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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. State of Alaska, Department of Family & Community Services, Office of Children's Services v. Karlie T. and Gino H. (11/17/2023) sp-7671

State of Alaska, Department of Family & Community Services, Office of Children's Services v. Karlie T. and Gino H. (11/17/2023) sp-7671

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

         Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

         303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

         corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  

  

  STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT  )                                 

  OF FAMILY & COMMUNITY                                    )   Supreme Court No. S-18500  

  SERVICES, OFFICE OF                                      )     

  CHILDREN'S SERVICES,                                     )   Superior Court No. 3AN-22-00200 CN  

                                                           )     

                             Appellant,                    )   O P I N I O N  

                                                           )     

           v.                                              )   No. 7671 - November 17, 2023  

                                                           )  

  KARLIE T. and GINO H.,                                   )  

                                                           )  

                             Appellees.                    )  

                    

                  Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third  

                  Judicial District,  Anchorage,  Frank  A. Pfiffner, Judge Pro  

                  Tem, and Adolf V. Zeman, Judge.  

  

                  Appearances:      Katherine   Demarest,  Assistant   Attorney  

                  General, Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General,  

                  Juneau,   for   Appellant.      Julia   Bedell,   Assistant   Public  

                  Defender,         and     Samantha         Cherot,       Public      Defender,  

                  Anchorage,   for   Appellee   Karlie   T.      Monique   Eniero,  

                  Anchorage, for Appellee Gino H.  

  

                  Before:    Winfree,  Chief  Justice,  and  Maassen,  Carney,  

                  Borghesan, and Henderson, Justices.  

                    

                  WINFREE, Chief Justice.  

                    

I.       INTRODUCTION  



                  The Office of Children's Services (OCS) took emergency custody of a  



child within days of her birth.  OCS then filed an emergency child in need of aid (CINA)  



petition in the superior court, seeking an order confirming probable cause to believe the  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

child was in need of aid and granting OCS temporary custody of the child pending  



further proceedings.  The superior court held an evidentiary hearing and concluded that  



OCS had not shown probable cause to believe the child was a child in need of aid, and  



it then dismissed the CINA case.  The superior court later denied OCS's reconsideration  



motion, and OCS then appealed.  We reversed the superior court's decision in a short  



summary order (with an opinion to follow), remanding to reopen the CINA case and  



conduct further proceedings in the normal course.  We now explain our order.  



II.     FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



        A.      OCS's Assumption Of Emergency Custody And Its CINA Petition  



                                                                             1 

                Karlie T. and Gino H. are the parents of  Cora T.,   born May 31, 2022.   



                                                                                        2 

OCS took emergency custody of Cora directly from the hospital on June 3  and filed an  



emergency petition to adjudicate Cora as a child in need of aid and obtain temporary  



                                                       3 

custody of Cora pending further proceedings.    OCS alleged that Cora was a child in  



                                                              4 

need of aid under three provisions of AS 47.10.011.    



                OCS cited ongoing concerns of domestic violence between the parents and  



their previous refusals to actively engage with OCS after prior contacts.   The agency  



asserted that it had assumed emergency custody of Karlie's two older children in March  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        1       We use pseudonyms to protect the family's privacy.  



        2       See  AS 47.10.142 (providing for emergency custody of child in certain  

circumstances); CINA Rule 6 (implementing procedure for AS 47.10.142  emergency  

custody).  

        3       See generally Miranda T. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  

Child. 's Servs., 524 P.3d 1105, 1107-09 (Alaska 2023) (describing three early stages of  

CINA proceedings, including probable cause determination whether child may be in  

need  of  aid,  an  adjudication  determination  whether  child  is  in  need  of  aid,  and  a  

disposition determination for OCS's custody and placement of child in need of aid).  

        4       AS 47.10.011 provides that a court may determine a child is in need of aid  

if the child has been subjected to any of 12 enumerated situations.  



                                                  -2-                                              7671  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

2021  after  Karlie  was  found  "intoxicated,  unconscious,  and  unresponsive"  during  a  



welfare check, leaving the children without "adequate supervision."  It alleged that there  



had been domestic violence in Karlie's past relationships, and it described Gino's prior  



conviction for felony assault in 2017 based on evidence that he struck his young  son.   



OCS  summarized:    "Due  to  [Karlie's]  inability  to  recognize  the  ongoing  domestic  



violence  in  her  relationship,  [Gino's]  inability  to  recognize  the  ongoing  domestic  



violence in his relationship, and [Cora] being a vulnerable infant, [OCS] is requesting  



temporary custody with removal at this time."   



                                                                           5 

                OCS noted that it believed Cora is an Indian child  under the Indian Child  



                          6 

Welfare Act (ICWA).   Cora's Tribe later submitted an affidavit regarding Cora's tribal  



                                                           7 

membership  along  with  an  intervention  notice.     The  superior  court  approved  the  



                                                                             8 

Tribe's intervention and appointed a guardian ad litem for Cora.    



        B.      The Probable Cause Hearing And Underlying Facts  



                The  case  was  assigned  to  Superior  Court  Judge  Adolf  V.  Zeman,  but  



because he was unavailable the probable cause hearing was held before Superior Court  



Judge Pro Tem Frank A. Pfiffner.  For Cora to remain in OCS's custody, the court  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        5       See  25  U.S.C.  §  1903(4)  (defining  "Indian  child"  as  "any  unmarried  

person who is under age eighteen and is either (a) a member of an Indian tribe or (b) is  

eligible for membership in an Indian tribe and is the biological child of a member of an  

Indian tribe").  

        6       25 U.S.C. §§ 1901-1963.  ICWA establishes "minimum Federal standards  

for the removal of Indian children from their families and [for] the placement of such  

children  in  foster  or adoptive  homes which  will  reflect  the  unique  values  of  Indian  

culture[.]"  25 U.S.C. § 1902.   

        7       See  25 U.S.C. § 1911(c) (authorizing child's Tribe to intervene in state  

court child custody or protection proceedings).  

        8       See AS 47.10.050(a) (authorizing appointment of guardian ad litem when  

"it appears to the court that the welfare of a child in the [CINA] proceeding will be  

promoted by the appointment").  



                                                  -3-                                               7671  


----------------------- Page 4-----------------------

needed to  make several findings, including, as relevant to this appeal,  that probable  



                                                                                          9 

cause existed to believe she was a child in need of aid under AS 47.10.011.   



                OCS had alleged in its petition that Cora was a child in need of aid under  



AS 47.10.011(6), (9), and (10), as follows:    



                (6)  . . . there is a substantial risk  that the child will suffer  

                substantial  physical  harm,  as  a  result  of  conduct  by  or  

                conditions created by the child's parent . . .[;]  



                (9) conduct by or conditions created by the parent  . . . have  

                subjected the child or another child in the same household to  

                neglect; [or]  



                (10) the parent['s] . . . ability to parent has been substantially  

                impaired by the addictive or habitual use of an intoxicant,  

                and  the  addictive  or  habitual  use  of  the  intoxicant  has  

                resulted in a substantial risk of harm to the child . . . .  



                At the beginning of the probable cause hearing, the court allowed OCS to  



amend its petition to include allegations that Cora was in need due to parental conduct  



listed in AS 47.10.011(8) :   



                (8) conduct by or conditions created by the parent . . . [that]  

                have  



                        (A) resulted in mental injury to the child; or  



                        (B) placed the child at substantial risk of mental injury  

                as a result of  



                                (i) a pattern of rejecting, terrorizing, ignoring,  

                or  corrupting  behavior  that  would,  if  continued,  result  in  

                mental injury; or  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        9       See CINA Rule 6(b) (regarding necessity of probable cause to issue order  

for emergency temporary custody of child in need of aid); CINA Rule 10(c) (regarding  

necessity  of  probable  cause  for  temporary  custody  order).    Probable  cause  "is  

established where reasonably trustworthy information would justify a prudent person's  

belief that the child is in need of aid."  In re J.A. , 962 P.2d 173, 176 (Alaska 1998).   

This  essentially  reflects  "a  fair  probability  or  substantial  chance,"  id.  (quoting  Van  

Sandt v. Brown, 944 P.2d 449, 452 (Alaska  1997)), less than the preponderance of the  

evidence showing required at an adjudication hearing, see CINA Rule 15(c).  



                                                  -4-                                              7671  


----------------------- Page 5-----------------------

                               (ii)   exposure   to   conduct   by   a   household  

               member [as defined by domestic violence statutes] against  

               another  household  member  [that  is   a  felony  crime  of  

               domestic violence]; or   



                               (iii)  repeated   exposure     to  conduct     by   a  

               household   member   [as   defined   by   domestic   violence  

               statutes]   against   another   household   member   [that   is   a  

               misdemeanor crime of domestic violence.]  



               The underlying facts OCS presented at the hearing to make these showings  



spanned back over five years and involved not only Karlie, Gino, and Cora, but also  



Karlie's older children and her and Gino's past partners.   



               1.      Interactions between Karlie and Gino concerning to OCS  



               OCS asserted in its petition and at the probable cause hearing that a history  



of domestic violence exists between Karlie and Gino, focusing on three interactions:   



Gino breaking Karlie's bedroom window, Gino pulling Karlie's hair with enough force  



to leave a small bald spot, and Karlie scratching Gino's face during a dispute.   



               OCS called an Anchorage police officer to testify about a May 12, 2022  



incident when Gino had called the police "stating that he was trying to get away from  



[Karlie]."  The officer testified that he and another officer responded to Gino's call and  



that  Gino  "alleged  that  [Karlie]  had  scratched  his  face  during  an  altercation."    The  



officer said he observed "a red scratch mark" that was "underneath [Gino's] right eye  



on his right upper cheek area."  The officer said he reviewed traffic camera footage  



showing the incident and that the footage showed:   



                [T]hey were both walking in the road, walking eastbound.  

                [He] was to the left of [her].  [She], at first, she tries to reach  

               out, appears to, like, grab his left arm - or his right arm, on  

               her  left  side. . . .  [I]t  doesn't  appear  to  be  in,  like,  an  

               aggressive manner.  He kind of shrugs away.  He doesn't  

               allow her to do that.  They continue a couple of feet down  

               the road. . . . [A] bit later, [she] reaches up with her hands  

               towards the direction of [his] face."   



                                                -5-                                            7671  


----------------------- Page 6-----------------------

               The officer said he spoke to Karlie after the incident and that she told him  



"it was an argument over property pertaining to a bank card."  The officer said Karlie  



"claimed to me her intention was to remove his hood from his head, but she said she  



accidentally scratched him in the process."  Karlie then was  arrested because of an  



unrelated  warrant,  but  she  later  also  was  charged  with  "a  misdemeanor  [domestic  



violence] assault" for scratching Gino.    



               The officer testified that when Karlie learned she was going to be arrested  



on the outstanding warrant, "she then . . . claimed [Gino] broke her window. . . .  I tried  



to ask her further questions . . . [but] she did not go into further detail about that."  The  



officer also stated:  "Later at the hospital . . . she also disclosed to me . . . [that] about  



one week prior there was another incident where she alleged [Gino] had pulled on her  



hair and caused a little bit of hair to pull out."  He further stated that Karlie "pull[ed] up  



the back of her hair" and, although he "didn't see any redness or any visible injury" he  



saw "one spot . . . a very small section where there wasn't hair growing."   



               The officer testified that he had interacted with Karlie once prior to the  



May 12 incident.  He said that in February 2022 Anchorage police received a call from  



"[a] woman I believed to be [Karlie's] mother" who was "claiming that [Karlie] was  



being abused by  [someone]."  He testified that when he went to Karlie's residence to  



speak with her,  she "didn't appear to have any injuries" and she "claimed to me that  



there had been no disturbance, she wasn't being abused, and her mother was, basically,  



intoxicated and saying things [and] just being paranoid."   



               OCS's caseworker for Karlie's family testified that the foster parents for  



Karlie's older children reported "multiple occasions where [Karlie] had bruises on her,  



and they are concerned with domestic violence going on."  That caseworker said it was  



her "understanding that the incident in May, as well as both parents' history, was a  



cause of concern for . . . [Cora's] safety."  Another caseworker testified that Cora was  



"at impending danger of risk due to the parents' history and inability to control their  



                                              -6-                                          7671  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

emotions."  She stated that Cora "is a young vulnerable infant  . . . [a]nd if the parents  



can't control their own behaviors and lash out towards each other, she's at risk."    



              2.     Karlie's past conduct concerning to OCS  



              OCS contended that Karlie's past conduct contributed to its conclusion  



that Cora was at risk of mental and physical harm in Karlie and Gino's custody.  OCS  



presented evidence about Karlie's two older children being removed due to Karlie's  



substance abuse, her past partners having abused her and her older children, her failure  



to complete counseling required in the case plan for her older children, and her refusal  



to report her partners' violence or protect her children from it.   



              The family caseworker testified that OCS had assumed custody of Karlie's  



older children after "a welfare check was done . . . [and] she was found intoxicated, and  



her children left without a caregiver."  At OCS's request the superior court took judicial  



notice that the two older children had been found to be children in need of aid and had  



been  removed from Karlie's custody.   The caseworker, who had worked with Karlie  



and the two children's fathers, testified that the boy's father had bit and thrown the boy  



and asserted that the father has "a history of assault, as well as assault on [Karlie and  



the boy]."  She also testified that the girl's father "is a known sex offender who was in  



prison for six years due to his sex offense."  The caseworker explained that OCS "wants  



[Karlie] to engage in counseling services to work on the behaviors that lead her to a  



pattern . . . of unhealthy relationships."  The caseworker stated that Karlie had engaged  



in most of the services called for in the case plan developed after her older children's  



removal, including "an integrated substance abuse assessment," "parenting classes,"  



"healthy  relationships  classes,"  and  an  "outpatient  program."    But  she  expressed  



concern that Karlie "has not engaged with counseling services" set out in her case plan.   



              The caseworker further explained that OCS "has concerns with [Karlie's]  



ability to be a protective parent and to protect her children from domestic violence."   



She testified that OCS learned that Karlie "did report to the police officers that there  



                                            -7-                                        7671  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

was domestic violence" between her and Gino in May, but that OCS "would like to  



have her report that [domestic violence] as soon as it happens, and be willing to work  



with providers such as police, in order to protect herself and her children."  OCS's other  



witness summed up OCS's concerns by stating:  " [I]f [Karlie] can't protect herself, she  



can't be relied upon to protect a vulnerable infant."   



               3.     Gino's conduct and criminal convictions concerning to OCS  



               OCS presented evidence of Gino's criminal history and his unwillingness  



to engage with social services.  The superior court admitted into evidence three past  



convictions.  One was from March 2017, when Gino pleaded guilty to felony assault of  

a child under age 12 (requiring medical treatment).10  He was sentenced to active and  



suspended jail time and three years of probation.  The caseworker testified that during  



a case planning meeting with Gino in September 2022 they discussed this conviction  



and OCS's concerns, but Gino "didn't see that there was a problem with his history."   

The other convictions were entered after no contest pleas for misdemeanor assault11 and  



unlawful contact with a crime victim in October 2020.12  He was sentenced to 90 days  



in jail and three years' probation; both judgments ordered Gino to have no contact with  



a specified person.   



               The  caseworker  testified  about  Gino's  refusal  to  engage  with  OCS's  



services.  She said Gino told her "that he could have gone to anger management classes  



to avoid some or all his jail time, but  . . . that he would rather go to jail than engage in  



services."  She said that after her September 2021 meeting with Gino, she "continued  



to  offer  case  planning  meetings"  and  "maintained  regular  contact  with  him."    She  



testified that from "November of [2021] to February" she "reached out to him multiple  



_____________________________________________________________________  

       10      AS 11.41.220(a)(1)(C)(i).  



       11      Anchorage Municipal Code (AMC) 08.10.010(B)(1).     



       12      AMC 08.30.115(A).     



                                              -8-                                         7671  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

times . . . to schedule an in-person case planning meeting."  But she said that Gino  



"mainly ignored my attempts to reach him" and "only responded periodically" to texts.   



She  also  said  that  in  February  2022  she  had  a  case  planning  meeting  with  Gino  to  



discuss multiple services that OCS recommended for him, but that Gino informed her  



"that he does not know why he needs to engage in services, and that he does not see  



that there  [are]  any concerns with his ability to keep children safe."  The caseworker  



concluded by stating that Gino's past  assaults on a child and others  and his refusal to  



engage  in  services  directed  to  anger management and domestic  violence prevention  



posed a risk of harm to Cora.   



               4.     The superior court's ruling  



               The court issued findings and an order from the bench at the conclusion  



of the probable cause hearing.  The court started by saying it would dismiss the case,  



telling OCS:  "You don't have any probable cause, and there's no basis for removal."   



The court ordered that Cora be returned to her parents "before the end of the day."  The  



court then explained its decision.  



               The  court  first  stated  that  OCS  had  "basically  abandoned  all  of  [the]  



claims in the Petition, except you came up with a new one, which I allowed you to do,"  



referring to the amended allegations regarding  section .011(8).  The court nonetheless  



did address the initial allegations of substantial risk of substantial physical harm under  



section .011(6) as well as the allegations of mental injury and substantial risk of mental  



injury under subsections .011(8)(B)(i) and (ii).   



               The court said it found "no behavior" by the parents like that described in  



subsection  .011(8)(B)(i):    "conduct  or  conditions  created  by  the  parent  [that]  have  



placed the child at substantial risk of mental injury as a result of a pattern of rejecting,  



terrorizing, ignoring, isolating, or corrupting behavior that would, if continued, result  



in mental injury."  The court further said it found "no evidence of exposure" to domestic  



violence between household members under subsection .011(8)(B)(ii).  As for section  



                                               -9-                                          7671  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

.011(6),  the  court  said  "there's  no  evidence  that  the  child  has  suffered  substantial  



physical harm and otherwise, there's no risk of - or there's no evidence of [domestic  



violence]  other  than  this  May  12th  thing  between  these  two  parents."    The  court  



concluded by stating that "I just think . . . [OCS] ran scared because of this other case  



[with Karlie's older kids] and filed this case . . . without a legal basis to do so."   



               5.      Denial of OCS's motion for reconsideration   



               OCS filed a motion for reconsideration of the court's order as it pertained  



to subsection .011(8)(B)(ii), asserting that the court had misinterpreted the provision to  



require that the child be directly and personally exposed to domestic violence.   The  



parents each filed an opposition to the reconsideration motion.    Judge Zeman  denied  



the  motion,  stating:    "Based  on  the  language  of  AS  47.10.011(8)(B)(ii)  and  the  



applicable case law, the Court did not misapply the law."  Referring to Judge Pfiffner's  



ruling, Judge Zeman concluded:  



               [T]he    Court    properly    considered    the   totality  of   the  

               circumstances in finding there was not a fair probability or  

               substantial chance that the child was a child in need of aid  

               under the probable cause standard.  Moreover, the Court did  

               not misapply the law in determining the child had to actually  

               be   exposed     to  domestic     violence   under    [subsection]  

               .011(8)(B)(ii).   



               6.      Appeal  



               OCS appealed the superior court's rulings that probable cause did not exist  



to believe that Cora is a child in need of aid under AS 47.10.011(6) and (8)(B)(i) and  



(ii).    In  our  earlier  order, we  agreed  with  OCS  that  the  superior  court  erred by not  



concluding there was probable cause under AS 47.10.011(6) and (8)(B)(i).   



                                               -10-                                           7671  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

III.    STANDARD OF REVIEW  



               "Whether probable cause exists" to find that a child is in need of aid "is a  

mixed  question of  law  and  fact."13    "We  review  the  content  of  the  superior  court's  



findings for clear error."14  "Absent clear error, this court will accept the factual findings  



of the lower court."15  "  'Whether probable cause arises from [the] facts, however, is a  



purely legal question' that this court reviews de novo."16  



IV.     DISCUSSION  



        A.     Overview  



               This appeal requires that we consider the following questions of statutory  



interpretation:  what does "substantial risk" of substantial physical harm mean under  



AS 47.10.011(6);      what    does   "substantial   risk"   of   mental   injury   mean     under  



AS 47.10.011(8)(B);       and    what     does    "exposure     to    conduct"     mean     under  



AS 47.10.011(8)(B)(ii)?  Statutory interpretation is a question of law we review de novo  

in our independent judgment.17  



               "When determining a statute's meaning, we consider three factors:  the  



language of the statute, the legislative history, and the legislative purpose behind the  

statute."18  "The objective of statutory construction is to give effect to the intent of the  



legislature,  with  due  regard  for  the  meaning  that  the  statutory  language  conveys  to  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        13     In re J.A. , 962 P.2d 173, 175 (Alaska 1998).  



        14     Philip J. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child . 's Servs.,  

314 P.3d 518, 526 (Alaska 2013).  

        15     In re J.A. , 962 P.2d at  175.  



        16     Id. (quoting Saucier v. State, 869 P.2d 483, 484 (Alaska App. 1994)).  



        17     Cora G. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

461 P.3d 1265, 1276 (Alaska 2020).  

        18     Id.   at  1277  (internal  quotations  omitted)  (quoting  Alaska  Ass'n  of  

Naturopathic Physicians v. State, Dep't of Com., Cmty. & Econ. Dev., 414 P.3d 630,  

634 (Alaska 2018)).  



                                               -11-                                           7671  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

others."19    "We  give  unambiguous  statutory  language  its  ordinary  and  common  



meaning,  but  the  'plain  meaning  rule'  is  not  an  exclusionary  rule;  we  will  look  to  

legislative history as a guide to construing a statute's words."20  "We have declined to  



mechanically apply the plain meaning rule when interpreting statutes, adopting instead  



a sliding scale approach:  'The plainer the statutory language is, the more convincing  



the evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent must be.'  We apply this sliding  

scale approach even if a statute is facially unambiguous."21    



        B.     "Substantial Risk" Of Harm In Both AS 47.10.011(6) And (8)(B)  



               1.      Ordinary and common meaning  



               "In  the  absence of a [statutory] definition, we  construe  statutory  terms  



according to their common meaning[;] [d]ictionaries provide a useful starting point for  

this exercise."22   "Substantial" is defined as "[r]eal and not imaginary; having actual,  



not fictitious, existence,"23 or as "not seeming or imaginary:  not illusive."24  "Risk" is  



defined as "uncertainty of a result, happening, or loss; the chance of injury . . .  ; esp.,  

the existence and extent of the possibility of harm,"25  and as "the possibility of loss,  



_____________________________________________________________________  

       19      Id.  (quoting Heller v. State, Dep't of Revenue , 314 P.3d 69, 74 (Alaska  

2013)).  

       20      Id. (quoting Heller, 314 P.3d at 74).  



       21      State, Dep't of Com., Cmty. & Econ. Dev., Div. of Ins. v. Alyeska Pipeline  

Serv. Co., 262 P.3d 593, 597 (Alaska 2011) (quoting Gov't Emp. Ins. Co. v. Graham- 

Gonzalez, 107 P.3d 279, 284 (Alaska 2005)).  

       22      State v. Recall Dunleavy, 491 P.3d 343, 359 (Alaska 2021) (alterations in  

original) (internal quotations omitted).  

       23      Substantial, BLACK 'S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019).  



       24      Substantial,  WEBSTER 'S  THIRD  NEW  INTERNATIONAL  DICTIONARY,  

UNABRIDGED (3d ed. 2002).  

       25      Risk,  BLACK 'S  LAW   DICTIONARY   (11th  ed.  2019).    See  also  Risk  

Assessment, id. (noting that in family law risk assessment refers to process to determine  

likelihood that "a parent[] will harm a child" and that before removing a child from the  

                                              -12-                                           7671  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

injury, disadvantage, or destruction:  contingency, danger, peril, threat" or "someone or  



something that creates or suggests a hazard or adverse chance:  a dangerous element or  

factor - often used with qualifiers to indicate the degree or kind of hazard[.]"26    



               One legal authority defining "substantial risk" is the Restatement (Third)  



of the Law Governing Lawyers.  A comment to the Restatement's Basic Prohibition of  



Conflicts of Interest, referring to a conflict when "there is a 'substantial risk' that a  



material adverse effect will occur," states that "[i]n this context, 'substantial risk' means  



that in the circumstances the risk is significant and plausible, even if it is not certain or  



even  probable  that  it  will  occur"  and  that  the  standard  "requires  more  than  a  mere  

possibility of adverse effect."27    Another legal authority is  the tentative draft of the  



Restatement of the Law:  Children and the Law, which defines "substantial risk" in the  

context  of  "civil  child-protection  proceeding[s]"  based  on  "physical  neglect."28    It  



explains that "[t]o satisfy the substantial risk standard, there must be a strong possibility  

of serious harm, not simply a remote or insignificant possibility."29  



_____________________________________________________________________  



family "a risk assessment should be performed to determine the likelihood of the child's  

being harmed in the future").  

        26     Risk,   WEBSTER 'S       THIRD     NEW      INTERNATIONAL         DICTIONARY,  

UNABRIDGED (3d ed. 2002).  

        27     RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF THE LAW GOVERNING LAWYERS §  121 cmt.  

c(iii) (AM. L. INST . 2000).   

        28     RESTATEMENT OF THE LAW : CHILDREN AND THE LAW  § 2.24(b) (AM. L.  

INST .,  Tentative  Draft  No.  2,  2019)  (explaining  that  "[i]n  a  civil  child-protection  

proceeding, a child is physically neglected when the child suffers serious physical harm  

or is exposed to a substantial risk of serious physical harm").   

        29     Id.  § 2.24 cmt. e ("The harm standard adopted in this Section includes the  

creation of a substantial risk of serious physical harm to a child.  Actual harm need not  

occur.  The focus is on the potential for the acts and omissions to lead to serious physical  

harm.").   



                                              -13-                                           7671  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

                Another very similar definition comes from Wyoming's child protection  



laws:   " 'Substantial risk'  means a strong possibility as contrasted with a remote or  

insignificant   possibility."30      The   three   definitions   align   by   recognizing   that   a  



"substantial  risk"  is  more  than  a  "mere  possibility"  or  a  "remote  or  insignificant  



possibility,"  although  Wyoming  characterizes  a  substantial  risk  as  more  likely  to  



materialize  than  does  the  Restatement  (Third)  of  the  Law  Governing  Lawyers,  



describing such a risk as a "strong possibility."  Defining "substantial risk" as more than  



a mere or remote possibility aligns with relevant dictionary definitions of "substantial"  



as meaning "not imaginary," and "having . . . actual existence."    



                2.      Legislative purpose   



                The  legislature  has  determined  that  "it  is  the  policy  of  the  state  to  



strengthen  families  and  to  protect  children  from  child  abuse  and  neglect;  the  state  



recognizes that, in some cases, protection of a child may require removal of the child  

from the child's home."31  The current version of AS 47.10.011 took effect in 1998 after  



legislation32  written  in  response  to  the  Governor's  Child  Protection  Review  Team33  



became  law.34    Governor Tony Knowles  directly  advocated for  the  child protection  



reforms contained in House Bill 375, writing:   



                National statistics have shown Alaska has the highest rate of  

                child   abuse   and  neglect   among   all   50   states   with  38  

_____________________________________________________________________  

        30      WYO.  STAT. ANN .  § 14-3-202(a)(ii)(C) (West 2023) (" 'Substantial risk'  

means a strong possibility as contrasted with a remote or insignificant possibility . . . .");  

see  also  OHIO  REV.  CODE  ANN .  §  2901.01(A)(8)  (West  2023)  ("  'Substantial  risk'  

means a strong possibility, as contrasted with a remote or significant possibility, that a  

certain result may occur or that certain circumstances may exist.").   

        31      AS 47.06.030(2).   



        32      House Bill (H.B.) 375, 20th Leg., 2d Sess. (1998).  



        33      See  Minutes, H. Fin. Comm., Hearing on H.B. 375, 20th Leg., 2d Sess.  

(May 2, 1998) (statement of Rep. Fred Dyson).   

        34      Ch. 99, §  18, SLA 1998.  



                                                 -14-                                              7671  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

                substantiated  cases  for  every  1,000  children  in  the  state's  

                population.        These    disturbing     numbers     have    steadily  

                increased since the 1980's along with increases in substance  

                abuse and domestic violence.  One abuse feeds another.  The  

                cycle must stop.  We're shirking our greatest responsibility  

                if we don't face this tragedy head on and demand the tools,  

                laws and resources to put an end to it.  [35]  



The governor described the bill as making "many changes in Alaska law to  protect  

children and prevent crime."36  The "most significant" included "[u]pdating the child in  



need of aid laws to put children first and make sure every effort is made to reunify the  

family when appropriate[.]"37   



                During a House Finance Committee hearing on HB 375, Representative  



Fred Dyson said that the CINA reforms would " [a]llow[] for earlier intervention in  

cases of child abuse and neglect when the child is in a dangerous home." 38  He stated  



that the bill would "[m]ake[] child protection the highest priority for [OCS], even higher  

than 'family reunification' at the expense of child safety ."39  At that hearing Assistant  



Attorney  General  Susan  G.  Wibker  testified  that  the  bill  would  remove  the  word  



"imminent" from CINA's jurisdictional statute, which then referred to "imminent and  

substantial  risk  of  harm"  to  children.40    That  change  was  in  response  to  an  audit  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        35       1998 H. Journal 2201-02.   



        36      Id. at 2202.  



        37      Id.  



        38      Minutes,  H.  Fin.  Comm.,  Hearing  on  H.B.  375,  20th  Leg.,  2d  Sess.  

(May 2,  1998) (statement of Rep. Fred Dyson).  

        39      Id.  



        40      Id.   (statement  of  Susan  G.  Wibker,  Asst.  Att'y  Gen.)    Under  the  

predecessor to the current version of AS 47.10.011(6), a child could be declared in need  

of aid upon a showing of "an  imminent  and substantial  risk that the child will suffer  

such harm as a result of the actions done by or conditions created by the child's parent,  

                                                  -15-                                               7671  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

undertaken by the Kempe Center after a report that a young girl in State care had been  

sexually assaulted.41  Wibker said that the Kempe Center reviewed a random selection  



of cases  and advised that Alaska's statutes were written too narrowly  and that social  



workers were handicapped in their ability to assess ongoing, high risk, and dangerous  

situations.42  Wibker said that the Kempe Center had concluded that Alaska's laws were  



some  of  the  most  restrictive  in  all  of  the  states,  "resulting  in  children  being  left  in  

dangerous situations."43  At a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting, Assistant Attorney  



General Lisa Nelson, Chief of the Human Services Section of the Department of Law,  



testified that Senate Bill 272 (the companion bill to HB 375) "allows for earlier court  



intervention in cases of abuse and neglect and quicker placement of children into safe  

homes."44   



                 3.       Conclusion  



                 "[T]he right to the care and custody of one 's own child is a fundamental  

right recognized by both the federal and state constitutions."45   This right implicates  



_____________________________________________________________________  



                                   

guardian, or custodian[.]"    In re S.A. , 912 P.2d 1235, 1237 (Alaska 1996) (quoting  

former AS 47.10.010(a)(2)(C) (1995)).   

         41      Minutes, H. Fin. Comm., Hearing on H.B. 375, 20th Leg., 2d Sess. (May  

2, 1998) (statement of Susan G. Wibker, Asst. Att'y Gen.).  

         42      Id.  



         43      Id.  



         44      Minutes, S. Jud. Comm., Hearing on S.B. 272, 20th Leg., 2d Sess. (May  

4, 1998) (statement of Lisa Nelson, Asst. Att'y Gen).  

         45      Dennis  O.  v.  Stephanie  O. ,  393  P.3d  401,  407  (Alaska  2017)  (quoting  

J.M.R. v. S.T.R. , 15 P.3d 253, 257 (Alaska 2001)); Mariah B. v. State, Dep 't of Health  

& Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 499 P.3d 1021, 1027 (Alaska 2021) ("And  '[i]n  

cases involving issues of such fundamental importance as parents' rights to raise their  

children, it is imperative that the legal system act with great care to protect parties'  

rights. ' "  (quoting Diego K. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s  

Servs., 411 P.3d 622, 628 (Alaska 2018))).  



                                                     -16-                                                 7671  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

constitutional considerations of privacy46 and liberty.47  But we have also explained that  



"this right is not absolute" and that when "the best interests of a child require it, a state  



may  terminate  parental  rights  provided  that  the  proper  procedural  safeguards  are  

observed."48   These considerations  factor into our  interpretation of "substantial risk,"  



and we strive to balance the private interest in family autonomy with the state's interest  

in  protecting  children  from  harm.49    Based  on  all  the  foregoing,  we  conclude  that  



"substantial risk" in both AS 47.10.011(6) and (8)(B) refers to a threat of  "substantial  



physical harm" or "mental injury,"  respectively,  that is actual, significant, and more  



than a mere possibility, but that the threat need not be probable, nor imminent, to satisfy  



the statutes.   



_____________________________________________________________________  

        46     See  Ravin  v.  State,  537  P.2d  494,  500  (Alaska  1975)  ("[T]he  zone  of  

privacy involves the area of the family [.]").   

        47     Richard B. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Div. of Fam. & Youth  

Servs., 71 P.3d 811, 831 (Alaska 2003) (explaining that child  custody  is "one of the  

most basic of all civil liberties," and recognizing that "the protections of the due process  

clause . . . should be accorded significant weight" (quoting Flores v. Flores , 598 P.2d  

893, 895 (Alaska 1979))).   

        48     Matthisen v. Matthisen , No. S-11317, 2005 WL 1253497, at *8 (Alaska  

May 25, 2005).   

        49     See  RESTATEMENT  OF  THE  LAW :  CHILDREN  AND  THE  LAW  intro.  note  

(AM. L. INST ., Tentative Draft No. 1, 2018) ("Parents living in poverty or in minority  

racial, ethnic, and religious communities may adopt child-rearing approaches that differ  

from mainstream practices and values but that do not pose a substantial risk of serious  

harm  to  their  children.    Limiting  state  intervention  for  child-protection  purposes  to  

parental conduct that threatens serious harm to children preserves the privacy of all  

families from unwarranted intrusion.").   



                                               -17-                                            7671  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

        C.      "Exposure" In AS 47.10.011(8)(B)(ii)  



                1.     Context   



                A child can be found in need of aid under three different subsections of  



AS 47.10.011(8)(B) if conduct or conditions created by a parent have "placed the child  



at substantial risk of mental injury as a result of":  



                       (i)  a  pattern  of  rejecting,  terrorizing,  ignoring,  or  

                corrupting behavior that would, if continued, result in mental  

                injury;[50] or  



                       (ii) exposure to conduct by a household member [as  

                defined   by   domestic   violence   statutes]   against   another  

                household  member  [that  is  a  felony  crime  of  domestic  

                violence]; or   



                       (iii)  repeated  exposure  to  conduct  by  a  household  

                member [as defined by domestic violence statutes] against  

                another household member [that is a misdemeanor crime of  

                domestic violence].[51]  



                Contrasting  language  in  (8)(B)(i),  (ii),  and  (iii)  provides  context  for  



determining the meaning of "exposure" in (B)(ii).  Specifically, subsection (B)(i) does  



not mention "exposure" with respect to the stated pattern of serious, but perhaps not  



criminal, misconduct; subsection (B)(ii) refers to "exposure" to stated felony domestic  



violence  conduct;  and  subsection  (B)(iii)  refers  to  "repeated  exposure"  to  stated  



misdemeanor domestic violence conduct.  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        50      See  Pattern,  WEBSTER 'S  THIRD  NEW   INTERNATIONAL   DICTIONARY,  

UNABRIDGED  (3d  ed. 2002) (defining pattern as "a reliable sample of traits, acts, or  

other observable features characterizing an individual); Terrorize, id. (defining terrorize  

as "to fill with terror or anxiety:  . . . to coerce by threat or violence:  . . . to excite fear:  

rule by intimidation").  

        51      We  have  paraphrased  the  statutory  references  to  specific  domestic  

violence crimes for brevity, clarity, and convenience.  



                                                -18-                                             7671  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

               We have held numerous times that ongoing domestic violence can support  

a child in need of aid finding under subsection (B)(i).52   We also have held that  the  



domestic violence does not have to be directed at the child  if the court finds that the  



pattern of behavior, if continued, would create a substantial risk of mental injury to the  

child.53  And we have expressly confirmed that it is not necessary that the child witness  



or be present throughout the pattern of domestic violence at issue under (B)(i).54  



               Subsections (8)(B)(ii) and (iii) allow a court to find a child is in need of  



aid  due  to  exposure  to  felony-level  domestic  violence  or  "repeated  exposure"  to  



misdemeanor-level domestic violence.   OCS asserts that the superior court erred by  



interpreting subsection (B)(ii) to require that  a child  actually be exposed to domestic  



violence to be found a child in need of aid.  According to OCS:   



               The language of the statute does not require proof that the  

               child has already been exposed to violence, but rather, that  

               the child is "at substantial risk of mental injury as a result of  



_____________________________________________________________________  

       52      See, e.g., Philip J. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child. 's  

Servs.,  314  P.3d  518,  521-24,  532  (Alaska  2013)  (affirming  CINA  finding  under  

(8)(B)(i) when record showed father had severely beaten his wife, sexually assaulted  

his children and social guests, held his family hostage, and threatened to kill his family);  

Barbara P.  v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off.  of Child. 's Servs., 234 P.3d  

1245, 1258 (Alaska 2010) (affirming CINA finding under (B)(i) based on substantial  

evidence of ongoing domestic violence between parents);  Winston J. v. State, Dep't of  

Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child. 's Servs., 134 P.3d 343, 348 (Alaska 2006) (holding  

that  father's  assault  of  children's  mother  and  long  history  of  domestic  violence  

supported CINA finding under (8)(B)(i)); Martin N. v. State, Dep't of Health &  Soc.  

Servs., Div. of Fam.  & Youth Servs., 79 P.3d 50, 55 (Alaska 2003)  (affirming CINA  

finding  under  (8)(B)(i)  when  father  had  seriously  assaulted  child's  mother  multiple  

times).  

       53      See Martin N. , 79 P.3d at 55  (holding that father's terrorizing behavior  

aimed at mother created significant risk of mental injury to child if continued).  

       54      See Barbara P., 234 P.3d at 1257  (stating that "AS 47.10.011(8)(B)(i)  

does  not  require  that  the  children  be  physically  present  when  there  is  domestic  

violence").  



                                             -19-                                        7671  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

                . . . exposure" to violence.  If the evidence supports a finding  

               that  the  child  is  likely  to  be  exposed  to  violence  in  her  

               parents'  care  and  that  the  violence  would  place  her  "at  

               substantial  risk  of  mental  injury,"  subsection  (8)(B)(ii)  

               applies.[55] [Emphasis and alterations in original.]   



The  parents,  on  the  other  hand,  argue  that  the  superior  court  correctly  interpreted  



"exposure to domestic violence" as requiring a child to see, hear, or otherwise perceive  



domestic violence.   



               OCS's interpretation of subsection (8)(B)(ii) is implausible and misstates  



the  "risk"  the  statute  is  designed  to  address.    "Exposure"  is  defined  as  "an  act  of  



exposing, laying open, or setting forth[;] . . . an act of subjecting to an experience or  

influence[;] . . . a condition of being exposed to danger or loss."56  Although we "held  



that  witnessing  domestic  violence  is  mentally  harmful  to  children,"57  subsection  



(8)(B)(ii) addresses the risk of mental injury due to exposure to domestic violence, not  



the risk of exposure to domestic violence.  This distinction matters causally:  a child is  



not rendered in need of aid  under (B)(ii) when there is  merely  a  substantial  risk of  



observing felony-level domestic violence in the household, but rather when exposure  



to  felony-level  domestic  violence  subjects  the  child  to  a  substantial  risk  of  mental  



injury.    The  distinction  is  plainer  when  considering  the  requirement  of  "repeated  



exposure" to misdemeanor-level domestic violence to find a child in need of aid under  



subsection (B)(iii) - under OCS's view of subsection (8)(B), "repeated exposure" is  



meaningless.    



_____________________________________________________________________  

        55     Citing AS 47.10.011(8)(B)(ii); Philip J., 314 P.3d at 533.  



        56     Exposure, WEBSTER 'S         THIRD    NEW     INTERNATIONAL         DICTIONARY,  

UNABRIDGED (3d ed. 2002).   

        57     Martin N. , 79 P.3d  at  55  (citing In re  J.A. , 962 P.2d  173,  178  (Alaska  

1998) and Borchgrevink v. Borchgrevink, 941 P.2d 132, 140 (Alaska 1997)); see also  

Philip J.,  314 P.3d at 533;  Cora  G. v.  State,  Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  

Child.'s Servs., 461 P.3d 1265, 1289 n.108 (Alaska 2020).   



                                               -20-                                            7671  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

               Karlie correctly captures the relationship between subsections (8)(B)(i)  



and (ii), contending that (B)(i) is intended to allow the court to make "a CINA finding  



based  on  a  pattern  of  harmful  behavior  regardless  of  whether  the  child  has  yet  



experienced that behavior firsthand" while (B)(ii) "provides a separate vehicle under  



which a child can be found to be at risk of mental injury because of the child's direct  



'exposure'  to  domestic  violence  between  the  child's  parents."    This  interpretation  



reveals a harmonious whole while giving effect to all three provisions of subsection  

(8)(B).58  



               OCS  asserts  in  its  brief  that  our  case  law  supports  its  position  that  



subsections "(8)(B)(i) and (ii) can apply to children too young to have yet been exposed  



to the violence directly." (Emphasis in original.)  But OCS misreads our prior decisions.   



In Martin N.  we affirmed a child in need of aid finding under subsection 8(B)(i), not  



(8)(B)(ii), after noting that (8)(B)(i) looked to the future:  



               [T]he trial court's factual findings were amply supported by  

               the  record,  and  we  agree  that  Martin's  acts  constitute  

               terrorizing   behavior.     We    have   previously   held    that  

               witnessing    domestic    violence    is  mentally   harmful    to  

               children.    There  was  clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  

               Martin's acts toward [the mother] create a significant risk of  

               mental injury to [the child] if continued.[59]  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        58     See Murphy v. Fairbanks N.  Star Borough, 494 P.3d 556, 564 (Alaska  

2021) ("When construing a statute, we must, whenever possible, interpret each part or  

section of a statute with every other part or section, so as to create a harmonious whole."  

(alterations  omitted)  (internal  quotations  omitted)  (quoting  Alaska  Airlines,  Inc.  v.  

Darrow, 403 P.3d 1116, 1127 (Alaska 2017))); Homer Elec. Ass 'n v. Towsley, 841 P.2d  

1042, 1045 (Alaska 1992) (stating "statute should be construed so that effect is given  

to  all  its  provisions,  so  that  no  part  will  be  inoperative  or  superfluous,  void  or  

insignificant."  (quoting Alascom, Inc. v. N .  Slope Borough, Bd. of Equalization,  659  

P.2d 1175, 1178 n.5 (Alaska 1983))).  

        59     Martin N. , 79 P.3d at 55 (emphasis added).   



                                              -21-                                          7671  


----------------------- Page 22-----------------------

                                      

                  In  Winston J.we  also  affirmed  a  child  in  need  of  aid  finding  under  



subsection (8)(B)(i), not (8)(B)(ii).  After noting that Winston argued that the superior  



court had erred by finding his children in need of aid under section .011(8), we quoted  

"in relevant part" subsection (8)(B)(i) when affirming the child in need of aid finding.60  



Likewise in Barbara P.  we affirmed a child in need of aid finding under subsection  



(8)(B)(i), not (8)(B)(ii):  after stating that "AS 47.10.011(8)(B)(i) does not require that  



the children be physically present when there is domestic violence" we further quoted  

that provision and drew upon Martin N. for our decision.61  



                  Finally, although our decision in Philip J. was not as clear, in that case we  



also affirmed a child in need of aid finding under subsection (8)(B)(i), not (8)(B)(ii).62   



We first quoted  the superior court's ruling that Philip's conduct placed the child "at  



substantial risk of mental injury as a result of exposure to domestic violence and repeat  

domestic violence," and cited  in a footnote  to AS 47.10.011(8)(B)(ii).63   This  might  



suggest  that  we  affirmed  the  superior  court's  ruling  on  this  basis.    But  in  the  next  



paragraph we addressed Philip's argument that the child was not in need of aid under  

subsection (8) because he never beat his wife after the child was born.64  We rejected  



that argument because "the statute accounts for future harm based on one parent's past  



abuse of the other parent," borrowing reasoning from Martin N. , which had  affirmed  

findings under AS 47.10.011(8)(B)(i).65   We supported our  statement that  OCS  "was  



_____________________________________________________________________  

         60       Winston J. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child. 's Servs.,  

134 P.3d 343, 348 (Alaska 2006).  

         61      Barbara P. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

234 P.3d 1245, 1257-58 (Alaska 2010).  

         62      Philip J., 314 P.3d at 533.  



         63      Id. at 533 & n.81.   



         64      Id. at 533.  



         65      Id.  



                                                      -22-                                                   7671  


----------------------- Page 23-----------------------

not required to wait until [the child] suffered harm to act" entirely by citing Martin N.66   



Our  analysis affirming the child in need of aid finding under subsection (8) thus was  



drawn entirely from opinions affirming findings under (8)(B)(i), not (8)(B)(ii).   



                2.      Conclusion  

                Based on the plain meaning of subsection (8)(B)(ii), its broader statutory  



context and contrasting language in (8)(B)(i), (ii), and (iii), and our existing case law,  



we conclude that a child must actually have been exposed to domestic violence to be  



found a child in need of aid under the subsection.  



        D.      Application To Contested Superior Court's Probable Cause Rulings  



                A child in need of aid finding under subsection .011(8)(B)(ii) requires that  



the  child  has  been  actually  exposed  to  felony  level  domestic  violence,  creating  a  



substantial risk of mental injury.  It is undisputed that Cora was not actually exposed to  



domestic violence  of any kind.  Accordingly, we affirm the superior court's  original  



conclusion, and the later denial of reconsideration of that conclusion, that there was no  



probable cause to find Cora was in need of aid under this subsection.  



                Neither section .011(6), regarding substantial risk of substantial physical  



injury,  nor  subsection  (8)(B)(i),  regarding  substantial  risk  of  mental  injury  from  a  



pattern of terrorizing-like conduct, requires that a child in need of aid finding be based  



on  a  child's  actual  exposure  to  domestic  violence.    And,  as  we  set  out  earlier,  the  



"substantial risk" under either subsection refers to a threat that is actual, significant, and  



more than a mere possibility, but it need not be probable, nor imminent, to satisfy the  



subsections.    



                At the probable cause stage of this CINA case, the superior court was not  



tasked with making findings whether the child was in need of aid under section .011(6)  



or subsection (8)(B)(i).  The court instead was tasked with determining whether the  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        66      Id.  



                                                  -23-                                               7671  


----------------------- Page 24-----------------------

evidence presented established probable cause  to believe the child was in need of aid,  



i.e., "a fair probability or substantial chance" that the child was in need of aid, under  

section  .011(6)  or  subsection  (8)(B)(i).67    This  low  probable  cause  threshold  for  a  



finding  about  substantial  risk  of  harm  compels  us  to  disagree  with  the  court's  



conclusions that OCS had not established probable cause under section .011(6) and  



subsection (8)(B)(i).  



               As to section .011(6), the superior court said "there's no evidence that the  



child has  suffered substantial  physical  harm and otherwise, there's no risk of  -  or  



there's no evidence of [domestic violence] other than this May 12th thing between these  



two parents."    But  there  was  relevant  evidence of domestic  violence other  than  the  



allegations  about  the  May  12  incident,  evidence  that  supported  a  probable  cause  



determination about a substantial risk of physical harm to the child.  First, there was  



evidence of ongoing domestic violence between Karlie and Gino, specifically evidence  



about Gino breaking Karlie's bedroom window, Gino pulling Karlie by the hair with  



sufficient force to leave a bald spot, the May 12 incident when Karlie scratched Gino's  



face in public, and reports from the foster parents for Karlie's older children that Karlie  



often had bruises suggesting domestic violence.    Second, there was Gino's previous  



felony   conviction   for   assault   on   his   young   son,   along   with   another   previous  



misdemeanor assault conviction.  Coupled with these convictions was testimony that  



Gino saw nothing of consequence arising from his convictions and refused to engage in  



any child protection services, to the point that he would rather go to jail than engage in  



services designed to protect his child.  Third, there was evidence that Karlie struggled  



with unhealthy relationships and protecting her older children from domestic violence  



_____________________________________________________________________  

        67     In re J.A., 962 P.2d 173, 176 (Alaska 1998) (quoting  Van Sandt v. Brown,  

944 P.2d 449, 452 (Alaska 1997)).  



                                               -24-                                           7671  


----------------------- Page 25-----------------------

involving her partners.  This evidence is sufficient to establish probable cause to believe  



the child was in need of aid due to substantial risk of substantial physical injury.  



               As to subsection (8)(B)(i), the superior court found "no behavior" by the  



parents fitting the terrorizing-like conduct described in the subsection.  But the same  



evidence of ongoing domestic violence between Karlie and Gino and of Gino's history  



of  violence,  along  with  the  evidence  of  Karlie's  inability  to  protect  herself  and  her  



children from abusive partners, suggests that domestic violence plays a role in defining  



the family's relationships.  Although a close call, we reiterate that the superior court  



was tasked with making a probable cause determination, not a finding whether the child  



actually was in need of aid.  The evidence is sufficient to  establish probable cause to  



believe  the  child  was  in  need  of  aid  due  to  substantial  risk  of  mental  injury  from  



continued domestic violence in the family.  



V.      CONCLUSION  



               We AFFIRM the superior court's conclusion that there was not probable  



cause to believe Cora was a child in need of aid  under AS 47.10.011(8)(B)(ii).  We  



REVERSE the superior court's conclusions that there was not probable cause to believe  



Cora was a child in need of aid under AS 47.10.011(6) and (8)(B)(i).   



                                               -25-                                            7671  

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