Cook County judge cites DCFS director for contempt
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[January 11, 2022]
By BETH HUNDSDORFER
Capitol News Illinois
bhundsdorfer@capitolnewsillinois.com
A Cook County judge found Illinois
Department of Children & Family Services Director Marc Smith in contempt
for the continued improper placement of two state wards.
Cook County Circuit Judge Patrick T. Murphy on Thursday, Jan. 6, also
fined Smith $1,000 a day in each of the cases for every day the two
children — a 9-year-old girl, known in court records as A.M.; and a
13-year-old boy, known as C.R.M. — remained in improper placements. In
both cases the orders are stayed — in one case until 4 p.m. Wednesday
and in the other until 4 p.m. Jan. 18 — for Smith to seek appellate
review.
“The contempt finding and the $1,000-a-day fine is based upon the fact
that Director Smith has disobeyed numerous court orders directing him to
place the minor in a clinically appropriate placement and to take the
minor out of the mental hospital to which she has been confined since
June 1, 2021, against the advice of medical staff which determined that
she could have been discharged on that date,” Murphy wrote in the
contempt order on A.M.’s case.
The 13-year-old boy C.R.M. was also ordered on Nov. 14 to be taken out
of temporary shelter where he was confined since Aug. 14 when he was
placed in a temporary shelter in Mount Vernon — 279 miles from Chicago
where his mother lives. Before that, C.R.M., who has severe mental
health issues, was at another temporary shelter in Chicago where he
slept in a utility room. At that time, DCFS told the court that the
child needed a therapeutic foster home placement. The Mount Vernon
shelter is a temporary placement for children for fewer than 30 days.
C.R.M. has been at the shelter 149 days, as of Monday.
The 9-year-old girl suffered years of sexual and physical abuse in her
biological home. She was psychiatrically hospitalized since April 24.
Doctors cleared her for discharge on June 1. A judge ordered three times
that the girl be placed in an appropriate placement. She is not going to
school or being involved in other activities, said Cook County Public
Guardian Charles Golbert.
“She’s been in there for the Fourth of July, her ninth birthday,
Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s,” Golbert said. “Enough is
enough. If there was ever a kid who needed to get out of a locked psych
ward and into an appropriate placement, it would be this girl.”
The 9-year-old has been held in a locked psychiatric unit for 223 days,
as of Monday.
The Cook County Public Guardian’s Office, represents abused and
neglected children. Golbert’s office represents both of the children in
these cases.
DCFS has placed 356 children statewide in inappropriate settings for an
average of 55 days, Golbert said. There were so many children that
Murphy, the presiding judge over the child protection division, noted
that created a separate “beyond medical necessity” docket.
The court order noted that in 2020, DCFS had 314 wards in psychiatric
hospitals beyond the date of discharge. In 2014, there were 75 DCFS
wards in mental health facilities beyond the date of discharge. That
number doubled in 2015 to 168.
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Marc D. Smith, director of the Illinois Department of
Children & Family Services, has been found in contempt by a Cook
County judge and ordered to pay $2,000 a day until two DCFS wards
were placed in appropriate settings. (Credit: Illinois DCFS)
Murphy, who served as Cook County public guardian for 25 years before
becoming a judge, wrote in his order that “children cannot get out of
psychiatric facilities because children cannot get out of residential
facilities and hence there is a bottleneck.” He cited the lack of foster
homes and the lack of group homes.
Golbert noted that DCFS has closed 460 residential beds since 2015 with
the goal of replacing those residential placements with foster homes
with specialized services for children. But those homes never
materialized. DCFS opened fewer than 30 therapeutic homes since the
closures and never reopened the residential placements.
“The highly structured therapeutic homes were never opened and the
residential beds never replaced,” Murphy wrote. “Instead, all judges in
this division consistently are told by DCFS agents to be patient while
they try to place an increasing number of disturbed children into a
decreasing number of residential places and appropriate specialized
homes. Several years ago, this argument had some merit. But after years
of children deteriorating in inappropriate and dangerous placements, the
court must act.”
Murphy further found that DCFS Director Smith and his agents and
predecessors violated the children’s constitutional rights and statutory
mandates, but he was not holding him in contempt for that but for his
refusal to follow valid court orders regarding the children’s
placements.
In a letter to Rep. Camille Lilly, D-Oak Park, who chairs the Human
Services Appropriations Committee, House Republican Leader Jim Durkin,
R-Western Springs, called for hearings into the matter, noting that DCFS
has a billion dollar budget and is tasked with protecting the most
vulnerable.
“The taxpayer dollars that have been allocated to DCFS are clearly not
being spent the way the General Assembly intended, and the core mission
of DCFS is not being fulfilled. It is the duty of your committee to
immediately investigate this matter. Our children can’t wait,” Durkin
wrote.
In 30 years of practicing in juvenile court, Golbert said, he’s never
seen a contempt order filed against the head of DCFS.
“It’s unprecedented,” he said.
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