Filed 10/21/15 In re Bianca S. CA4/1
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COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
DIVISION ONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA
In re BIANCA S. D068942
on (San Diego County
Super. Ct. No. JCM237690)
Habeas Corpus.
In re D.C. D068943
on (San Diego County
Super. Ct. No. JCM237689)
Habeas Corpus.
ORIGINAL PROCEEDINGS in habeas corpus. Roderick W. Shelton, Judge.
Relief granted.
Dependency Legal Group of San Diego and John P. McCurley for petitioners.
Bonnie M. Dumanis, District Attorney, and Samantha Begovich, Deputy District
Attorney, for respondent.
Bianca S. and D.C. (collectively petitioners) seek habeas corpus relief from orders
of the juvenile court detaining them in Juvenile Hall while they await further proceedings
on petitions seeking to declare them wards of the court. We grant the requested relief.
BACKGROUND
Petitioners are 13-year-old girls who are dependents of the juvenile court. (See
Welf. & Inst. Code, § 300.) While they were residing at the Polinsky Children's Center,
they knocked over a vending machine and took items from inside it. When staff
confronted petitioners, they fled but later returned to the Center. Staff then reported the
incident to police, who arrested petitioners and booked them into Juvenile Hall.
The district attorney filed petitions in the juvenile court alleging petitioners
committed two misdemeanors, petty theft and vandalism. (Pen. Code, §§ 484, 594.) The
district attorney asked the court to declare them wards. (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 602.)
The probation officer prepared detention reports recommending petitioners be
detained in Juvenile Hall, on the unexplained grounds they were likely to flee the court's
jurisdiction and such detention was necessary for the protection of person or property and
of petitioners. The report on Bianca stated her social worker "explained that [Bianca] has
demonstrated poor behavior"; the social worker was looking for a placement for Bianca,
but was unlikely to find one before the detention hearing; and the social worker
considered placing Bianca at the Center, but was "concerned [Bianca] will be negatively
influenced by her peers." The report on D.C. stated: "Given the circumstances of the
underlying offense, the Probation Department recommends that [D.C.] remain detained in
Juvenile Hall pending further hearings and that a meet and confer be arranged between
Health and Human Services and the Probation Department." The reports include
detention screening forms that showed no grounds for mandatory secure detention and
that petitioners' risk assessment scores did not warrant discretionary secure detention.
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Nevertheless, for each petitioner, the probation officer overrode the assessment and
recommended secure detention because "[t]he minor is a [Welfare and Institutions Code
section] 300 ward and social work[er] is unavailable." The probation officer further
recommended petitioners' social workers be allowed to place them "in a suitable
alternative placement should one become available."
At the detention hearing, the juvenile court adopted the recommendations of the
probation officer over the objections of the minors' counsel and ordered petitioners
"detained in Juvenile Hall pending further hearing." The court granted petitioners' social
workers permission to place them in alternative locations should they become available.
Petitioners promptly challenged the detention orders in this court by filing
petitions for peremptory writs of mandate in the first instance directing the juvenile court
to vacate the orders. We treated the petitions as petitions for writs of habeas corpus (see
Pen. Code, § 1473, subd. (a); People v. Picklesimer (2010) 48 Cal.4th 330, 340);
consolidated them for all purposes; issued an order directing the district attorney to show
cause why the relief requested by petitioners should not be granted; and temporarily
stayed the detention orders, and ordered petitioners released from Juvenile Hall to the
custody of the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency for appropriate
placement. (See People v. Romero (1994) 8 Cal.4th 728, 744 [discussing accelerated
habeas corpus proceedings].) The district attorney filed a consolidated return conceding
the detention orders were erroneous and stating she had no objection to our granting the
relief requested by petitioners. Petitioners filed a consolidated traverse reiterating their
request for relief. No party requested oral argument.
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DISCUSSION
We agree with the parties that the juvenile court erred by ordering petitioners'
detention in Juvenile Hall pending further hearing. "[T]he Juvenile Court Law protects
the minor's right to an individualized detention hearing, in which the court may not
dispose of cases by mechanical rules on a categorical basis." (In re William M. (1970) 3
Cal.3d 16, 19.) "[T]he intendments are all against detention and it may not be ordered
unless there is clear proof of the 'urgent necessity' which [Welfare and Institutions Code]
sections 635 and 636 require." (In re Dennis H. (1971) 19 Cal.App.3d 350, 354, fn.
omitted.) No such urgent necessity was shown in this case.
The juvenile court made no findings regarding its decision to order petitioners'
continued detention in Juvenile Hall. Although the detention reports prepared by the
probation officer listed permissible grounds for secure detention, namely, that petitioners
were a danger to themselves or to the person or the property of others and were likely to
flee the court's jurisdiction (Welf. & Inst. Code, §§ 635, subd. (a), 636, subd. (a)), neither
report contained any explanation, and the record does not support the existence of any of
these grounds. The allegations against petitioners concern minor property offenses; these
are first offenses for both petitioners; and nothing suggests petitioners, 13-year-old girls,
have the means or are likely to flee the county. The facts that the probation officer
overrode the detention risk assessments solely because petitioners are dependents whose
social workers were unavailable and the juvenile court granted the social workers
permission to place petitioners in alternative locations should suitable ones become
available strongly suggest the court ordered petitioners detained in Juvenile Hall based on
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the facts they are dependents of the court and their social workers have been unable to
find placements for them. This was error: "If a minor is a dependent of the court
pursuant to Section 300, the court's decision to detain shall not be based on the minor's
status as a dependent of the court or the child welfare services department's inability to
provide a placement for the minor." (Id., §§ 635, subd. (b)(2), 636, subd. (a), italics
added.) The juvenile court should have ordered the release of petitioners to the custody
of the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency for placement in a licensed
or approved setting. (Id., § 635, subd. (c)(2).)
DISPOSITION
The relief requested by petitioners is granted. The juvenile court is directed to
vacate the September 25, 2015 orders that petitioners be detained in Juvenile Hall and to
enter new orders releasing them to the custody of the San Diego County Health and
Human Services Agency for appropriate placement. This court's order of October 2
temporarily staying the juvenile court's September 25 orders and temporarily releasing
petitioners from custody is vacated.
MCCONNELL, P. J.
WE CONCUR:
BENKE, J.
O'ROURKE, J.
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