S.A. v. Superior Court CA4/3 ( 2023 )


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  • Filed 6/20/23 S.A. v. Superior Court CA4/3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION THREE
    S.A.,
    Petitioner,                                                      G062390
    v.                                                          (Super. Ct. No. 20DP1072)
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ORANGE                                          OPINION
    COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    ORANGE COUNTY SOCIAL
    SERVICES AGENCY et al.,
    Real Parties in Interest.
    Original proceedings; petition for a writ of mandate/prohibition to
    challenge an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, Mary Kreber Varipapa,
    Judge. Petition denied.
    Martin Schwarz, Public Defender, Richard Cheung, Assistant Public
    Defender, and Brian Okamoto, Deputy Public Defender, for Petitioner.
    Leon J. Page, County Counsel, Karen L. Christensen and Deborah B.
    Morse, Deputy County Counsel, for Real Party in Interest Orange County Social Services
    Agency.
    Law Office of Harold LaFlamme and Marissa B. Hertzberg for Real Party
    in Interest P.A.
    *           *           *
    S.A. (Mother) and A.A. (Father) are the biological parents of P.A. (the
    Minor). The Minor was taken into protective custody in August 2020 based on
    allegations of child abuse by Mother and Father against K.H. and Am.H., the Minor’s
    older half siblings. (Mother and A.H. are the biological parents of K.H. and Am.H.)
    Child welfare proceedings were initiated and the juvenile court found the Minor to be
    within its jurisdiction. In March 2023, the court entered a disposition order determining,
    inter alia, the Minor was a dependent of the juvenile court, and setting the matter for a
    permanency hearing under Welfare and Institutions Code section 366.26. (All further
    statutory references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code, unless otherwise specified.)
    Mother filed a petition for a writ of mandate or prohibition challenging two
    aspects of the disposition order: (1) the finding that reunification services need not be
    provided to Mother under section 361.5, subdivision (b)(6); and (2) the denial of a motion
    for placement of the Minor with a relative in Texas under section 361.3. We conclude
    the juvenile court did not err in its disposition order, and deny the writ petition.
    2
    FACTS
    I. Based on Allegations of Severe Physical Child Abuse to the Minor’s Older Half
    Siblings, the Minor Is Detained
    On August 24, 2020, at approximately 1:00 a.m., Buena Park police were
    dispatched to a motel in Buena Park, California for a child abuse investigation. At the
    time, the Minor was 18 months old, K.H. was eight years old, and Am.H. was five years
    1
    old. (The family is from Houston, Texas, but was temporarily in California in August
    2020.) One officer immediately observed K.H. had “bruising and welts to the right side
    of his face.” K.H. also had “extreme bruising” and welts on his shoulders and arms in a
    pattern indicating he had been “hit with the studded side of a belt.” Another officer
    discovered more marks on K.H.’s back and legs and below his armpits.
    After being read her rights under Miranda v. Arizona (1966) 
    384 U.S. 436
    ,
    Mother admitted she had “‘whooped’” K.H. with a belt for being disrespectful. Although
    she was aiming for his bottom, he was moving around so she hit him on the arms and the
    side. Mother also admitted “she was so enraged at [K.H.]’s behavior, while hitting him
    with the belt, she wasn’t paying attention to the marks on [K.H.]’s body.”
    K.H. was transported to a hospital for a medical clearance. The emergency
    room doctor provided photographs and test results to a child abuse pediatrician at the
    University of California Irvine Medical Center and the Child Abuse Services Team
    (CAST) Medical Unit. That pediatrician observed “numerous large bruises to his right
    face, thighs, arms and upper back, many of which are patterned. Bleeding labs performed
    are normal, therefore there appears to be no overt problem with his ability to clot. There
    has not been accidental trauma history provided to account for all of these current
    1
    This writ proceeding involves only the Minor. K.H. and Am.H. will be addressed
    in this opinion as necessary. Where appropriate, the Minor, K.H., and Am.H. will be
    referred to collectively as the children.
    3
    bruises, especially the patterned bruises. These injuries are most consistent with inflicted
    trauma (child physical abuse).”
    A forensic examination of Am.H. by a pediatrician with the CAST Medical
    Unit showed “[Am.H.] has multiple linear, curvilinear, looped, red marks that [Am.H.]
    stated are from a whooping with a jump rope on more than one occasion. The marks are
    from an object that can be looped and has a small diameter, which could be a jump rope.
    The marks are of different ages – acute (fresh) and some are older (diffuse and/or
    hyperpigmented). The multiple patterned bruises are from more than one event of
    physical abuse.” Am.H. had a scar on her chest; Mother explained she had had open
    heart surgery in 2017 to mend holes found in her heart and she will eventually need a
    pacemaker.
    When questioned by a social worker, K.H. initially came up with excuses
    for the marks on his body. Eventually K.H. admitted Mother disciplined him with a belt
    and Father hit him with his hands. Sometimes Mother would hit him so hard he bled.
    K.H had to be quiet when he was being hit so the neighbors would not contact the police.
    He was afraid Mother would learn he was telling the social workers what happened;
    Mother and Father had told the children not to say what went on because they did not
    want to go to court. The abuse did not stop until K.H. was removed from Mother and
    Father.
    Am.H. told the social worker she and K.H. were regularly beaten by
    Mother and Father with belts, ropes, and phone charging cords. She had significant
    bruising on her body. The abuse had occurred in California and Texas. Like K.H., she
    had been told not to tell anyone about the abuse, and she was afraid Mother and Father
    would whoop her if they found out she told about the earlier whoopings.
    Mother and Father were arrested and charged with two counts of willfully
    inflicting cruel or inhuman corporal punishment on a child. (Pen. Code, § 273d, subd.
    4
    (a).) The Minor, K.H., and Am.H. were placed with licensed foster care provider Dana
    R. (the caregiver).
    II. A Child Welfare Petition Is Filed
    The Orange County Social Services Agency (SSA) filed a petition alleging
    the Minor came within the juvenile court’s jurisdiction under section 300, subdivisions
    (a) (serious physical harm), (b)(1) (failure to protect), (g) (no provision for support), and
    (j) (abuse of sibling). The petition also alleged section 300, subdivision (c) (serious
    emotional abuse) and applied to K.H. and Am.H., and subdivision (i) applied to K.H.
    The petition alleged Mother and Father subjected K.H. and Am.H. to significant physical
    abuse, both were incarcerated, Mother had unresolved mental health issues, and A.H.’s
    whereabouts were unknown. There were no allegations, and there was no evidence, of
    physical abuse of the Minor.
    Mother pleaded guilty to the criminal charges of child cruelty. After
    Mother was released from jail, she moved back to Houston.
    III. After the Minor Is Placed with K.H. and Am.H. in the Caregiver’s Home, K.H. and
    Am.H. Provide Further Information Regarding Physical and Emotional Abuse
    After being placed with the caregiver, K.H. exhibited increasingly difficult
    behavior at bedtime and told the caregiver “he wished that he could just kill himself.” He
    was troubled about ongoing thoughts he wanted “out of his head.” K.H. confided in the
    caregiver he would get “whoopings” with extension cords when there were any issues
    with his schoolwork, and the beatings would continue if he made noise or moved while
    being beaten. He and Am.H. had to stand in the corner without sitting for hours. They
    were punished by being given only bread and water for days at a time. K.H. would be
    left at home alone, or be required to take care of his sisters. Mother would whip his
    hamstrings so hard he could not lay down to sleep at night. She punished K.H. and
    Am.H. by making them lie on their backs and hold their legs slightly off the ground.
    They would get another beating if they put their legs down or held them “up too high.”
    5
    During one beating K.H. was in so much pain he moved, so Mother taped
    his feet to the floor. He broke free and started running to his grandmother’s house, but
    Mother caught him. She then put super glue on his hands and feet and “stuck all of them
    to the floor” and then beat him. Eventually, Mother used a knife to cut one of his hands
    free and gave him the knife to free his other hand and his feet; K.H. cut his hand in the
    process.
    K.H. also told the caregiver Mother taped him to the couch and beat him
    with the curtain rod. Mother sat on him for one hour while he was face down on the
    couch; he said that “‘was the worst one ever’” because he could not breathe. Mother then
    sat on Am.H., but only for about 20 minutes because of her heart problem; Am.H. was
    screaming.
    K.H. told the caregiver Father also emotionally abused him by telling his
    school class he pees on the couch and still has accidents. Father also beat K.H. with a
    piece of wood with nails in it.
    On the night the children were detained, Mother was trying to beat K.H.,
    but he was moving around too much. She then threatened to kill him. She told Father “to
    take over and stated ‘now you’re really going die.’” Father beat K.H. so hard “he could
    feel the hits ‘all the way to my bones.’” K.H. screamed to Mother, “‘help me he’s going
    to kill me,’” but Mother just stood there watching. K.H. told the caregiver Mother had a
    pistol in her purse as well as a shotgun, and Father had an assault rifle and an Uzi.
    K.H. later made more disclosures to the caregiver about the abuse inflicted
    by Mother and Father. While they were living in Texas, K.H. got in trouble when he got
    a doughnut from the kitchen for his maternal great-grandmother. Mother “put him in a
    push up position, and whooped him with an extension cord.” The maternal grandmother
    and great-grandmother tried to stop Mother, but she pulled a gun on them. The maternal
    grandmother and great-grandmother called S.C., A.H.’s aunt, and asked her to help calm
    6
    Mother down. Father then arrived, and “it got worse from there,” but K.H. did not want
    to provide any more details.
    K.H. also told the caregiver about observing acts of domestic violence by
    Father against Mother. The maternal grandmother took Mother to the hospital after
    Father stepped on Mother’s neck, beat her up, and burned her forehead with cigarettes.
    On another occasion, Father dropped a case of water on Mother.
    Am.H. also told the caregiver Mother hit her with a wire hanger. Am.H.
    said she would be slapped in the face if she looked down while she was walking. The
    children would be slapped in the face if they were not wearing socks in the house. As a
    punishment, they would have to hold a watermelon with their arms stretched out in front.
    Punishment also included being fed a frozen corn dog and having to wait until it thawed
    to eat it. They would also be told when they could use the bathroom. If the children did
    not write their name on their water bottle, Mother threatened to put dirt in their water and
    make them drink it.
    In a CAST interview in November 2020, K.H. said “it was bad living in
    Houston due to the whoopins, being slapped in the face and [Father] hitting him on the
    bottom with a metal curtain rod.” He “stated whoopins included being hit on his bottom
    with a belt and [Mother] and [Father] would make him stay still.” One time, he could not
    stay still and Mother glued his shoes to the floor. Mother hit him on the legs and his
    bottom, in front of his sisters.
    K.H. also stated in the CAST interview Mother had given Father
    permission to give K.H. “‘whoopins’” and Father hit harder than Mother. Father hit him
    with a belt, metal hangers, and “lots of other stuff.” On one occasion Father slapped
    K.H. across the face, and Mother put makeup on the mark and told him not to tell anyone
    about it. When his teacher asked what happened, K.H. did not tell her the truth, but the
    teacher spoke to Mother about it. When they got home, Mother hit him on his bottom,
    legs and back with a piece of wood, believing he had disclosed the abuse to the teacher.
    7
    K.H. said he was sometimes beaten so severely he could not sit on a chair and had to
    squat to sit down. The abuse continued until the police intervened in Buena Park.
    K.H. also told the CAST interviewer he had witnessed domestic violence
    between Mother and Father but Mother told him not to talk about it. Mother and Father
    fought with their hands and with other objects; Father threw chairs at Mother, pulled her
    hair, and stood on her body. Father threatened to hurt Mother if she told anyone about
    the abuse. Once Mother went to the hospital after a beating due to a “headache.” K.H.
    saw Father hit Mother with the side of a pistol “on top of her head and her jaw.” K.H.
    was scared and crying in his bed; Father pointed the pistol at K.H. and threatened to kill
    him if he did not “shut up.”
    Am.H. was also interviewed by CAST in November 2020, and told the
    CAST interviewer about an incident where K.H. was given a “whoopin” with a towel just
    because he was standing outside the bathroom. Another time Father hit K.H. above his
    left eye and Mother did nothing about it. Father gave most of the “whoopins” with a
    jump rope or “with nails on a belt.” Mother often used a belt to beat her and K.H.
    Am.H. also witnessed Mother and Father throw things at each other and
    saw Mother’s injuries, including an injury on her forehead above her eye; she was unable
    to provide more details because it was too difficult to talk about. She confirmed Mother
    carried a gun in her purse and Father had a large gun he “sho[o]ts in the air.” The
    maternal grandmother and maternal great-grandmother knew about the abuse because
    they heard the children scream and saw their injuries.
    Father made K.H. “smoke weed.” He was crying and got a headache;
    Mother put his head in the freezer and said Father would make K.H. smoke again if he
    caught him crying. Am.H. also saw Father give K.H. “whoopins on his private parts with
    a belt.” Am.H. said they “received lots of whoopins” while living in Texas.
    8
    IV. S.C. Seeks Relative Placement
    In September 2020, K.H. and Am.H.’s paternal great aunt, S.C., requested
    placement of the children in Houston, Texas. Interstate Compact on Placement of
    Children (Fam. Code, § 7900 et seq.) (ICPC) paperwork was completed by SSA and
    submitted to the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services (DFPS). A
    preliminary home study for S.C. was completed in February 2021. As of June 2021, the
    ICPC was still open and the Texas DFPS has not made any decision. The Minor and
    Am.H. participated in video calls with S.C. K.H. did not want to participate in these
    calls; he told the caregiver S.C. had been aware of the abuse inflicted by Mother and
    Father, but had done nothing to stop it. On one occasion, K.H. recalled, S.C. had been
    called to help calm Mother down when she was beating K.H.
    V. The Minor Does Not Participate in Virtual Visitation, but Minor Does Well with the
    Caregiver
    Mother and Father were authorized to have video calls with the Minor.
    Father generally spent less than five minutes communicating with the Minor. The
    caregiver reported the Minor “wants no part of the visit and pays no attention to them and
    usually hides.”
    At the time she was placed with the caregiver, the Minor was nonverbal,
    and the caregiver expressed concern about the Minor lagging in language development.
    In January 2021, the caregiver reported the Minor’s interactions with the caregiver were
    improving and her responses were becoming more appropriate. She received services at
    the Regional Center.
    An evaluation suggested a diagnosis of autism. “[The Minor]’s social and
    behavior skills are delayed for her age. Th[is] means emotional regulation and social
    interactions are challenging for her. [The Minor] needs a consistent and structured
    environment to help her learn to express and manage her emotions in a healthy manner,
    especially when routine changes or she needs to adapt to a new environment. Developing
    9
    positive and reciprocal social interactions will be important for her to get assistance with
    as she continues to grow and develop. Behavioral Health Treatment (BHT) is
    recommended which includes a Functional Behavior Analysis (FBA) and Applied
    Behavioral Analysis (ABA) to help [the Minor] with problematic behaviors and
    emotional development.”
    VI. The Minor is Found to be Within the Juvenile Court’s Jurisdiction.
    2
    At a bifurcated jurisdiction hearing in March 2021, the juvenile court
    found the allegations in the first amended petition true within section 300, subdivisions
    (a), (b)(1), (c) and (g) as to the Minor, and set a disposition hearing in May 2021.
    VII. The Minor Does Not Want to Participate in Virtual Visits and S.C. Visits in Person
    In a May 2021 addendum report, SSA noted the caregiver had reported the
    Minor did not want to engage with Mother during the virtual visits. Father had not
    reached out to the caregiver to schedule any virtual visits. The caregiver reported S.C.
    was initially not consistent in calling on her scheduled visitation days, but had called on
    Christmas Day to watch the children open their presents from her; the caregiver noted
    that S.C. gave several gifts to K.H. and Am.H. but only one gift to the Minor. Since
    April, S.C. had been consistent in calling.
    In June 2021, S.C. contacted SSA to express concern that the caregiver had
    been attacking her character with Texas DFPS regarding her ability to care for the
    children. S.C. claimed that in Texas before the child welfare proceedings began, she only
    saw the children on special occasions, and never witnessed any physical discipline by
    2
    The jurisdiction/disposition hearing was scheduled to occur in October 2020. In
    the jurisdiction/disposition report, SSA requested that the hearing be continued to allow
    further investigation to be conducted. The juvenile court continued the hearing for one
    month. SSA again requested a continuance for further investigation, and the jurisdiction
    hearing was continued for two more months. Because of the court’s unavailability, the
    hearing was again delayed until March 2021.
    10
    Mother or Father. S.C. said she did not use physical discipline. As an educator, she felt
    qualified to care for the children and their special needs. S.C. was willing to adopt the
    Minor as well as K.H. and Am.H., and stated the children had a good relationship with
    her own son. S.C.’s background check in Texas had been clear, and SSA told her she
    could have unsupervised visits with the children if she traveled to Southern California.
    In July 2021, DFPS closed its in-house fostering/adopting department and
    advised it would not be able to proceed with licensing S.C. in Texas. S.C. nevertheless
    moved forward with the help of a private adoption agency.
    Later that month, S.C. traveled to California for an in-person visit with the
    Minor, K.H., and Am.H. All parties enjoyed the visit; K.H. said it was a 10 out of 10,
    and Am.H. said it was “‘[a]wesome.’” In June 2022, S.C. had a second, multi-day,
    overnight visit with Am.H. and the Minor, but K.H. chose not to attend.
    VIII. The Caregiver Moves for Specific Placement and S.C. Moves for Relative
    Placement
    On July 26, 2021, the caregiver filed a section 388 motion asking the
    juvenile court to order specific placement of the Minor, K.H., and Am.H. in her custody
    and care. The caregiver also filed a motion to be granted de facto parent status, which
    was granted when the disposition hearing began.
    On August 12, 2021, S.C. moved for relative placement pursuant to
    section 361.3. Texas Health and Human Services had determined S.C. was eligible to be
    a foster parent.
    In July 2022, the juvenile court concluded it had jurisdiction over the
    matter because the Texas court had failed to assert jurisdiction. A.H. filed a notice of
    appeal from the court’s orders regarding application of the Uniform Child Custody
    Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA) (Fam. Code, § 3400 et seq.), and requested
    the matter be transferred to Texas. In a published opinion, this court affirmed the
    11
    juvenile court’s assertion of jurisdiction. (A.H. v. Superior Court (2023) 
    89 Cal.App.5th 504
    .)
    IX. Mother’s Participation in Services Is Minimal and Father Does Not Communicate
    with SSA and Does Not Participate in Services
    Mother was provided referrals for services by the social worker. She had
    limited ability to participate in services while she was in jail, but she completed parenting
    packets. After her release from jail, she returned to Texas and could not locate a child
    abuser’s treatment program, one of the required parts of her case plan. The social worker
    gave Mother resources for services in Texas, but Mother complained 90 percent of them
    were unhelpful.
    Mother denied most of the allegations in the child welfare petition. She
    claimed she provided safety for the children, and neither she nor Father abused the
    children. She stated the Minor was not physically abused because she was just a baby.
    She also complained the children’s words had been twisted by SSA to make her look like
    a monster. She did not believe K.H. did not want to reunify with her.
    Mother started a counseling class in Houston in March 2021. She
    participated in parenting classes, found a support group, and completed an online book
    designed to assist her decision making. She also completed a course on “Adult Decision
    Making/Thinking for Change/Impulse Control/Criminal Behavior Education.”
    Mother denied any domestic violence with Father; she became defensive
    and accused K.H. of making false statements. Mother claimed she and Father had
    separated, but would not provide further information about their relationship. She
    showed no insight as to how her actions affected the children, minimized her actions, and
    showed little if any remorse for the harm she caused.
    Mother told the social worker her first therapist said the therapy was not
    working and Mother did not believe she needed counseling. The therapist told the social
    worker Mother’s case was closed in April 2021 because Mother would not talk about
    12
    what happened with the children. The therapist thought Mother should work with a
    therapist specializing in clients mandated to attend therapy. As late as September 2021,
    Mother did not understand why domestic violence was a part of her case plan.
    A second therapist discharged Mother from counseling because she refused
    to talk about parenting, her past relationships, and the abuse and neglect of her children.
    In July 2022, Mother stopped responding to the social worker. Mother
    insisted further communication with SSA must go through her attorney.
    Father did not respond to SSA and did not visit the Minor, either by video
    or in person. SSA had no contact with him after December 2020. In June 2021, SSA
    discovered criminal charges had been filed against Father in Houston, Texas.
    Because Mother and A.H. live in Texas, all visitation has been virtual.
    K.H. did not participate in visitation because contact with his parents and relatives
    triggers bad memories of the abuse he suffered. Am.H. and the Minor initially engaged
    in visitation, but later declined to. At one point the Minor expressed interest in visiting
    with Mother, but when a virtual visit was set up, she declined.
    X. K.H. and Am.H. Make Further Allegations of Abuse
    In August 2022, K.H. met with the social worker; he had written a list of
    the ways in which he was abused so he could remember to disclose them. In addition to
    the acts of abuse he had previously disclosed, the list noted Mother stabbed him in the leg
    while beating him with a broken metal mop handle, scrubbed him with a horse brush,
    woke him for the sole purpose of beating him, forced him to urinate in water bottles and
    defecate in cans outside for at least two months, withheld food as a punishment, held his
    hand over a fan while Father acted like he would chop off his fingers, made him hold
    heavy objects (watermelons, crock pots) in front of him, made him eat out of a trash can
    when he woke her up asking to eat, and made him perform push-ups on hot, broken
    concrete. Mother watched Father abuse K.H. and did not intervene. When Mother
    13
    thought K.H. had gotten out of the shower too soon, she forced him back in under
    scalding water.
    K.H. told the social worker Mother began abusing him when he was five
    years old, before she became involved with Father, but the beatings were worse after
    Father showed up. K.H. stated his biological father, A.H., was aware of the abuse.
    Although he believed A.H. “would probably protect him” he did not want to stay with
    A.H. if he had to go back to Texas. K.H. would rather stay in California, and on the list
    wrote “If I go to [T]exas they will kill me,” referring to Mother and Father. K.H.
    believed Mother and Father were still together. K.H. saw domestic violence between
    Mother and Father on a regular basis. Mother had visible bruises caused by Father.
    XI. The Contested Disposition Hearing
    Although the disposition hearing was set for May 2021, because of delays,
    some of which involved a dispute as to whether Texas or California should be
    adjudicating the child welfare proceedings, the hearing did not begin until October 2022,
    and continued over multiple dates through March 2023.
    A. K.H.’s Testimony
    K.H., who was by then 10 years old, testified he would like to live in
    California with the caregiver because he felt safe with her. He called the caregiver
    “mom” and hoped she would adopt him, Am.H., and the Minor. He gets along with
    Am.H. and the Minor and wants to stay together with them.
    He was worried that if he went back to Texas Mother and Father would find
    him. He was also afraid that if he were to visit with Mother or A.H. in person, he would
    have flashbacks or nightmares. K.H. testified being with S.C. brought flashbacks and bad
    memories because S.C. knew about the physical abuse he was suffering but did not do
    anything to stop it.
    14
    B. The Social Worker’s Testimony
    The social worker testified the recommendation was not to offer
    reunification services to Mother or Father because Mother and Father inflicted severe
    physical abuse on K.H. and Am.H. Further, the social worker testified Mother would not
    benefit from further services because she was “not engaging in the process with [the]
    social worker and [she was] not having visits, [so] there is no way for me to be able to
    assess if you’ve actually made changes to your behavior for me to be able to say this
    child is safe to be able to return to you.” Mother was argumentative and did not show
    any insight into what the children went through. Specifically, Mother denied her actions
    were abusive, claimed she was simply disciplining the children, and did not acknowledge
    the children had been hurt and beaten. Father had not been in contact with the social
    worker since October 2020.
    The social worker had been informed by a family member that Mother and
    Father were still in a relationship. This caused the social worker concern because their
    relationship had previously been marked with domestic violence, and there was no
    indication anything between them had changed. The social worker believed the children
    would be at substantial risk of physical and emotional harm if they were returned to the
    custody of Mother or A.H.; that Mother inflicted severe physical harm on K.H. and
    Am.H.; that it would not benefit the children in any way to pursue reunification with
    Mother; and that the Minor would be at substantial risk of physical and emotional harm if
    she were returned to Father’s custody. The social worker’s recommendation that family
    reunification services not be provided to Mother considered the children’s best interests.
    The social worker did not believe Mother could protect the children from harm.
    The social worker did not believe placement with S.C. in Texas was
    appropriate because she felt K.H.’s concerns about S.C.’s knowledge of the abuse were
    founded. Although she did not believe S.C. would harm the children, the social worker
    was concerned the parents would find the children and harm them, even if they were
    15
    under S.C.’s care. The social worker believed placement with S.C. would not be safe for
    the children, although she was licensed as a foster parent by the state of Texas, because
    she had knowledge of the past abuse but did nothing to stop it. The social worker
    recommended that the children remain in their current placement.
    The social worker testified that moving to Texas would be a difficult
    adjustment and negatively affect the emotional well-being of the Minor because she had
    been thriving in the caregiver’s care for two and one-half years—more than half her life.
    The social worker had no concerns about the quality of care provided to the Minor by the
    caregiver. The social worker had observed the Minor “blossomed, just became very
    social, very chatty, very wanting to play with her siblings, more wanting to interact,
    maybe a little mischievous at times” after being placed with the caregiver. The Minor
    was in applied behavioral analysis therapy.
    The social worker testified the children are attached to each other, and she
    believed it would be emotionally detrimental and traumatic for the children to be
    separated from each other.
    All three children were bonded to the caregiver; they easily engaged with
    her, smiled and laughed together, interacted positively, and they showed her respect. It
    would be difficult for the children to be removed from the caregiver because they are
    attached to her, they have stability with her, they feel safe with her, and they do not have
    a relationship with anyone in Texas. It was not in the children’s best interests to go to
    Texas at that time because they were stable and safe in the current placement. Their
    denial of visits indicated they did not want to move to Texas, and forcing them to do so
    would create challenges.
    The social worker did not recommend the children be placed with S.C. after
    the ICPC was approved in November 2021 because she was unaware she needed to make
    such a recommendation; she had informed the juvenile court of the approval. S.C. had no
    16
    in-person visits with the children since June or July 2022. She had no virtual visits with
    the children since September 2022, because the children did not want to have visits.
    C. The Caregiver’s Testimony
    The caregiver reiterated the social worker’s testimony that S.C. had not
    visited the children in person since the previous summer, and had not had any virtual
    visits since September 2022. S.C. did not send presents or gifts or make a phone call for
    Christmas 2022. When she sent gifts, she would send several gifts each for K.H. and
    Am.H., and only one or two for the Minor. One year she called K.H. and Am.H. on their
    birthdays, but did not call the Minor.
    The caregiver testified the children were bonded to her and called her
    “mom.” The children were a “very close sibling set” and the Minor loves her siblings
    and plays with them all the time.
    D. S.C.’s Testimony
    S.C. saw K.H. and Am.H. for two or three hours every three weeks from
    their birth when Mother did her hair, as well as on holidays.
    S.C. denied being aware of any abuse suffered by K.H. and Am.H. She
    never saw bruises on either child, K.H. never seemed afraid of Mother, and neither child
    seemed afraid of A.H. A.H. never told her he had concerns about K.H. and Am.H. in
    Mother’s care. She never saw Mother chastise the children, raise her voice at them, get
    frustrated with them, be inappropriate with them, lose her temper with them, raise a hand
    to them, or hit them. Hearing about the abuse surprised her because “the children were
    always happy, engaging with myself and my son, and in there, I didn’t see any indication
    that they were being abused.” Mother cut off contact with S.C. when Mother broke up
    with A.H. and married Father. S.C. believed the physical abuse of K.H. and Am.H. was a
    one-time thing.
    17
    S.C. had concerns about the children being around Mother in the future but
    not around A.H. S.C. did not believe A.H. was a risk to the children. If she learned A.H.
    was on probation for a violent crime, it would change her opinion. If the children were
    placed with her, she would take any necessary steps to protect them from Mother and
    A.H. (if appropriate). She testified she had concerns about Father having contact with the
    children, and did not know if he was still in a relationship with Mother.
    S.C. was aware that the Minor, K.H., and Am.H. were bonded and “really
    love each other.” She loves the Minor like her own child and considers the Minor to be a
    member of her family. She would be willing to accept care of only the Minor if K.H. and
    Am.H. could not be placed with her or if they reunified with either of their parents. She
    was willing to provide permanency for K.H., Am.H., and the Minor. She would still
    want a relationship with the children even if the juvenile court decided it was not in their
    best interests to be placed with her. She wanted to continue having regular visitations.
    She had experience working with children who have ADHD, autism, and physical
    disabilities, including heart conditions, and had no concerns about her ability to care for
    K.H., Am.H., or the Minor. S.C. had the financial means and educational resources to
    support the children, and her home was immediately ready for the children.
    E. A.H.’s Testimony
    A.H. currently lives in Houston with his grandmother. When they were
    living in Houston, K.H. and Am.H. generally stayed with him every other weekend but
    then they stopped. A.H. admitted using a “belt or two on the behind” as discipline on his
    children.
    A.H. defined a whooping as spanking with a belt; he never saw Mother
    whooping either K.H. or Am.H. A.H. never saw signs Mother was physically abusing
    K.H. and Am.H., and they never told him she was doing so. During his seven or eight
    18
    year relationship with Mother, he never saw her yell at, use a belt on, or grab K.H. and
    Am.H., and never saw a bruise on them or saw them afraid of or unwilling to go to her.
    On Mother’s Day 2020, A.H. heard Mother say if Am.H. left the house
    with A.H. “she would beat her ass.” He did not call law enforcement because he didn’t
    believe Mother would really do that. He didn’t take Am.H. from Mother’s house that day
    because he didn’t want to cause a confrontation with Mother in front of the children.
    Sometime in 2020, A.H. was threatened by Father on Facetime, and called
    the police as a result. He informed the police Father was the boyfriend of the mother of
    his children, who lived with Mother, and he was concerned for the children as well as
    himself. He was not aware of whether the police ever did anything about it. He was not
    aware of the specifics of the abuse suffered by K.H. and Am.H., although he knew it
    would be important to avoid triggers. He had discussed with his counselor how to assist
    the children in processing and recovering from trauma and how to be supportive of the
    children.
    In 2020, A.H. was arrested and jailed for aggravated assault with the use of
    a knife, and burglary. He was on probation until at least 2025. He was also arrested for
    aggravated assault with the use of a knife in 2018. He had at least one conviction for
    controlled substances.
    A.H. was not aware Mother had taken K.H. and Am.H. to California until
    he was contacted by SSA and informed they had been taken into protective custody.
    Although A.H. tried to engage in virtual visits with the children, he
    understood they were able to decline visits. Although A.H. heard K.H. testify he did not
    want to return to Texas, A.H. did not understand why he wouldn’t want to come back
    home. He believed his ability to bond with Am.H. was affected by only having virtual
    visits for half an hour twice a week. A.H. wanted K.H. and Am.H. returned to his
    custody, and wanted the Minor to remain with her half-siblings. A.H. believed there was
    19
    room in his home for K.H., Am.H., and the Minor; no one from SSA had ever visited his
    home in person or by video.
    A.H. had participated in counseling and substance abuse treatment. He was
    drug testing with his probation officer and through SSA. Because of the services he had
    received, he believed he was now mature enough and mentally prepared to be able to care
    for the children.
    A.H. supported placement with S.C. and believed she could safely care for
    the children. He had no concerns about the children’s current placement with the
    caregiver. He wanted the children returned to him instead of remaining with the
    caregiver “[b]ecause I’m their father, and I would like a chance to show them that they’re
    safe with me . . . .” Although K.H. did not want to return to Texas, A.H. was not giving
    up on his desire to reunify.
    F. The Court’s Ruling
    All reports prepared by SSA were admitted into evidence.
    The juvenile court found S.C.’s testimony credible. The court also found
    K.H.’s testimony credible, and gave weight to K.H.’s testimony he did not feel safe with
    S.C., and wanted to remain with the caregiver. The court found the caregiver did not
    interfere with reunification and K.H.’s testimony was not unduly influence by the
    caregiver.
    The juvenile court denied S.C.’s motion for relative placement under
    section 361.3. The court made the following findings relevant to S.C.’s placement
    request: (1) S.C. was willing to take all three children, permanently or temporarily; (2)
    she would support reunification with A.H.; (3) she would do whatever the court or SSA
    directed her to do; (4) she took immediate and absolute steps to help the children within
    days of learning they had been detained; (5) her home was suitable and she had unique
    and special skills regarding the children and their particular needs; (6) there was no issue
    20
    regarding her moral character; (7) S.C. did not have a close relationship with the children;
    (8) she either did not have enough contact with the children to see or recognize the
    extensive abuse they were suffering, or she did have a close enough relationship but did
    not recognize the signs of abuse; and (9) K.H. did not feel safe with S.C. because he
    believed she knew about the abuse. Based on all the foregoing, the court found it was not
    in the children’s best interests to be placed with S.C. because of their need for
    psychological and emotional stability, the “very high complex-trauma nature of this
    particular case,” and the lack of a significant relationship between S.C. and the children.
    The court noted it had done an independent review of the criteria under section 361.3 and
    had given full consideration to the Family Code section 7950 mandates.
    The juvenile court also denied the caregiver’s specific placement order
    because it did not want to “tie the hands of social services.” The court ordered that SSA
    should retain discretion on placement, and would be required to give 30 days notice to all
    parties before changing placement.
    The juvenile court found by clear and convincing evidence that
    reunification with Mother and Father would be detrimental to the Minor’s well-being.
    “[W]hile the court . . . did not sustain the torture allegation, . . . the extent of the abuse in
    this case is, in fact, severe, and it cannot be thought of otherwise, and it is not only the
    physical abuse, but also the ongoing emotional and mental abuse. [¶] . . . [¶] The
    evidence that we received in this matter supports that it is a situation that is recently
    understood to cause serious emotional damage. I have [K.H.] who, as a result of all that
    happened, was indicating a sigh for purposes of the record, in addition to other
    extraordinary mental health needs. [¶] So, despite the flourishing situation we have now,
    the situation that was presented was one of grave concern.”
    The juvenile court declared the Minor to be a dependent of the court.
    (§ 360, subd. (d).) The court found by clear and convincing evidence the circumstances
    justified removing the Minor from Mother and Father’s physical custody. (§ 361,
    21
    subd. (c)(1), (3), (5).) The court found by clear and convincing evidence reunification
    services need not be provided to Mother and Father (§ 361.5, subd. (b)(6)) and adopted
    SSA’s recommendation that family reunification services not be provided to Mother and
    Father. The court set a permanency hearing for the Minor under section 366.26. Mother
    timely filed a notice of intent to file a writ petition challenging the juvenile court’s orders.
    3
    DISCUSSION
    I. Denial of Family Reunification Services Under Section 361.5.
    Mother’s first challenge to the disposition order is to the juvenile court’s
    denial of reunification services to Mother. “When a child is removed from a parent’s
    custody, the parent generally must be provided with family reunification services.
    [Citations.] There are ‘narrowly specified exceptions’ to this rule, however [citation], as
    set out in section 361.5, subdivision (b). The application of these exceptions in the
    juvenile court is subject to a clear and convincing standard of proof. [Citation.]” (J.J. v.
    Superior Court (2022) 
    81 Cal.App.5th 447
    , 455.) In this case, the court found by clear
    and convincing evidence that reunification services need not be provided to Mother
    because the Minor was “adjudicated a dependent pursuant to any subdivision of
    [s]ection 300 as a result of . . . the infliction of severe physical harm to . . . a half sibling
    by a parent . . . and the court [made] a factual finding that it would not benefit the child to
    pursue reunification services with the offending parent . . . .” (§ 361.5, subd. (b)(6)(A).)
    Once the court finds that reunification services need not be provided under
    section 361.5, subdivision (b), “denial of reunification services is mandatory, not
    discretionary, with respect to nearly all of the bypass provisions, unless the court makes
    certain countervailing factual findings.” (In re A.E. (2019) 
    38 Cal.App.5th 1124
    , 1141.)
    Because the court found Mother inflicted severe physical harm to the Minor’s half-
    3
    Counsel for the Minor filed a brief joining all of SSA’s arguments on appeal and
    requesting affirmance of the juvenile court’s orders.
    22
    sibling, the court was not authorized to order reunification services unless it found, “by
    clear and convincing evidence, that reunification is in the best interest of the child.”
    (§ 361.5, subd. (c)(2).) In this case, to the contrary, the court found reunification with
    Mother would be detrimental to the Minor’s well-being. Substantial evidence under the
    heightened burden of proof supports these findings. (In re L.O. (2021) 
    67 Cal.App.5th 227
    , 245.)
    Section 361.5, subdivision (i) lists the factors the juvenile court must
    consider in determining whether reunification services will benefit the child. In this case,
    the factors that are relevant all support the finding reunification services would not
    benefit the Minor. As detailed ante, the specifics of the physical harm inflicted on K.H.
    and Am.H., the circumstances under which that harm was inflicted, and the severity of
    the emotional trauma the children suffered as a result were significant and shocking.
    (§ 361.5, subd. (i)(1)-(3).)
    While there is no evidence of abuse of children other than K.H. and Am.H.,
    the length and severity of their abuse tends to negate this factor. (§ 361.5, subd. (i)(4).)
    The Minor is too young to express an opinion about reunifying with Mother. (Id.,
    subd. (i)(6).) It bears noting, however, that the Minor has refused to participate in virtual
    visitation with Mother, and she has spent more than half of her life with the caregiver,
    having been detained at age 18 months, and spending the last 34 months with the
    caregiver.
    Finally, there is little if any likelihood the Minor could be returned to
    Mother’s care without continuing supervision within 12 months. (§ 361.5, subd. (i)(5).)
    The child welfare proceedings have already gone on for almost three years and are
    outside the maximum time allowed for reunification. (See id., subd. (a)(1)(B) [when
    child is under three years old when initially removed, services may not be provided for
    more than 12 months]; id., subd. (a)(3)(A) [services may be extended to maximum of 18
    months if the child will be returned and safely maintained in the home during that
    23
    period]; § 366.22, subd. (b) [if parent has consistently visited and has made significant
    and consistent progress in resolving problems leading to child’s removal, additional
    services may be provided at permanency review hearing if there is substantial probability
    child will be returned to parent’s custody within 24 months after original removal date].)
    Mother has yet to benefit (or show any potential benefit to the Minor) from
    the services she has been provided. While in her petition Mother contends she “has
    already taken significant steps toward minimizing risks to her children,” none of the
    services she has completed shows she has acknowledged the suffering she caused the
    4
    children or taken the necessary steps to ensure such abuse will not occur again.
    Mother failed to even address the abuse of the children with two different
    therapists, and continued to deny the severity of the abuse or understand why the
    domestic violence between her and Father was an issue in the child welfare proceedings.
    Mother admitted early on that the Minor was not subject to physical abuse because she
    was a baby. But the Minor is now almost four and one-half years old, nearly the age
    Am.H. was when these proceedings began. Mother has not offered any reason for the
    juvenile court to believe the Minor would not be subject to the same abuse suffered by
    K.H. and Am.H. if she were returned to Mother’s care.
    We acknowledge that Mother herself was the victim of severe physical
    abuse at the hands of Father, and that she should not be viewed as a “one-dimensional
    abuser.” But the juvenile court’s findings that Mother had not taken any steps through
    the services already provided to address her own abuse, much less the abuse inflicted on
    4
    Mother finished a parenting course and requested another, participated in
    counseling which she acknowledges was not successful, completed a course on decision-
    making, completed a psychological assessment, and completed a substance abuse
    assessment. During the pendency of these proceedings, Mother gave birth to another
    baby that was voluntarily placed with a relative in Texas. Mother is receiving family
    preservation or voluntary family services for that child in Texas.
    24
    the children, was supported by substantial evidence, and amply justifies the court’s
    finding that further reunification services would be detrimental to the Minor.
    Mother argues the juvenile court violated section 361.5 by failing to “read
    into the record the basis for a finding of . . . the infliction of severe physical harm under
    paragraph (6) of subdivision (b),” and failing to “specify the factual findings used to
    determine that the provision of reunification services to the offending parent . . . would
    not benefit the child.” (§ 361.5, subd. (k).) As to the application of section 361.5,
    subdivision (b)(6), this argument borders on specious—the transcript of the disposition
    hearing is replete with the findings of the abuse of K.H. and Am.H. As to the lack of
    benefit to the Minor of reunification services to Mother, the juvenile court clearly and
    specifically found: “To [Father] and [Mother], the court is going to indicate as follows
    and I’m going to make , again, specific findings . . . the court is going to find, by clear
    and convincing evidence in a moment, that reunification services would, in fact, be
    detrimental to the children.” The court then clarified for counsel that this finding by clear
    and convincing evidence was as to Mother and Father, as parents of the Minor.
    The parent in In re S.G. (2003) 
    112 Cal.App.4th 1254
     made the same
    argument as Mother does here: “[S]he argues the court’s failure to make specific
    findings was prejudicial because she has no meaningful method of obtaining appellate
    review. She claims it is impossible to ascertain whether the juvenile court found severe
    sexual abuse, severe physical harm or neither; determined appellant inflicted the harm or
    consented to it; or found it would not benefit the child to pursue services.” (Id. at p.
    1261.) The appellate court “strongly disagree[d]” with the parent’s “disingenuous
    contentions.” (Ibid.) There, as here, the parent conceded the severe physical harm
    allegation; the juvenile court could have found either that the parent personally inflicted
    the harm on the child and consented to the harm by her partner; and “given that the
    evidentiary and argument phases of the dispositional hearing focused almost exclusively
    25
    on whether it would benefit the child to pursue reunification services with her mother, we
    have no doubt that the court found there was no such benefit.” (Ibid.)
    In re T.R. (2023) 
    87 Cal.App.5th 1140
    , on which Mother relies, can be
    distinguished from the present case. In that case, in denying reunification services, the
    juvenile court said it was adopting the proposed findings in the child welfare services
    department’s report without stating which bypass provision applied, identifying any
    specific instances of severe physical harm, or addressing whether the children would
    benefit from reunification services. (Id. at p. 1149.) The appellate court held that
    findings as to reunification services should generally not be implied “‘from an otherwise
    silent record.’” (Id. at p. 1150.) More importantly, the appellate court held that in that
    case, there was not enough evidence in the record to make such inferences. (Ibid.) By
    contrast, while the juvenile court in this case may not have recited its findings into the
    record strictly following section 361.5, subdivision (k), the record was anything but silent
    as to the basis for the findings of severe physical harm and the lack of benefit to the
    Minor from reunification services.
    Mother also cites In re Albert T. (2006) 
    144 Cal.App.4th 207
    , 219, which
    questioned whether an appellate court should imply findings from a silent record to
    support denial of reunification services. In that case, the appellate court concluded there
    was no evidence to satisfy the department’s burden to prove the parent had failed to make
    reasonable efforts to address the problem leading to the removal of another child with
    whom the parent failed to reunify. (Id. at p. 221; see § 361.5, subd. (b)(10).) As with
    In re T.R., supra, 
    87 Cal.App.5th 1140
    , In re Albert T., supra, 
    144 Cal.App.4th 207
     is
    distinguishable from the present case based on the full detailed record in the juvenile
    court regarding both the severe physical abuse suffered by K.H. and Am.H. and the
    reasons why reunification would not be in the Minor’s best interest.
    The juvenile court did not err by bypassing reunification services for
    Mother based on section 361.5, subdivision (b)(6)(A).
    26
    II. Denial of Relative Placement
    Mother also challenges the juvenile court’s denial of placement of the
    5
    Minor with S.C.
    “‘The best interest of the child is the fundamental goal of the juvenile
    dependency system, underlying . . . child safety, family preservation, and timely
    permanency and stability.’ [Citation.] ‘“‘Its purpose is to maximize a child’s
    opportunity to develop into a stable, well-adjusted adult.’”’ [Citation.] Stability and
    continuity of care are primary considerations in determining the child’s best interest.
    [Citation.] Custody determinations in dependency proceedings are ‘committed to the
    sound discretion of the juvenile court,’ and such rulings ‘should not be disturbed on
    appeal unless an abuse of discretion is clearly established.’ [Citation.] We will not
    disturb a custody determination ‘“‘unless the trial court has exceeded the limits of legal
    discretion by making an arbitrary, capricious, or patently absurd determination.’”’
    [Citation.]” (In re J.M. (2020) 
    44 Cal.App.5th 707
    , 718.)
    “Section 361.3 gives ‘preferential consideration’ to placement requests by
    certain relatives upon the child’s removal from the parents’ physical custody at the
    dispositional hearing.” (In re N.V., supra, 189 Cal.App.4th at p. 30.) The application of
    the relative placement preference “require[s] the consideration of multiple factors all
    dependent on an examination of evidence relating to the minor’s current circumstances.
    Consequently, a reflexive approach that children are always better off with relatives is
    incompatible with the governing laws . . . .” (Amber G. v. Superior Court (2022) 
    86 Cal.App.5th 465
    , 489.)
    “The overriding concern of dependency proceedings, however, is not the
    interest of extended family members but the interest of the child. ‘[R]egardless of the
    5
    Mother has standing to challenge the issue of denial of placement with the paternal
    aunt. (In re N.V. (2010) 
    189 Cal.App.4th 25
    , 27, fn. 1 [parent has standing to challenge
    order regarding placement of children with relative].)
    27
    relative placement preference, the fundamental duty of the court is to assure the best
    interests of the child, whose bond with a foster parent may require that placement with a
    relative be rejected.’ [Citation.] Section 361.3 does not create an evidentiary
    presumption that relative placement is in a child’s best interests. [Citation.] The passage
    of time is a significant factor in a child’s life; the longer a successful placement
    continues, the more important the child’s need for continuity and stability becomes in the
    evaluation of her best interests. [Citations.]” (In re Lauren R. (2007) 
    148 Cal.App.4th
              6
    841, 855.)
    Initially we note S.C. is not a “relative” of the Minor under section 361.3
    7
    and is not entitled to any of the presumptions under that statute. S.C. is A.H.’s aunt, and
    thus the great-aunt of K.H. and Am.H. Nothing in the appellate record shows Mother and
    A.H. were ever married or in an official domestic partnership. Vis-à-vis the Minor, S.C.
    is at most a non-related extended family member.
    If we were to nevertheless apply the factors to be considered under section
    361.3, subdivision (a), we would agree with Mother that many support placement with
    6
    We note that the rather extreme passage of time in this case is not attributable to
    S.C. S.C. communicated with SSA early on in the child welfare proceedings to express
    her willingness to accept placement of the children. She continued to be involved with
    SSA and visited virtually and in person. The delays in reading the disposition hearing are
    not S.C.’s fault, but we cannot ignore them in considering the Minor’s best interest.
    7
    “‘Relative’ means an adult who is related to the child by blood, adoption, or
    affinity within the fifth degree of kinship, including stepparents, stepsiblings, and all
    relatives whose status is preceded by the words ‘great,’ ‘great-great,’ or ‘grand,’ or the
    spouse of any of these persons even if the marriage was terminated by death or
    dissolution.” (§ 361.3, subd. (c)(2).) “‘Affinity’ means the connection existing between
    one spouse or domestic partner and the blood or adoptive relatives of the other spouse or
    domestic partner.” (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 5.502(1).) “‘Domestic partner’ means one
    of two adults who have chosen to share one another’s lives in an intimate and committed
    relationship of mutual caring as described in Family Code section 297.” (Id., rule
    5.502(12).)
    28
    S.C. S.C. is undoubtedly of high moral character, can provide a safe, stable home for the
    Minor, and is capable of providing the specialized care required by the Minor’s autism
    diagnosis. S.C. has also agreed to abide by any and all requirements set by the juvenile
    court or SSA.
    However, the single most important consideration for any placement,
    including but not limited to a relative placement, is the best interest of the child. (See,
    e.g., § 361.3, subd. (a)(1); Fam. Code, § 7950, subd. (a)(1).) We cannot say the juvenile
    court erred in its determination that placement with S.C. would not be in the Minor’s best
    interest. First, the relationship between S.C. and the Minor was not strong. S.C.’s
    interaction with K.H. and Am.H. occurred before Mother began her relationship with
    Father and before the Minor was born. S.C. admitted she had little contact with Mother
    and the children when Father was around, and nothing in the appellate record indicates
    S.C. had even met the Minor before their visit in California in July 2021. S.C. and the
    Minor had positive in-person visits in July 2021 and June 2022. But the Minor was not
    interested in virtual visits, which eventually stopped.
    Second, and more importantly, the juvenile court’s finding that the best
    interests of the Minor were served by remaining with the caregiver, with whom she has
    lived for the last three years—two-thirds of her young life—is supported by substantial
    evidence. “The passage of time is a significant factor in a child’s life; the longer a
    successful placement continues, the more important the child’s need for continuity and
    stability becomes in the evaluation of her best interests.” (In re M.H. (2018) 
    21 Cal.App.5th 1296
    , 1304.)
    The juvenile court did not err by denying S.C.’s motion for relative
    placement under section 361.3.
    29
    DISPOSITION
    The petition for writ of mandate/prohibition is denied.
    O’LEARY, P. J.
    WE CONCUR:
    BEDSWORTH, J.
    DELANEY, J.
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: G062390

Filed Date: 6/21/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 6/21/2023