Hal Stanley v. Katherine Finnegan
Opinion
*625
On January 12, 2015, child abuse investigators removed seven minor children from the private home of their parents, Hal and Michelle Stanley, in Hot Springs, Arkansas. After extensive state administrative and judicial child abuse proceedings, the Stanleys filed this § 1983 action, individually and on behalf of six of their children, against the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS); Garland County; and numerous employees of the State and Garland County in their individual and official capacities. The forty-seven page Complaint asserted a variety of claims against numerous defendants, including multiple claims against Katherine Finnegan, a civilian investigator for the Crimes Against Children Division of the Arkansas State Police, in her individual and official capacities. Three individual defendants, including Finnegan, moved to dismiss plaintiffs' individual capacity claims based on qualified immunity. The district court
1
granted these defendants qualified immunity on all claims except one, the claim that Finnegan removed the Stanleys' minor children from their home without an adequate basis. Finnegan appeals. An interlocutory order denying a motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity is immediately appealable.
Ashcroft v. Iqbal
,
I. Background.
Our review of the denial of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity is limited to the facts alleged in the Stanleys' lengthy Complaint, which we accept as true and view most favorably to the plaintiffs.
Hager v. Ark. Dep't of Health
,
The Complaint alleges that Hal and Michelle are parents who chose to raise and home-educate their children according to Christian beliefs and with limited access outside of the home. In 2014, son Jonathan, then sixteen, developed a desire to attend public school and "not contribute and be a part of his family such as it was." His parents disapproved. Jonathan rebelled, convincing an adult friend to report to the DHS Division of Children and Family Services that the Stanley children were not adequately clothed and one was being abused. In December 2014, a DHS investigator visited the Stanley home and "unsubstantiated" the report.
Undeterred, Jonathan then accused his parents of "poisoning, burning, striking, and bruising the children," neglecting the children's education, and providing inadequate food and healthcare. He alleged to adult friends that Hal caused the children to become ill by forcing them to drink a solution called "Miracle Mineral Solution" (MMS), a product Hal used in his greenhouse, and threatened to pipe MMS through the house vents. Jonathan provided what he said was a sample of MMS to an adult friend who turned it over to the Garland County Sheriff's Department. Sergeant Mike Wright interviewed Christopher Stanley, an adult child, on January 9, 2015, who said his only knowledge that Hal had pumped MMS vapors through the home's school room came from Jonathan. Sergeant Wright consulted Dr. Teresa Esquivel of the Arkansas Children's Hospital *626 who conducted an internet search and reported that MMS was dangerous. Based on this information, Sergeant Wright obtained a warrant to search the Stanley home for MMS and other dangerous chemical substances. Wright's warrant affidavit stated that "the Arkansas State Police Crimes Against Children Division ... intends to remove the children from the home to have them examined by a medical doctor."
At approximately 4:30 p.m. on January 12, some thirty government agents including Finnegan conducted a five-hour warrant search of the Stanley home. Seven minor children including Jonathan were present. Their parents were ordered to remain on the front porch during the search and were not allowed to speak with the children. Each child was interviewed by Finnegan. Jonathan repeated his accusations of abuse and neglect and made numerous additional accusations. Fourteen-year-old V.S. stated that Jonathan and his adult friends "convinced her how bad things were."
During the investigation, each child was examined in an ambulance by a doctor who found each child healthy and showing no symptom of exposure to a toxic substance. At the conclusion of the investigation, the DHS Division of Children and Family Services representatives concluded the children were happy, healthy, and in no danger and declined to take them into DHS custody. However, the Sheriff's Department and its Crimes Against Children Division investigator, Finnegan, credited Jonathan's accusations. Sergeant Wright removed the children "at the insistence of Inv. Finnegan," leaving DHS no choice but to accept custody. The children were sent to two different cities, two hours away from home, and enrolled in public school. Contested proceedings ensued and continued for twenty-one months. Finnegan made findings of abuse and neglect that were overturned on appeal.
The Complaint's First Claim for Relief includes a § 1983 claim seeking to hold Finnegan liable for compensatory and punitive damages for "removing, detaining, and continuing to detain [six minor children] from the care, custody, and control of their parents ... without proper or just cause and/or authority" in violation of plaintiffs' First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendment Rights. In briefing the broader motion to dismiss to the district court, the parties did not separately address whether Finnegan is entitled to qualified immunity on this claim. The district court denied Finnegan's motion to dismiss the claim on the basis of qualified immunity:
[I]t was clearly established at the time of the seizure that at least a reasonable suspicion of child abuse was required before removing children from the home. ... Because the allegations indicate that Finnegan ordered the Stanley children removed despite evidence and DHS recommendations to the contrary, Finnegan has not established that she had a reasonable suspicion of child abuse. 2
II. Discussion.
"Qualified immunity protects public officials from § 1983 damage actions
*627
if their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known."
Bradford
,
As the district court recognized, it is clearly established that the removal of children from their parents' custody violates a constitutional right if the removal occurs without reasonable suspicion of child abuse.
See
Heartland Acad. Cmty. Church v. Waddle
,
Finnegan first argues that the Stanleys' claim is not plausible because, under the Arkansas Child Maltreatment Act, only a law enforcement officer, a juvenile court judge, or a designated DHS employee has authority to take a child into protective custody. At the Rule 12(b)(6) stage, this argument is without merit. The Complaint alleges that Finnegan, acting under color of state law, entered the home to execute a search warrant, separated the Stanleys from their children, questioned the children, and had them taken to the ambulance for a doctor's examination. At the end of this process, "all seven (7) of the Stanley children were removed by Sgt. Mike Wright at the insistence of Inv. Finnegan." These facts plausibly allege that Finnegan may be liable if the children were removed without reasonable suspicion of child abuse.
Finnegan next argues that a child maltreatment investigator
cannot
be liable for "making recommendations based on investigative findings," citing
Manzano
,
The issue in this case is properly framed by cases establishing the Fourth Amendment standard that applies to police officers and investigators in making arrests and other seizures. The standard is well established in this circuit. Cause or suspicion warranting a seizure must exist at the moment of the seizure.
Ripson v. Alles
,
Here, Finnegan, Sergeant Wright, and the other investigators went to the Stanleys' home based on bizarre accusations by teenager Jonathan that, if true, gave reason to believe Jonathan's minor siblings were in danger of continuing child abuse. But a month earlier, another investigator had "unsubstantiated" Jonathan's earlier allegations, and proper research would have shown, as an email from a DHS supervisor attached to the Complaint reported the day after the warrant search, that "MMS is legal and promoted as a cure for the simple cold to acne to the flu and to other more serious diseases." Thus, although the investigators went to the home with the intent to remove the children, this was a child abuse situation that cried out for investigation and confirmation. After five hours, the five youngest children had been interviewed; they denied abuse in the home and said they loved their parents; a doctor had medically examined each child and concluded they were healthy and showed no signs of abuse or symptoms of poisoning; and the DHS investigators had concluded that the home was safe and the children were happy, healthy, in no danger, and should not be taken into custody. Yet, Sergeant Wright, at the "insistence" of Finnegan, ordered the children removed, compelling DHS to take custody and beginning a twenty-one month ordeal for the family.
As the district court concluded, it was clearly established at the time Finnegan acted that reasonable suspicion was required to remove the Stanley children from their home and their parents' custody. Like probable cause to arrest, reasonable suspicion to seize children must exist at the moment of the seizure, and an official is not free to disregard plainly exculpatory evidence when it undermines substantial inculpatory evidence that reasonable suspicion exists. The Complaint raises a fair inference that Finnegan was aware of the substantial exculpatory evidence developed during the five-hour investigation before Finnegan and Sergeant Wright made the decision to remove. The Complaint also raises the inference that the decision to remove was motivated by disagreement with the Stanleys' decision to home-school their children in an isolated environment. Though perhaps unlikely, this theory is not implausible. "[A] well-pleaded complaint may proceed even if it strikes a savvy judge that actual proof of those facts is improbable, and that a recovery is very remote and unlikely."
Twombly
,
Finnegan argues that our decision in
Myers v. Morris
,
We affirm that part of the district court's Order dated June 20, 2017, denying the motion to dismiss the claim that Finnegan removed plaintiffs' minor children from their home without an adequate basis, and the Order dated July 5, 2017, denying Finnegan's motion for reconsideration.
The Honorable P.K. Holmes, III, Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas.
On the merits, to defeat a qualified immunity defense, plaintiff has the burden of proving that defendant's conduct violated a clearly established constitutional right.
See
Hess v. Ables
,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hal W. STANLEY and Michelle Stanley, Individually and as Parents and Legal Guardians Plaintiffs-Appellees v. Katherine FINNEGAN, Defendant-Appellant Garland County, Et Al. Defendants
- Cited By
- 46 cases
- Status
- Published