for a bad search."
It should be. There ought to be a remedy for people who are subjected to illegal searches but are never prosecuted (removing exclusion of evidence as a remedy).
That's not right; it can be a remedy. Obviously the first line of attack is a motion to suppress — but that only applies if they found something that needs to be suppressed! — but one can sue for damages under 1983. Said damages are generally just nominal, of course. (Plus attorneys' fees!)
So, If I'm reading the actual appellate decision correctly, the order suspending parental visitation on these grounds has now been vacated, right?
Shouldn't that information be placed near the top of this post? I don't see it anywhere... had to follow the link to find out.
What decision to seal the record? I don't see anything in the post about that either.... Am I missing an introductory paragraph somewhere?
Whoops, good point, thanks -- I think this was implied by the "impermissible"s in the last sentence of the quote ("in the absence of a threat of harm posed by supervised parenting time, the suspension of plaintiff's parenting time appears to be intended as an impermissible sanction or an impermissible attempt to compel compliance with a court order"), but I agree that I should have made it clearer; I've revised the post to so note, in the first sentence.
much better now, thank you.
What? She was told he abused an 11 yo when he was 17 and thought that was not a deal breaker? How about dating someone who did not abuse an 11 yo.
Molly, you would be surprised.
5 years in public housing (not as a janitor, btw) was an eye-opener and there are women, who -- for a variety of reasons -- flock to such guys. Some are psychopaths and very good at manipulating people (which is how they can molest the children) but a lot of these women are -- well, have personality issues which make them unattractive to men, and this is often the best they can do. Others seek power in the relationship and like to have something to hold over the man, like here.
Some mothers even let their teenaged daughters get molested to have the attention and financial gain from the molester. I've seen that happen as well.
We live in a very sick society -- I am not at all surprised that a mother of a small child would let a convicted child molester move in with her, or that she'd have a child with him. (Remember that he likely is paying her child support for said child...)
Molly, I'll go further.
I ran into a lot of single mothers with what I came to refer to as a "boyfriend de jour." They'd let a drug dealer move in with them, giving him an address that the cops didn't (yet) know he lived at, and he would give her cash and buy her stuff she couldn't afford. Eventually the cops would figure out where he was, but before they could bust *her* for being involved, she'd cry "domestic violence", get a 209A restraining order against him, and be the innocent victim. She would then let a different drug dealer move in with her and the cycle would repeat itself -- and he'd move in with a different single mother on public assistance.
What really bothered me was what this was doing to the children, particularly the boys. They have a male role model that is unsavory (and may be physically abusive) that they are told to treat like their father -- and then, suddenly -- he is gone and there is a DIFFERENT male whom they are told to treat as their father. Often this happens every 7-10 months and the boys start withdrawing into themselves -- or affiliating with gangs when they are older.
Molly, I know of two cases where a child died in an oven in the State of Maine -- one a regular oven which made the news https://www.upi.com/Archives/1984/10/29/Parents-burn-child-to-death-in-oven/1533467874000/ and another in a microwave oven, which did not.
Nothing surprises me anymore...
This blog has some peculiar fixations.
Your entire presence here is the result of a peculiar fixation.
Commentary on unusual cases has been standard for VC going back to when they were independent.
Certain unusual cases.
There is no way that a person's parental rights should be affected because their vindictive ex seizes private property without a shred of evidence of it being anything improper and the person refuses to allow the further invasion of their privacy. I would be completely against the plaintiff here if there was any actual evidence that he'd done anything to the kids or that the drives contained anything improper. The fact that the trial court acknowledged there were valid reasons why the plaintiff wouldn't want to turn over passwords to allow general police rummaging through their digital life but still took away his visitation based on nothing more than "I'd feel better if I can look at it" is appalling. The trial court needs to be removed from the case because the judge has obviously pre-judged plaintiff as guilty of Something with no evidence.
The plaintiff is guilty of something (serial molestation of a toddler).
Yes, but the judge hasn't pre-judged the plaintiff as guilty of that with no evidence.
Perhaps that was in reference to
Apparently the defendant found evidence of that.
No, the plaintiff was guilty of something that he'd already served his sentence for. The trial judge correctly recognized that the prior offense is not evidence of a current crime and was not sufficient to justify the demand for the password.
The fact that the judge then mis-stepped by applying an "I'll feel better" standard instead of the law does not change the fact that the judge was right on the law - there was no evidence to support the accusation of a current crime. Which, yes, means that the evidence-less "I'll feel better" standard is prejudice.
So because he was guilty of a different crime, that means he's guilty of this one and they can violate the law to get evidence of it? No, that's not what our system of justice requires. There's nothing indicating that the thumb drives held evidence of a crime. The fact that he was previously convicted of a crime doesn't change that.
"The trial court...concluded that plaintiff knew what was on the drives, knew the passwords to the drives,"
Was there any basis for this? It doesn't sound like there was.
Well, most people don't keep a bunch of thumb drives they don't know what's on and don't know the passwords to, and he admitted one was a backup of his stuff.
But even if that much is true, so what? The police don't know what's on them, don't have probable cause, and didn't have a warrant to get them in the first place. Shouldn't they just be returned?
Most people don’t have thumb drives that they don’t know what’s on? Most people don’t make backups and forget the passwords? That’s not true in my experience.
Plus his uncontroverted testimony that he doesn’t know the passwords, It’s hard to see a basis for a finding that he does.
But I agree that they should be returned.
I agree. My sense is that lots of people don't mess with encryption. But people who do are likely to have stuff that's encrypted that they don't know the passwd to. As in, for example. 'I'm sending you a thumb drive of all the docs from Mom's house. The pw is foobar27". I copy the stuff off and put the thumb drive in the spare thumb drive box. A month later I couldn't tell you the password for a million bucks.
The underlying case was dismissed from federal court for failure to state a federal-law claim.
Perhaps the sheer ubiquity and ominipresence of federal law may be laying traps for people that may catch innocent unsavvy people by surprise. When nearly every case where someone claims to have been treated unfairly on a matter relating to a hot-button political issue gives rise to a federal cause of action, the rare case where it doesn’t may seem to come like a bolt out of the blue, completely arbitrary and inexplicable.
Sorry, somehow replied to this case instead of the sealing case, and too late to delete.
The result seems straightforward. To suspend Father’s parental rights, a trial court needs to make a factual finding under the right legal standing, here a finding the father’s visiting the children would endanger them, under a clear and convincing evidence standard.
But here the trial court clearly made no such finding. Indeed, its factual findings actually went against a claim of danger. The court ruled in Father’s favor on these issues, finding that Father did not abuse the children by a preponderous of the evidence, and also finding that father’s presence was not harming the children.
Given that the Court had found the evidence to be in Father’s favor on the factual issues relevant to the legal merits of a suspension order, it seems pretty clear that the trial court’s order suspending Father’s visitation rights was nothing more than an unauthorized sanction for not complying with a judicial order. As the Court of Appeals noted, only the kinds of sanctions that are authorized by law are available to trial courts to deploy against litigants who violate court orders.
And as the Court of Appeals also noted, suspending parental visitation rights is simply not one of the permitted sanctions.