In re A.R.
Filed
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF
SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
In re A.R., et al., Persons Coming Under the Juvenile Court Law. | H030314 ( Super. DP001358) |
SANTA CRUZ HUMAN RESOURCES AGENCY, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. JAMES R., Defendant and Appellant. |
This appeal is brought by the father of three dependent children. He seeks reversal of the juvenile court's order terminating his visitation with the two older children following his incarceration. For reasons explained below, we affirm the challenged order.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This dependency proceeding involves three siblings: A.R., a girl born in April 2002; L.R., a boy born in January 2004; and T.W.R., a boy born in August 2005. This appeal concerns only the older two children. We therefore mention the youngest child only as relevant to the procedural background of the case. The parents of all three children are Stacey C. (the mother) and appellant James R. (the father).
Dependency Petitions; Jurisdiction; Detention
In late July 2005, petitions were filed on behalf of A.R. and L.R. by the Santa Cruz Human Resources Agency (Agency). The petitions asserted that the parents had failed to protect the children. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 300, subd. (b).)[1] As factual support for the petitions, the Agency asserted that the father screamed at the children and threatened to kill them; that he had also threatened to kill the mother; and that he had substance abuse and anger management problems. The shelter where the mother and children were staying refused to admit the father until he completed an anger management program.
The juvenile court detained both children, but it did not remove them from their parents' physical custody. The Agency recommended that the children remain in the parents' custody.
In early August 2005, baby T.W.R. was born. Medically fragile, he was placed in the hospital's neonatal intensive care unit. The Agency filed a petition on his behalf the following month, alleging that the father had threatened to remove T.W.R. from the hospital against medical advice, which could put the baby at risk of death. The juvenile court detained baby T.W.R. and ordered visits for the parents as often as allowed by the hospital. In its jurisdiction/disposition report, the Agency recommended that T.W.R. remain out of the parents' custody and that family reunification services be provided. The parents later submitted on the Agency's report, and the court adopted its recommendations.
A jurisdictional hearing for A.R. and L.R., originally set for August 2005, was heard on
Modification
On