| Matter of Tilar M. |
| 2013 NY Slip Op 51280(U) [40 Misc 3d 1222(A)] |
| Decided on August 6, 2013 |
| Family Court, Queens County |
| Hunt, J. |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports. |
In the Matters
of Tilar M., CHRISTOPHER L. and TENZIN G., Persons Alleged to be Juvenile
Delinquents.
|
Tilar M., Christopher L. and Tenzin G. committed one or more
criminal acts, they were
subsequently adjudicated to be juvenile delinquents in separate Family Court
proceedings, and
each was placed in the Close to Home Initiative with the New York City
Administration for
Children's Services ("ACS"). While the cases of these three juveniles were
unrelated, they each
have run away from their placement with the Close to Home Initiative, a
distinction they share
with many other juvenile delinquents who have similarly been placed in
ACS custody. Although
warrants have been issued for these three juvenile delinquents, their
whereabouts are unknown,
they are at large in the community, and thus far have evaded
apprehension.[FN1]
[*2]
On April 8, 2013 this Court found that Tilar M.
had possessed a toy or imitation firearm,
an unclassified misdemeanor, in violation of New York City Administrative
Code §10-131 (g).
At the time that Tilar M. committed the act charged in this petition, he had
already been
adjudicated to be a juvenile delinquent and placed in the custody of ACS for
the Close to Home
Initiative program on November 12, 2012 by another Family Court Judge
following a finding that
he had committed an act constituting the crime of Criminal Trespass in the
Second Degree. Both
of Tilar's juvenile delinquency cases were preceded by another proceeding in
April 2012 in
which yet another Family Court Judge found him to be a Person in Need of
Supervision and
ordered his placement in the custody of ACS with the direction that he be
sent to a residential
treatment center (Mental Hygiene Law §1.03 [33]).
In the juvenile delinquency proceeding before this Court, it was determined that
Tilar M.
required treatment, supervision, and confinement as he had previously been
adjudicated a Person
in Need of Supervision, he had run away from the Close to Home Initiative
placement made in
the first juvenile delinquency case, and he had been AWOL from that
placement at the time he
committed the crime charged in this case.[FN2] At the conclusion of the dispositional
hearing, this
Court concluded that the needs and best interests of the respondent and the
need to protect the
community required that he be placed in accordance with Family Court Act
§353.3. The Court
further concluded that the least restrictive available alternative for Tilar
(Fam. Ct. Act §352.2
[2] [a]; e.g., Matter of Julian O., 80 AD3d 525 [2011]; Matter of Alberto R., 84 AD3d
593
[*3]
[2011]) was a further non-secure
placement with ACS for the Close to Home Initiative for 12
months.[FN3]
Christopher L. was found to have committed an act which, were he an adult, would
constitute the felony of Attempted Robbery in the Third Degree (P.L.
§§110.00/160.05). After an
an adjudication of juvenile delinquency based upon a determination that he
required supervision
and treatment (Fam. Ct. Act §352.1 [1]), he was placed on probation
under the supervision of
the New York City Department of Probation for a period of two years (Fam.
Ct. Act §§352.2 [1]
[b]; 353.2). The Department of Probation subsequently filed a petition
alleging that Christopher
violated the conditions of probation imposed by this Court, and following an
adjudication of
violation (Fam. Ct. Act §360.3), the Court revoked the order of
probation and entered an order on
January 24, 2013 which placed him in the custody of ACS for placement in
the non-secure Close
to Home Initiative program for a period of 18 months (Fam. Ct. Act
§360.3 [6]; see also, Fam.
Ct. Act §352.2 [2] [a]).[FN4]
[*4]
Tenzin G. entered an admission to having
committed an act which, were he an adult,
would constitute the felony of Attempted Assault in the Second Degree (P.L.
§§110.00/120.05
[2]). At the conclusion of a dispositional hearing, the Court found that
Tenzin was a juvenile
delinquent who required supervision and treatment and that his best interests
and the need for
protection of the community required that he be placed under the supervision
of the New York
City Department of Probation for a period of 18 months (Fam. Ct. Act
§§352.1 [1]; 352.2 [1] [b];
353.2). On September 18, 2012 the Department of Probation filed a petition
pursuant to Family
Court Act §360.2, alleging that Tenzin had violated one or more of the
court-imposed conditions
of probation. Following a hearing in accordance with Family Court Act
§360.3, the Court found
that Tenzin G. had violated the conditions of probation, and the Court
proceeded to conduct a
further dispositional hearing.
During the continued dispositional hearing a further juvenile delinquency petition
was
filed against Tenzin G. and it was referred to this Court. With respect to this
second juvenile
delinquency petition, Tenzin entered an admission that he had committed an
act which, were he
an adult, would constitute the felony of Robbery in the Second Degree (P.L.
§160.10 [1]). With
the consent of the parties, the second juvenile delinquency petition was then
consolidated with
the continued dispositional hearing in the first case in which the Court found
that Tenzin had
violated probation. At the conclusion of this dispositional hearing the Court
revoked the order of
probation issued in the first delinquency case and Tenzin was adjudicated to
be a juvenile
delinquent in need of treatment, supervision, and placement with respect to
the second juvenile
[*5]
delinquency proceeding.
Upon consideration of the best interests of the respondent and the need for protection
of
the community, the Court determined that with respect to both cases, the
least restrictive
dispositional alternative was an order placing Tenzin G. in the custody of
ACS for the Close to
Home Initiative for a period of 18 months.
ACS and the authorized agencies (Social Services Law §371 [10]) with which
Tilar,
Christopher and Tenzin had been placed by ACS subsequently informed the
Court that they each
had run away from their Close to Home Initiative placement and were
AWOL (see, Social
Services Law §404 [13] [d]). While the Court was further advised that
ACS had issued warrants
directing the apprehension of the three juveniles (Social Services Law
§404 [13] [e]), because it
was reported that the three juveniles could not be located and apprehended,
the Court issued its
own bench warrants for all three (Fam. Ct. Act §153; Social Services
Law §404 [13] [d] [iii]).[FN5]
Thereafter, the Court invoked the authority granted by Family Court Act §353.3
(6) with
respect to the three juveniles, and issued orders directing that the juveniles,
their attorneys, the
Presentment Agency, and the Commissioner of ACS, show cause why the
Court should not
conduct a hearing in accordance with Family Court Act §355.1 to
inquire into the need for
[*6]
continuing the placement of each
respondent in the Close to Home Initiative.[FN6]
When the post-dispositional motions for Tilar M. and Christopher L. came before the
Court on July 16, 2013, neither juvenile delinquent appeared. The Court was
advised that both
were still missing from their Close to Home Initiative non-secure
placements, that both remained
at large, and that efforts to locate and apprehend them has not
succeeded.[FN7]
While the actual inquiry into the need for continuing the placements of Tilar M. and
Christopher L. were stayed pending their voluntary appearance or their arrest
and production, the
Court proceeded to inquire into the circumstances surrounding their escape
from the custody of
the authorized agencies with which they had been placed by ACS, the efforts
made to apprehend
the juveniles, why they could not be found, and whether any additional
action should be taken by
the Court to secure the presence of the respondents.
Roy Reynolds is a social worker employed by Children's Village, an authorized
agency
located in Dobbs Ferry, Westchester County. According to Mr. Reynolds,
Christopher L. arrived
at Children's Village for placement as a juvenile delinquent in the Close to
Home Initiative on
March 29, 2013, and he worked with Christopher during his very brief stay
at the agency. Mr.
Reynolds recalled that Christopher was "very angry and upset" when he
arrived at Children's
Village and that he engaged in "physical altercations" with other juvenile
delinquents placed in
[*7]
the Close to Home Initiative program.
On April 9, 2013, a mere 10 days after he arrived,
Christopher simply walked off the campus at Children's Village, telling Mr.
Reynolds that he
"was not going to school", which is located on the campus, and that "he was
leaving." Mr.
Reynolds and another agency staff member followed Christopher off the
grounds and tried to
persuade him to return with them. Once Christopher reached an intersection
in the road, "he ran
away into the woods".
Children's Village reported Christopher L. as "AWOL" to ACS and a missing
persons
report was filed with the police department.[FN8] The ACS "Movement Control and
Communications
Unit" ("MCCU") notified Reynolds that ACS had issued a warrant for
Christopher and
Children's Village proceeded to make further unsuccessful attempts to locate
him through
contact with both his mother and Detective Dennis Seger of the New York
City Police
Department. The agency also prepared "missing child" flyers for distribution
near Dobbs Ferry
and in respondent's home neighborhood in Queens County. After a six day
absence, Christopher
returned to the Children's Village campus on April 15, 2013. He met with
Ron Reynolds and told
him that he "doesn't want to be there" and he simply walked off the campus
again. No force was
applied by Children's Village personnel to prevent Christopher from leaving
the campus again.
Unbeknownst to Mr. Reynolds, prior to the sudden reappearance of Christopher L. at
Children's Village on April 15th, this Court had issued its arrest warrant for
him on April 10,
2013. Had Mr. Reynolds known of the issuance of the bench warrant, he
perhaps could have
[*8]
called the Dobbs Ferry police to take
Christopher into custody which would theoretically have
led to his production before this Court.
Edith James,[FN9] the mother of Christopher L., testified
that she became aware that her
son had escaped from the custody of Children's Village when she received
telephone calls from
Mr. Reynolds and Detective Seger advising her to be on the lookout for her
son. According to
Ms. James, since April 9, 2013 she has seen Christopher at her home for very
brief moments
when he was coming or going, as well as "on the streets around Jamaica",
and that she sees him
"every three days or so" and usually early in the morning. Ms. James would
telephone Detective
Seger to report these sightings of her son, but he would disappear before
police could arrive to
take him into custody. At some point, Ms. James became aware that
Christopher had
occasionally been sleeping in an abandoned car which is located in the
backyard of her house.
Ajish Nair, a social worker employed by Children's Village, testified about the
placement
of Tilar M. with the agency. According to Mr. Nair, Tilar has escaped from
Children's Village on
three occasions, the most recent of which occurred on July 10, 2013.
According to Nair, the first
escape by Tilar M. occurred on May 21, 2013 and lasted for "two days" and
he returned
voluntarily. Tilar's second escape from Children's Village occurred on June
17, 2013 and it
ended when he returned on his own on June 26, 2013. Tilar's last and most
recent escape from
custody occurred July 10, 2013. When agency staff discovered Tilar's most
recent absence, they
conducted a search in the Village of Dobbs Ferry and they reported him
missing to the Dobbs
Ferry Police Department and to ACS, which issued yet another warrant for
his apprehension and
return to ACS custody.
[*9]
A few days later, Mr. Nair and a staff security
officer from Children's Village traveled to
Queens County to search for Tilar. They searched his neighborhood but they
did not find him.
They also visited the 113th and the 103rd police precincts in Queens County
where they provided
the desk officers at both precincts with a copy of the Family Court bench
warrant which they had
in their possession, and they requested police assistance in locating Tilar.
Mr. Nair and the
agency security officer also searched for Tilar at locations in Queens which
his mother had told then that he frequented, but they were unable to locate him.
Detective Dennis Seger of the New York City Police Department Queens Juvenile
Warrant Squad has been a member of the police service for more than 20
years. He has been
investigating the whereabouts of both adult and juvenile fugitives for the
past 12 or 13 years in
connection with their apprehension upon warrants issued out of various
courts in New York
City. According to Detective Seger, he is one of only "five" police detectives
assigned to
investigate and execute juvenile warrants in the entire City of New York. He
stated that he is
presently the only detective assigned to investigate and execute juvenile
(i.e. Family Court)
warrants in Queens County, and that there is one detective assigned to
Brooklyn, two detectives
assigned in the Bronx, and one detective assigned to Manhattan. The
detectives are supervised by
a Sergeant who is responsible for the entire City and who moves from
borough to borough.
Detective Seger indicated that prior to the placement of adjudicated juvenile
delinquents
with ACS under the Close to Home Initiative, he was responsible for
investigating the numerous
bench warrants issued by Family Court for juveniles who have failed to
appear for pending
juvenile delinquency cases (see, Fam. Ct. Act §312.2).
However, since the inception of the Close
to Home Initiative, Detective Seger and his fellow detectives now have the
additional
[*10]
responsibility to locate and apprehend
adjudicated juvenile delinquents who have run away from
ACS Close to Home Initiative placements. According to Seger, he is usually
searching for 15 to
20 Close to Home Initiative escapees whose juvenile delinquency cases were
initiated in Queens
County at any give time.
Detective Seger observed that occasionally, the detective assigned to one county will
assist the detective assigned to another county in locating and apprehending
a Close to Home
Initiative escapee or a juvenile with a pending delinquency case who is the
subject of a Family
Court warrant. This necessarily removes the assisting detective from his or
her own home county
and impedes the investigation of the ACS and bench warrants issued
juveniles in that county.
Where an arrest is made, the detectives are required to hold the apprehended
juvenile until the
Family Court convenes that day, or they must transport the juvenile to the
Horizon Detention
Center in the Bronx, if it a weekend or holiday. In either event, this process
adds hours to the
detectives' absence from their other duties.
Detective Seger indicated that the volume of juveniles escaping from agency custody
since the inception of Close to Home Initiative on September 1, 2012 has
significantly increased
his work load. He further stated that there has been no corresponding
increase in police officers
assigned to investigate and execute juvenile warrants since Close to Home
began.[FN10]
According to
[*11]
Detective Seger, prior to the inception
of the Close to Home Initiative, he rarely if ever became
involved in searching for and arresting juvenile delinquents who were placed
in the custody of
the state Office of Children and Family Services.[FN11]
At the Court's request, Detective Seger proceeded to describe his efforts to locate
Tilar
M., Christopher L. and Tenzin G. pursuant to the warrants issued by ACS
and this Court. With
respect to Christopher L., Detective Seger maintains regular telephone
contact with the juvenile's
mother and she provides him with updates as to her sightings of Christopher
at home or in the
neighborhood. Because he previously apprehended Christopher at home on
two prior occasions
when he had run away from Close to Home, Detective Seger occasionally
stops by the family's
home to try to catch Christopher coming or going. According to Detective
Seger, he most
recently saw Christopher at his mother's house on May 14, 2013. When
Seger attempted to
apprehend Christopher, he jumped out of a side window, yelled "suck my
d**k" at Seger, and
[*12]
then proceeded to run down the street
and out of sight.
As for Tilar M., Detective Seger stated that he has "never seen" him although he is
actively searching for him. Detective Seger has not invested time into
searching for Tenzin G.
as he has information that Tenzin relocated with his family to the City of
Utica in Oneida
County, New York. There is no information as to whether anyone is actively
searching for
Tenzin G. at this time.[FN12]
Given the recently documented potential for danger to the community posed by
juvenile
delinquents who escape from a Close to Home Initiative placement
(see, Matter of Arnold P., 39
Misc 3d 1219[A], 2013 NY Slip Op 50669[U] [2013]; O. Yaniv, New
York teen who escaped
nonsecure' group home arrested on murder charge, New York
Daily News, June 30, 2013), and
the alarmingly large number of escapes by juveniles placed in the ACS
Juvenile Justice Initiative
program, common sense would seem to dictate that additional resources be
allocated to locate
and apprehend these youth. However, since September of 2012 there appears
to have been no
additional law enforcement or social services resources committed to
locating juvenile
delinquents who go AWOL, nor any effective solution to stop the torrent of
juvenile delinquents
who escape from Close to Home Initiative placements.[FN13]
[*13]
The Close to Home Initiative was presented as a
plan to provide troubled juvenile
delinquents with needed services in facilities near their homes (Sobie, Supp
Prac Commentaries,
McKinney's Cons Laws of NY, Book 29A, 2013 Cum Ann Pocket Part,
Family Court Act
§353.3 at 101-102). However, a juvenile who simply walks away from
a Close to Home Initiative
placement is receiving no services nor any adult supervision, thereby
creating a potential for self-
harm or harm to others. The possibility that juvenile delinquents might
escape from community-
based Close to Home Initiative placements was certainly considered when
the program was
enacted, and the Legislature has required that ACS report annually as to the
number of juvenile
delinquents who escape from Close to Home Initiative placements (Social
Services Law §404
[11] [g]).[FN14]
Accordingly, the warrant is continued for each respondent and their cases are
continued
pending their involuntary return upon the warrant or their voluntary
appearance before the Court.
E N T E R:
___________________________________
JOHN M. HUNT
Judge of the Family Court
Dated: Jamaica, New York
August 6, 2013