DCPP VS. P.D. AND A.W.IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP OF S.D.(FG-02-0082-14, BERGEN COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)(RECORD IMPOUNDED) ( 2017 )


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  •                       RECORD IMPOUNDED
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-5437-14T4
    NEW JERSEY DIVISION OF CHILD
    PROTECTION AND PERMANENCY,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    October 20, 2017
    v.
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    P.D.,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and
    A.W.,
    Defendant.
    ____________________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP OF
    S.D.,
    Minor.
    _____________________________________
    Argued September 19, 2017 – Decided October 20, 2017
    Before Judges Yannotti, Leone and Mawla.
    On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery   Division,  Family   Part,  Bergen
    County, Docket No. FG-02-0082-14.
    Patricia Nichols, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, argued the cause for appellant
    (Joseph   E.   Krakora,   Public   Defender,
    attorney; Ms. Nichols, of counsel and on the
    briefs).
    Elliott M. Siebers, Deputy Attorney General,
    argued the cause for respondent (Christopher
    S. Porrino, Attorney General, attorney;
    Andrea M. Silkowitz, Assistant Attorney
    General, of counsel; Mr. Siebers, on the
    brief).
    Noel C. Devlin, Assistant Deputy Public
    Defender, argued the cause for minor (Joseph
    E. Krakora, Public Defender, Law Guardian,
    attorney; Mr. Devlin, of counsel and on the
    brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    YANNOTTI, P.J.A.D.
    P.D. appeals from a judgment entered by the Family Part on
    July 22, 2015, which terminated his parental rights to the minor
    child S.D.1 On appeal, P.D. argues that the judgment should be
    reversed because the Division of Child Protection and Permanency
    (Division) and the trial court failed to comply with the Vienna
    Convention   on   Consular   Relations   (VCCR),   April   24,   1963,   21
    U.S.T. 77; he was denied due process and the right to effective
    assistance of counsel; and the Division failed to establish with
    clear and convincing evidence the criteria for termination of
    his parental rights. We reject these arguments and affirm the
    trial court's judgment.
    1
    In accordance with Rule 1:38-3(d), we use initials to identify
    the parties and others involved in this matter.
    2                              A-5437-14T4
    I.
    We        briefly     summarize        the       salient      facts    and   procedural
    history. In August 2006, A.W. gave birth to S.D. and several
    days later, the Division received a report that the child was
    living    in       an   apartment    where       certain       individuals       were   using
    alcohol and drugs. Two days later, the hospital where S.D. was
    born reported to the Division that S.D. had tested positive for
    cocaine. The Division investigated the report and substantiated
    physical abuse by A.W., based upon the child's positive drug
    test.
    On August 25, 2006, the Division removed S.D. from A.W.'s
    care on an emergent basis without a court order and placed the
    child    in    a    resource     home.2     Thereafter,         the   Division      filed    a
    verified complaint in the Family Part, seeking care, custody,
    and supervision of S.D., which the court granted. In September
    2006,    A.W.       stipulated      that    she      had    abused    or    neglected     the
    child. Several days later, the Division placed S.D. in the care
    of K.A., a maternal relative, and her husband, R.A.
    At his first court appearance in August 2006, P.D. disputed
    paternity of S.D. Tests confirmed, however, that P.D. was the
    child's       biological     father.       P.D.       did   not    offer    himself     as   a
    2
    The child's removal was authorized by the Dodd Act, which as
    amended is codified at N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21 to -8.82. See N.J. Div.
    of Youth & Fam. Servs. v. P.W.R., 
    205 N.J. 17
    , 26 n.11 (2011).
    3                                  A-5437-14T4
    placement for the child at that time, but the Division provided
    him    with   supervised     visitation.     Initially,    P.D.'s      visitation
    took place at the resource home, but in January 2007, the visits
    were supervised at the Division's office due to an incident
    between the biological parents and the resource parents. The
    Division later returned the child to A.W.'s physical custody,
    but remained involved with the family.
    In March 2007, the Family Part judge entered an order,
    which precluded P.D. from having any contact with S.D. until he
    complied with a required psychological evaluation and substance-
    abuse   assessment.       P.D.   later   participated     in    a   psychological
    evaluation.      In   addition,    between    May   and    August     2007,   P.D.
    attended a substance abuse program.
    P.D. stopped attending the program because he was charged
    with    a     violation    of    probation.    He    had       been   serving     a
    probationary term due to a conviction in 2006 on drug charges.
    P.D. also has a history of domestic violence against A.W. and
    another woman, C.F., whom he later married.
    In January 2008, the trial court dismissed the abuse or
    neglect proceedings without making any findings concerning P.D.
    The court's order stated that A.W. and P.D. shared legal custody
    of S.D., and A.W. would have physical custody of the child. At
    some point, P.D. was charged with aggravated assault. He pled
    4                               A-5437-14T4
    guilty to an offense and the court sentenced him to a three-year
    prison term, beginning in March 2008. In December 2008, P.D. was
    deported to his home country of Cape Verde, off the coast of
    Africa.
    Several years later, in April 2012, the Division received a
    report of domestic violence involving A.W. and her paramour,
    J.G. S.D. was then five years old. The Division investigated the
    report and substantiated A.W. for neglect. In July 2012, the
    Division filed a complaint in the Family Part, seeking care and
    supervision of S.D., and the court granted the application. In
    August    2012,     the   Division    informed       P.D.   that    it   was    again
    involved with the family.
    In October 2012, the Division filed another complaint for
    care   and    supervision     of     S.D.,     and   sought   the    issuance        of
    restraints against J.G. The court ordered the Division to take
    custody of S.D. Due to her drug use, A.W. stipulated to abuse or
    neglect of S.D. In November 2012, the Division again placed S.D.
    with   K.A.   and    R.A.,   and     the   Division     informed     P.D.      of   the
    child's placement.
    The Division considered P.D. as a possible placement for
    the child, but it had difficulty assessing P.D. and his living
    situation because he was living in Cape Verde. The Division
    referred the matter for an international home study, which was
    5                                A-5437-14T4
    completed    in   November   2013.   The   Division     found   the    report
    inadequate because it did not address concerns it had regarding
    P.D.'s criminal history. The report did not recommend S.D.'s
    placement with P.D.
    In 2012 and 2013, the Division considered placing the child
    with P.D.'s relatives in Massachusetts. The Division ruled out
    these placements because it believed it was in the child's best
    interests to remain in her current resource home. In addition,
    one of the paternal relatives did not have the resources to care
    for the child.
    In January 2014, the trial court approved the Division's
    permanency   plan   for   termination     of   P.D.   and   A.W.'s   parental
    rights followed by adoption. In March 2014, the Division filed
    its complaint for guardianship of S.D., and the court entered an
    order   terminating    the   abuse   or    neglect     proceedings,      again
    without any findings concerning P.D. In December 2014, A.W. made
    an identified surrender of her parental rights to K.A. and R.A.3
    In June 2015, the Family Part judge conducted a trial on
    the Division's complaint. At the trial, the Division presented
    testimony from its caseworker Priscilla Ortiz and Dr. Elayne
    3
    We note that K.A. and R.A. later separated but the Division and
    K.A. remain committed to K.A.'s adoption of the child.
    6                                A-5437-14T4
    Weitz,     who    was    qualified          as       an   expert     in   the    field    of
    psychology.
    P.D. was in Cape Verde at the time of the trial and he did
    not participate in the first day of trial.4 On the second day of
    the   trial,      P.D.    participated               by   phone    and    provided      sworn
    testimony. He opposed the termination of his parental rights. He
    testified that he wanted S.D. sent to Cape Verde to live with
    him until she reached high-school age.
    On July 22, 2015, the judge filed a written opinion in
    which he found that the Division had established by clear and
    convincing       evidence    all       of    the      criteria      for   termination     of
    P.D.'s     parental      rights    in       N.J.S.A.       30:4C-15.1(a).       The     judge
    determined that P.D. had harmed S.D. because he had been absent
    during most of S.D.'s life, and he failed to take any steps to
    assume a parental role for the child.
    In   his    opinion,       the    judge         noted   that    after     2008,    P.D.
    failed to maintain contact with S.D., and he lacked knowledge of
    essential     facts      about     her,      including        her    current     grade     in
    school. The judge also noted that P.D. did not appear by phone
    4
    P.D. asked the court to allow him to participate in the trial
    by video-conferencing, but he failed to provide the court with
    the necessary technical information. P.D.'s attorney advised the
    trial judge that if P.D. could not participate by video-
    conferencing,   the   plan   was   to   have   him   participate
    telephonically. The judge then placed a telephone call to P.D.,
    but he failed to answer.
    7                                 A-5437-14T4
    for the first day of trial, and he did not acknowledge the
    child's psychological needs.
    The judge also observed that P.D. had not complied with any
    of the recommendations that the Division made "to remedy the
    fact that he is a virtual stranger to his child." The judge
    rejected P.D.'s claim that S.D. should be sent to live with him
    in Cape Verde. The judge wrote that "[t]o remove the child from
    her current placement and move her to another country to live
    with a virtual stranger would cause severe and enduring harm."
    In addition, the judge found that P.D. was unwilling or
    unable to eliminate the harm facing S.D. because he had not
    maintained contact with his daughter since 2008. P.D. also had
    no long-term plan for the child, since he intended to raise her
    only   until   she   reached    high-school   age.   Finally,    the   judge
    relied upon Dr. Weitz's testimony to conclude that separating
    S.D.   from    her   resource   parent   would   cause   her   serious   and
    enduring emotional and psychological harm, which P.D. would not
    be able to ameliorate.
    The judge memorialized his decision in an order dated July
    22, 2015, terminating P.D.'s parental rights. Thereafter, P.D.
    filed a notice of appeal from the court's July 22, 2015 order.
    He also filed a motion for leave to file an appeal as within
    time from certain orders entered by the trial court in the abuse
    8                             A-5437-14T4
    or neglect proceedings, and a motion to consolidate that appeal
    with this case. We denied the motions.
    We also denied P.D.'s motion to supplement the record on
    appeal in the guardianship case with transcripts of the abuse or
    neglect proceedings. P.D. filed a petition for certification,
    seeking review by the Supreme Court of our rulings on these
    motions. The Court denied the petition. Div. of Child Prot. &
    Perm. v. P.D., 
    227 N.J. 248
     (2015).
    II.
    We first consider P.D.'s argument, raised for the first
    time on appeal, that the guardianship judgment should be vacated
    because   the   Division   and   the   trial   court   failed   to   provide
    notice of the 2012 abuse or neglect proceedings to the Cape
    Verde consulate, which P.D. argues was required by the VCCR. He
    also contends he was denied due process of law because he had no
    legal representation in the 2012 abuse or neglect proceedings,
    which allegedly had an adverse effect upon his rights in the
    guardianship action.
    "The VCCR is a binding multi-lateral treaty to which over
    160 nations are parties." State v. Jang, 
    359 N.J. Super. 85
    , 91
    (App. Div.), certif. denied, 
    177 N.J. 492
     (2003). The VCCR "was
    drafted in 1963 with the purpose, evident in its preamble, of
    'contribut[ing] to the development of friendly relations among
    9                             A-5437-14T4
    nations,    irrespective        of     their    differing    constitutional          and
    social systems.'" Sanchez-Llamas v. Oregon, 
    548 U.S. 331
    , 337,
    
    126 S. Ct. 2669
    , 2674, 
    165 L. Ed. 2d 557
    , 571 (2006) (quoting
    VCCR, supra, 21 U.S.T. at 79) (alteration in original). The VCCR
    addresses the functions of a consular post established by the
    nation sending the consul (the sending State) in the nation
    receiving the consul (the receiving State). See VCCR, supra, 21
    U.S.T.    at     82.   Both    the     United    States     and    Cape     Verde    are
    signatories to the VCCR.
    The Supreme Court of the United States has not determined
    whether    the    VCCR   is     "self-executing"      in     the    sense     that    it
    creates    individual         rights    that    are   judicially          enforceable.
    Sanchez-Llamas, 
    supra,
     
    548 U.S. at 337
    , 
    126 S. Ct. at 2674
    , 
    165 L. Ed. 2d at 571
     (assuming for purposes of argument that the
    VCCR   created     judicially-enforceable          rights,        and    holding    that
    suppression of evidence in a criminal proceeding would not be an
    appropriate remedy for violation of Article 36 of the VCCR). We
    will assume for purposes of our decision that the VCCR creates
    individual rights that may be enforced in court.
    On appeal, P.D. relies upon Article 37 of the VCCR, which
    requires a receiving State (in this case, the United States), to
    provide    information         regarding        guardianships           involving    any
    "national of the sending State" (in this case, Cape Verde). P.D.
    10                                   A-5437-14T4
    argues that the VCCR required the Division and/or the court to
    notify the Cape Verde consulate about the 2012 abuse or neglect
    proceedings because S.D. allegedly has dual citizenship in the
    United States and Cape Verde.5
    Article 37 of the VCCR provides, in pertinent part:
    If the relevant information is available to
    the competent authorities of the receiving
    State, such authorities shall have the duty:
    . . . .
    (b) to inform the competent consular post
    without   delay    of   any case   where   the
    appointment of a guardian or trustee appears
    to be in the interests of a minor or other
    person lacking full capacity who is a
    national of the sending State. The giving of
    this information shall, however, be without
    prejudice to the operation of the laws and
    regulations     of    the   receiving    State
    concerning such appointments;
    [VCCR, supra, 21 U.S.T. at 102.]
    The purpose of such notice is to allow the consulate to
    determine whether to provide assistance to its citizen. Under
    Article 5 of the VCCR, such assistance could include:
    (a) protecting in the receiving State the
    interests of the sending State and of its
    nationals,  both  individuals  and  bodies
    5
    P.D. testified at trial that Cape Verde would grant S.D.
    citizenship because he is a citizen there. We need not decide
    whether P.D.'s assertion is correct. Even assuming Cape Verde
    would grant citizenship to S.D., it is undisputed that she is
    also a citizen of the United States.
    11                        A-5437-14T4
    corporate, within the     limits   permitted   by
    international law;
    . . . .
    (e) helping and assisting nationals, both
    individuals and bodies corporate, of the
    sending State;
    . . . .
    (h) safeguarding, within the limits imposed
    by the laws and regulations of the receiving
    State, the interests of minors and other
    persons   lacking  full   capacity  who  are
    nationals of the sending State, particularly
    where any guardianship or trusteeship is
    required with respect to such persons;
    (i) subject to the practices and procedures
    obtaining    in    the     receiving    State,
    representing    or    arranging    appropriate
    representation for nationals of the sending
    State   before   the   tribunals   and   other
    authorities of the receiving State, for the
    purpose of obtaining, in accordance with the
    laws and regulations of the receiving State,
    provisional measures for the preservation of
    the rights and interests of these nationals,
    where, because of absence or any other
    reason, such nationals are unable at the
    proper time to assume the defence of their
    rights and interests;
    (j) transmitting judicial and extra-judicial
    documents or executing letters rogatory or
    commissions to take evidence for the courts
    of the sending State in accordance with
    international agreements in force or, in the
    absence of such international agreements, in
    any other manner compatible with the laws
    and regulations of the receiving State;
    . . . .
    12                             A-5437-14T4
    (m) performing     any     other    functions
    entrusted to a consular post by the sending
    State which are not prohibited by the laws
    and regulations of the receiving State or to
    which no objection is taken by the receiving
    State or which are referred to in the
    international agreements in force between
    the sending State and the receiving State.
    [Id. at 82-85.]
    The United States Department of State has issued guidance
    on consular notification and access, and has stated that the
    Article   37   notice   requirements    do   not   apply   when   the   minor
    involved in the proceedings is an American citizen, even if the
    minor holds dual citizenship from another nation. United States
    State Dep't Manual on Consular Notification and Access, at 14,
    https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/consularnotification.
    html (last visited October 10, 2017); Robert G. Spector, The
    Vienna Convention on Consular Relations:              The Most Neglected
    Provision of Int'l Family Law, 22 Transnat'l Law & Contemp.
    Problems 643, 649-50 (Fall 2013). We see no reason to interpret
    the VCCR in a manner contrary to the interpretation reflected in
    the State Department's guidance.
    Indeed, courts in other jurisdictions have relied upon the
    State Department's guidance on this issue. See In re R.J., 
    381 S.W.3d 619
    , 625 (Tex. App. 2012) (noting that under the VCCR,
    "the Department was required to notify the Mexican consulate of
    the parental termination suit only if the child that is the
    13                               A-5437-14T4
    subject of the suit was a Mexican national," and there was no
    evidence    that       children   were    Mexican      nationals);   Melendez      v.
    State, 
    4 S.W.3d 437
    , 441-42 (Tex. App. 1999) ("Because there is
    no evidence in the record that Melendez is not a United States
    citizen, we cannot conclude that the [VCCR] notice provisions
    were triggered in the first instance."). We therefore conclude
    that the VCCR did not require consular notice of the 2012 abuse
    or neglect proceedings involving S.D.
    However,    even     if    the     VCCR   required     notice   of     those
    proceedings, P.D. has not shown that he was prejudiced by the
    lack of such notice. See In re Adoption of Peggy, 
    767 N.E.2d 29
    ,
    38 n.12 (Mass.) (noting that consular notice regarding custody
    proceedings may have been appropriate, but the consulate was
    aware of the proceedings, and did not assert an interest in the
    case; therefore, the authorities' failure to provide notice did
    not change the outcome of the case), cert. denied, sub nom.
    S.T. v. Mass. Dept. of Soc. Servs., 
    537 U.S. 1020
    , 
    123 S. Ct. 540
    , 
    154 L. Ed. 2d 428
     (2002); In re Antonio O., 
    784 N.W.2d 457
    ,
    466-67 (Neb. Ct. App. 2010) (finding that failure to comply with
    VCCR   caused     no    prejudice   and    did   not    deprive   father    of   due
    process).
    We note that the trial court appointed a law guardian to
    represent S.D. in the abuse or neglect proceedings. N.J.S.A.
    14                               A-5437-14T4
    9:6-8.23.     Thus,        S.D.   had     legal     representation       in      those
    proceedings,        notwithstanding      the    absence    of   consular      notice.
    Furthermore, P.D. presented no evidence showing what additional
    action, if any, the Cape Verde consulate would have taken on
    S.D.'s behalf, if it had been notified of the proceedings.
    P.D. further argues that he was denied due process in the
    2012 abuse or neglect proceedings as a result of the lack of
    consular notice, which he claims adversely affected his rights
    in the guardianship action. The record shows, however, that the
    Division notified P.D. of the 2012 proceedings. During those
    proceedings, P.D. was living freely in Cape Verde. In addition,
    P.D.'s wife is a United States citizen who works for the United
    States Department of State in Cape Verde, and his father works
    for the Cape Verde government. Therefore, P.D. could have sought
    assistance from the Cape Verde consulate on behalf of S.D. or
    himself.
    Moreover, P.D. could have obtained counsel to represent his
    interests in the abuse or neglect proceedings. The record also
    reflects     that    the    Division     provided   P.D.    with   the   paperwork
    necessary to obtain assigned counsel for those proceedings. P.D.
    did   not,    however,      return      the    completed   application        to    the
    Division until October 2013. Thereafter, counsel was appointed
    for P.D., and he had legal representation at the December 23,
    15                                  A-5437-14T4
    2014 hearing on the Division's permanency plan. P.D. also was
    represented by counsel throughout the subsequent guardianship
    proceedings.
    Thus, the record shows that P.D. was afforded notice and
    the opportunity to be heard in both proceedings. Furthermore,
    P.D.   also    has    not   shown    any    prejudice      in    the   guardianship
    proceeding resulting from the abuse or neglect matter in which
    the judge made no findings regarding P.D. We therefore reject
    P.D.'s contention that he was denied due process of law due to
    the lack of assistance from the Cape Verde government or the
    Cape Verde consulate.
    III.
    Next,   P.D.    argues       that    he     was   denied     the    effective
    assistance of counsel in the abuse or neglect and guardianship
    proceedings. He asserts that the guardianship judgment should be
    reversed or, at the very least, the matter remanded to the trial
    court for an evidentiary hearing on his ineffective-assistance-
    of-counsel claims.
    We note that a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel
    in an abuse or neglect or a guardianship proceeding must be
    raised   in    a   direct   appeal    from       the   final    judgment   in   those
    matters. R. 5:12-7 ("Claims of ineffective assistance of counsel
    shall be raised exclusively on direct appeal of a final judgment
    16                               A-5437-14T4
    or order."); N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. B.R., 
    192 N.J. 301
    , 311 (2007). P.D. did not file a timely appeal from the
    final judgment entered in the abuse or neglect proceedings.
    Moreover, we denied P.D.'s motion for leave to file an
    appeal in the abuse or neglect matter nunc pro tunc. We also
    denied P.D.'s motion to supplement the record on appeal in this
    case to include portions of the record in the abuse or neglect
    matter. Accordingly, we will only address P.D.'s claim that he
    was    denied      the     effective    assistance       of    counsel         in    the
    guardianship action.
    To establish the ineffective assistance of counsel, P.D.
    must    meet    the   two-prong       test    established     in   Strickland         v.
    Washington, 
    466 U.S. 668
    , 687, 
    104 S. Ct. 2052
    , 2064, 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 674
    ,   693   (1984),      and   adopted     by   our    Supreme     Court      for
    ineffective-assistance-of-counsel               claims   asserted        in     matters
    involving the termination of parental rights. B.R., supra, 192
    at 308-09.
    Therefore,        P.D.   first    must     show   that      his        counsel's
    performance was deficient in that it "fell below an objective
    standard of reasonableness." Strickland, 
    supra,
     
    466 U.S. at 688, 690
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2064, 2066
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d at 693, 695
    . He also
    must establish that he was prejudiced by showing that there is a
    "reasonable probability that, but for counsel's unprofessional
    17                                    A-5437-14T4
    errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different."
    
    Id. at 694
    , 
    104 S. Ct. at 2068
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d at 698
    .
    We are convinced that the existing record is sufficient to
    resolve P.D.'s claims, and a remand to the trial court is not
    necessary.     We      are     also     convinced      that     P.D.'s     claims     of
    ineffective     assistance        of    counsel     fail      because    he   has    not
    established both prongs of the Strickland test.
    P.D.    claims     he    was     denied    the   effective        assistance   of
    counsel      because     his     attorney        allegedly      lacked     sufficient
    knowledge of the VCCR. Even if his attorney was not sufficiently
    familiar with the VCCR, P.D. has not shown he was prejudiced
    thereby. As we have explained, consular notice under the VCCR
    was not required with regard to the abuse or neglect proceedings
    involving S.D. because she is an American citizen. The same is
    true regarding the guardianship action.
    P.D. also claims his attorney should have sought dismissal
    of   the   Division's         guardianship       complaint     based     on   N.J.S.A.
    30:4C-15.2,      which        provides     that     "the      final      hearing     for
    guardianship shall be held within three months from the date the
    petition is filed[.]" P.D. has not shown, however, that he was
    prejudiced     by   counsel's          failure    to   seek     dismissal     of     the
    complaint pursuant to the statute.
    18                                 A-5437-14T4
    Even if the court had dismissed the petition on this basis,
    the dismissal would have been without prejudice and the Division
    could have filed a new complaint seeking to terminate P.D.'s
    parental rights to S.D. Thus, P.D. has not shown that the result
    here   would    have     been     different      if    his       attorney    had   filed    a
    motion to dismiss the Division's complaint pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    30:4C-15.2.
    P.D.    further      alleges      that    his       attorney    was    ineffective
    because he did not object when Dr. Weitz, the Division's expert,
    interviewed him on the telephone. P.D. also claims his attorney
    was    ineffective     because      he    failed       to    object     to   Dr.   Weitz's
    testimony because she did not perform an in-person psychological
    evaluation of him.
    These arguments are entirely without merit. Psychological
    evaluations      are     often     performed          in     termination-of-parental-
    rights litigation. Because P.D. had been deported and was living
    in Cape Verde, Dr. Weitz could only speak with him on the phone.
    If P.D.'s counsel had objected to the call, the court would have
    found no merit in the objection.
    Moreover, P.D.'s counsel could not have objected to Dr.
    Weitz's    report      on   the    ground       that       she   had   not   performed      a
    psychological evaluation of him. There was no basis for such an
    objection. At trial, Dr. Weitz testified that she could not give
    19                                     A-5437-14T4
    an opinion on P.D.'s fitness as a parent because she had not
    been able to perform a psychological evaluation of him.
    P.D. also claims his attorney was ineffective because he
    did not object to the introduction of evidence regarding his
    criminal record. He contends his attorney should have insisted
    that the State present certified copies of documents pertaining
    to his criminal convictions. Even if P.D.'s attorney erred by
    failing to object on this basis, P.D. has not shown that he was
    prejudiced by the error.
    P.D. does not dispute the accuracy of the facts presented
    concerning     his        criminal    record.       Indeed,       at     trial,      P.D.
    acknowledged        his    prior     conviction     on     a    drug     charge,       the
    imposition     of    a    probationary    term      for   that     conviction,         his
    violation of probation, the charge of aggravated assault, and
    his subsequent incarceration.
    In    addition,        P.D.    alleges    his   attorney       was    ineffective
    because   he   allegedly      provided       lackluster        opening    and    closing
    statements. He also alleges his attorney did not sufficiently
    challenge the Division's evidence. The record does not support
    these   claims.      The    record    shows    that      defense       counsel    worked
    diligently on P.D.'s behalf and provided strong advocacy for
    him. P.D. has not shown that he was prejudiced by his attorney's
    opening and closing statements. He also has not established that
    20                                      A-5437-14T4
    the   result     in   this    matter      would          have   been   different        if   his
    attorney had been more forceful in challenging the Division's
    evidence.
    We therefore conclude that P.D. has not established that he
    was   denied        the     effective      assistance             of   counsel      in       the
    guardianship proceedings.
    IV.
    P.D.     argues       that    the    guardianship            judgment     should        be
    reversed because the trial judge's findings of fact are not
    supported by the record. He contends the Division failed to
    present     clear     and    convincing         evidence         establishing      all       four
    prongs of the test for termination of parental rights.
    The    scope     of    our       review       in    an    appeal   from      an    order
    terminating parental rights is limited. N.J. Div. of Youth &
    Family Servs. v. G.L., 
    191 N.J. 596
    , 605 (2007) (citing In re
    Guardianship of J.N.H., 
    172 N.J. 440
    , 472 (2002)). "Appellate
    courts    must    defer      to    a    trial       judge's       findings    of    fact      if
    supported by adequate, substantial, and credible evidence in the
    record." 
    Ibid.
     (citing             In re Guardianship of J.T., 
    269 N.J. Super. 172
    , 188 (App. Div. 1993)).
    Factual       findings       of    the    Family          Part   "are   entitled        to
    considerable deference." D.W. v. R.W., 
    212 N.J. 232
    , 245 (2012)
    (citing Cesare v. Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    , 413 (1998)). However, we
    21                                   A-5437-14T4
    give no "special deference" to the court's "interpretation of
    the law." 
    Ibid.
     (citing N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v.
    I.S., 
    202 N.J. 145
    , 183 (2010)).
    The Division may initiate a petition to terminate parental
    rights in the "best interests of the child" and the petition may
    be     granted      if      the   Division     establishes      the     criteria     for
    termination of parental rights established in N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
    15.1(a) by clear and convincing evidence. In re Guardianship of
    K.L.F., 
    129 N.J. 32
    , 38 (1992) (citing In re J.C., 
    129 N.J. 1
    ,
    10-11 (1992)).
    "The      four       criteria    enumerated       in   the     best   interests
    standard      are     not    discrete    and      separate;   they    relate   to    and
    overlap with one another to provide a comprehensive standard
    that identifies a child's best interests." In re Guardianship of
    K.H.O., 
    161 N.J. 337
    , 348 (1999).
    On appeal, P.D. argues that the judge erred by finding that
    the Division established prong one of the best interests test,
    which requires the Division to show that "[t]he child's safety,
    health or development has been or will continue to be endangered
    by the parental relationship." N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a)(1). P.D.
    asserts that he never abused or neglected S.D.
    We note that "injury to children need not be physical to
    give    rise     to      State    termination       of   biological      parent-child
    22                                A-5437-14T4
    relationships. Serious and lasting emotional or psychological
    harm to children as the result of the action or inaction of
    their   biological      parents   can     constitute         injury      sufficient    to
    authorize the termination of parental rights." K.L.F., supra,
    129 N.J. at 44. "A parent's withdrawal of . . . solicitude,
    nurture, and care for an extended period of time is in itself a
    harm that endangers the health and development of the child." In
    re Guardianship of DMH, 
    161 N.J. 365
    , 379 (1999).
    The   trial   evidence     shows       that    P.D.    made       no   effort   to
    maintain a relationship with S.D. after he was incarcerated in
    March 2008 and deported in December of that year. The record
    supports the judge's finding that P.D. essentially failed to
    maintain contact with S.D. after 2008, lacked knowledge of basic
    facts    about   her,    and    failed        to     acknowledge      that     she     had
    psychological needs. The evidence therefore supports the judge's
    determination    that    S.D.'s    safety,         health     or   development       have
    been harmed by her relationship with P.D.
    P.D. next argues that the evidence does not support the
    judge's finding that the Division established prong two of the
    best    interests    test.     This     prong        requires      the    Division      to
    establish that "[t]he parent is unable or unwilling to eliminate
    the harm facing the child or is unable or unwilling to provide a
    23                                     A-5437-14T4
    safe and stable home for the child and the delay of permanent
    placement will add to the harm." N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(a)(2).
    The       record    shows    that    P.D.    failed      to   take       steps    to
    establish communication between himself and S.D. The record also
    shows that P.D. could not provide S.D. with a safe and stable
    home because he failed to acknowledge S.D.'s emotional needs and
    he did not recognize the possibility that she would require
    psychological counseling if sent to live with him in Cape Verde.
    Furthermore, Dr. Weitz's unrebutted testimony established that
    the child would suffer severe and enduring harm if she were
    removed from her resource parent and placed with P.D. There is
    sufficient     credible     evidence     in     the   record      to   support       the
    judge's finding on prong two.
    P.D. also contends the Division failed to establish prong
    three of the test for terminating parental rights. That prong
    requires the Division to show that it "made reasonable efforts
    to provide services to help the parent correct the circumstances
    which led to the child's placement outside the home, and the
    court   has    considered      alternatives     to    termination       of    parental
    rights."      N.J.S.A.    30:4C-15.1(a)(3).           P.D.     argues        that    the
    Division       failed     to      make        reasonable       efforts         towards
    reunification.
    24                                    A-5437-14T4
    "The diligence of [the Division]'s efforts on behalf of a
    parent is not measured by their success." DMH, supra, 161 N.J.
    at 393. Therefore, a parent's failure to become an adequate
    caretaker for a child "is not determinative of the sufficiency
    of [the Division]'s efforts at family reunification[,]" which
    "must be assessed against the standard of adequacy in light of
    all the circumstances of a given case." Ibid.
    As noted previously, the Division took custody of S.D. in
    October 2012, when she was six years old. At that time, S.D.
    essentially had no relationship with P.D. He had not seen her
    since March 2008, when she was eighteen months old. The child's
    age   also   made   it   difficult   for   the   Division   to   establish
    communications with P.D. In addition, the evidence shows that
    S.D. did not want to have any communications with P.D.
    The trial court initially ordered the Division to pursue
    phone contact, but it later ordered the Division to have P.D.
    communicate with S.D. in writing. The Division encouraged P.D.
    to send S.D. cards, letters, or gifts, but he declined to do so,
    apparently believing that it would be a waste of time and the
    resource parents were brainwashing the child. When S.D. sent two
    e-mails to P.D., he only answered one of those messages. He
    refused to answer the second e-mail, because he believed the
    resource parent had written that message.
    25                           A-5437-14T4
    We    therefore    conclude     that   there    is   sufficient    credible
    evidence in the record to support the judge's finding that the
    Division made reasonable efforts to achieve reunification. The
    record     supports    the   judge's    determination       that   the   Division
    established prong three.
    P.D. further argues that the Division failed to establish
    prong four of the best interests test. That prong requires the
    Division to show that "[t]ermination of parental rights will not
    do   more    harm     than   good."    N.J.S.A.      30:4C-15.1(a)(4).     "[T]he
    fourth prong of the best interests standard cannot require a
    showing that no harm will befall the child as a result of the
    severing of biological ties." K.H.O., supra, 161 N.J. at 355.
    Therefore, the court must balance the relationships of the
    biological parent and the child, and the resource parent and the
    child, and determine whether the child will suffer greater harm
    from terminating the child's ties with the biological parent
    than from permanent disruption of the child's relationship with
    the resource parent. N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. A.G.,
    
    344 N.J. Super. 418
    , 435 (App. Div. 2001), certif. denied, 
    171 N.J. 44
     (2002).
    Here, the judge found that termination of P.D.'s parental
    rights would not do more harm than good. The judge pointed out
    that P.D. was a virtual stranger to S.D. The judge found that
    26                               A-5437-14T4
    P.D. had no bond with S.D. and had "in essence abandoned the
    child to the care of others." The judge noted that Dr. Weitz had
    testified that the child would suffer severe and enduring harm
    if she were removed from her resource parent, and P.D. could not
    mitigate that harm. Dr. Weitz further testified S.D. would not
    suffer any harm if P.D.'s parental rights are terminated. The
    judge accepted Dr. Weitz's testimony, which was unrebutted.
    In addition, the judge noted that P.D. only planned to
    raise     S.D.     until      she    reached       high-school        age.        The    judge
    concluded that P.D. had "not taken affirmative steps" to show
    that    he    wanted    to    parent     S.D.      The   judge      found    that       "[t]he
    child's right to a permanent, safe and stable home must prevail"
    over P.D.'s desire for reunification.
    On appeal, P.D. argues that the record does not support the
    judge's findings. He contends the judge erred by accepting Dr.
    Weitz's      testimony       because    the    doctor     never      evaluated          him    or
    witnessed any interaction between him and S.D. He further argues
    that all doubts must be resolved in favor of maintaining his
    parental      rights,      and   the    record      lacks     any    analysis           of    the
    deleterious effects adoption would have on the child.
    We are convinced that these arguments are entirely without
    merit. We conclude there is sufficient credible evidence in the
    record       to   support      the     judge's      finding      that       the     Division
    27                                    A-5437-14T4
    established that termination of P.D.'s parental rights will not
    cause more harm than good.
    We have considered P.D.'s other contentions, including his
    argument that the trial judge's opinion lacks necessary findings
    of fact and conclusions of law, and his contention that the
    evidence   shows   he   did   not   abandon   his   daughter   within   the
    meaning of N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15(e) and N.J.S.A. 30:4C-15.1(b). We
    are convinced that these arguments are without sufficient merit
    to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Affirmed.
    28                           A-5437-14T4