New Jersey Division of Child Protection and Permanency , 445 N.J. Super. 324 ( 2016 )


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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    NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE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-5370-13T3
    NEW JERSEY DIVISION OF CHILD
    PROTECTION AND PERMANENCY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    v.
    May 2, 2016
    K.G.,
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and
    V.M., Sr.,
    Defendant.
    _____________________________
    IN THE MATTER OF V.M., Jr.,
    a Minor.
    ______________________________
    Argued March 15, 2016 - Decided May 2, 2016
    Before Judges Reisner, Hoffman and Whipple.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Chancery Division, Family Part,
    Union County, Docket No. FN-20-170-13.
    Barbara E.    Ungar    argued    the    cause   for
    appellant.
    Mary C. Zec, Deputy Attorney General, argued
    the cause for respondent (Robert Lougy,
    Acting Attorney General, attorney; Andrea M.
    Silkowitz, Assistant Attorney General, of
    counsel; Ms. Zec, on the brief).
    Damen J. Thiel, Designated Counsel, argued
    the cause for minor (Joseph E. Krakora,
    Public Defender, Law Guardian, attorney; Mr.
    Thiel, on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    REISNER, P.J.A.D.
    Defendant      K.G.   appeals   from    a   February    21,    2014    fact-
    finding order, determining that she abused or neglected her ten-
    month-old baby, V.M., Jr. (Valentine or the baby), by leaving
    him    under    the   sole   supervision      of   her   nineteen-year-old         son
    Carl,1 who is substantially cognitively impaired.                    Applying the
    totality of the circumstances test, we agree with the trial
    judge    that    defendant's    conduct     was    grossly    negligent      and   we
    affirm.
    I
    The following evidence was presented at the fact-finding
    hearing.       Defendant lives in a single-family house with Carl and
    Valentine.       On May 18, 2013, the Division of Child Protection
    and Permanency (Division or agency) received a referral from
    Carl's father, V.M., Sr., reporting that defendant was leaving
    Valentine alone with Carl, who was not capable of caring for
    him.      On May 19, 2013, Division caseworker Priscilla Garcia
    visited defendant's home and spoke to her about the referral.
    1
    We use initials and pseudonyms to protect the family's privacy.
    2                                 A-5370-13T3
    Defendant said there was "nothing wrong" with Carl being the
    baby's caretaker and told Garcia that she would leave the baby
    in Carl's care if she went to the supermarket or ran other
    errands.    She told Garcia that Carl was not receiving services
    from the Division of Developmental Disabilities (DDD), and that
    he was enrolled in school and working at a local hospital.2
    However, when Garcia attempted to speak to Carl, he went to his
    room, and defendant told Garcia that Carl did not want to talk
    to her.    Garcia left without completing her investigation.                         She
    later made several attempts to arrange a time when she could
    speak to Carl, but defendant told Garcia that "she wasn't able
    to accommodate [Garcia's] schedule."
    On     June   12,     2013,   V.M.,        Sr.,    phoned   the    local     police
    headquarters to express concern for the baby's safety.                         Officer
    Pearson,    a     uniformed       patrol       officer,     was       dispatched       to
    defendant's residence at about 8:50 p.m. to do a welfare check.
    Pearson    knocked   on    the    front    door,       announcing      himself    as    a
    police officer, but got no answer.                    Eventually a man came to a
    second floor window and peeked his head out.                    Pearson attempted
    to speak to the man, but still no one came to the door.                                He
    2
    Defendant omitted some significant information in her statement
    to Garcia, including the fact that Carl attended a special
    school for persons with developmental disabilities and that, as
    of March 2012, she had Carl evaluated by DDD for continuing
    services.
    3                                   A-5370-13T3
    started       knocking    again     and   noticed      that       the    door     knob    was
    unlocked.           Pearson      opened    the       door    and        stepped    inside,
    announcing his presence.                The same man who had been at the
    window was in a doorway.                  When the man saw Pearson, he ran
    upstairs and slammed a door shut.                 Pearson walked around inside
    the    house,       announcing    that     he    needed      to    talk     to    someone.
    Eventually the man came out and identified himself as Carl.
    According to Pearson, Carl was very protective of his baby
    brother.       He told Pearson that Valentine was upstairs sleeping,
    and that Pearson had to be quiet and had to leave.                                 After a
    while,    Carl      let   Pearson    go    upstairs     to    check       on     the   baby.
    Valentine was asleep in a crib; he appeared clean; the physical
    environment appeared safe.
    Pearson testified that he went back downstairs to talk to
    Carl.     His initial impression was that Carl seemed childish for
    his age — very shy and "a little off with his behavior and
    speech."        Pearson tried to put Carl at ease by talking about
    sports and Carl's favorite teams.                Pearson then asked Carl "what
    he    would    do    if   the   house     was   on    fire    or    if    he     needed    an
    ambulance," and Carl replied, "I don't know."                              When Pearson
    asked Carl "if he could call his mother," Carl was "unable to
    answer" that question either.               Pearson did not feel it would be
    appropriate to leave the baby with Carl so he called for backup.
    4                                      A-5370-13T3
    After other officers arrived on the scene, Pearson's sergeant
    asked headquarters to contact defendant.
    Pearson estimated that he was at the house for about an
    hour before defendant arrived home.                She was very agitated and
    cursed   at   the   officers.         According     to   Pearson,    Carl     asked
    defendant what was going on and she replied, "they think you're
    too fucking retarded to watch your brother."                 Carl ran into his
    room.    Pearson's sergeant then contacted the Division so that
    the agency could assess the situation.
    Patricia        Arroyo,      a      Division        emergency      response
    investigator,       testified     that       she   arrived    at     defendant's
    residence at approximately 10:30 p.m.              When defendant refused to
    allow Arroyo to interview Carl, Arroyo threatened to conduct a
    Dodd removal3 of Valentine.            At that point, defendant allowed
    Arroyo   to   speak    to   Carl.        After     interviewing     him,    Arroyo
    prepared a report memorializing her observations that Carl had
    "a major mental disability[,]" he did not know defendant's phone
    number, and he did not have access to a telephone to call 911 in
    case of an emergency.          Before leaving the home, Arroyo prepared
    a safety protection plan, signed by defendant, that required
    defendant to make alternate plans for babysitting and to provide
    3
    Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.29, legislation sponsored by Senator
    Dodd, the Division is authorized to take custody of a child on
    an emergency basis in order to protect the child's safety.
    5                                 A-5370-13T3
    the Division with the name of any new caregiver.
    Garcia testified that after the court granted the Division
    care and supervision of Valentine, she was able to speak with
    Carl   at    his    school.       He     attended   a   specialized         school    that
    teaches life skills to children who are developmentally delayed.
    Carl, who was nineteen years old at the time of his interview,
    was cooperative but his demeanor was childlike.                             He appeared
    very shy; he giggled and his conversation bounced from topic to
    topic.      Carl told Garcia that he worked at a hospital cafeteria
    on Thursdays and said he liked his job very much.                        He explained
    that when he got home from school he changed his clothes, ate a
    snack and played video games.               When Garcia asked Carl if he was
    ever left in charge of caring for his little brother, he first
    said that he did not know and later said, "hold up, hold up, oh
    maybe sometimes."           He could not recite his mother's phone number
    or his home phone number, and had trouble answering the question
    whether his mother was there when he got home from school.                           Carl
    did tell Garcia that he loved his mother very much.
    Garcia      testified      that    she   later   met    with    defendant       and
    attempted to explain why Carl was not an appropriate independent
    caregiver       for      Valentine.        Defendant     told       Garcia    that    she
    disagreed.       At that meeting in July 2013, defendant told Garcia
    that   there       was    still    no    land   line    in    the    home    and     while
    6                                   A-5370-13T3
    defendant had a cell phone, Carl did not.
    Ronald Wasserman, a Senior Community Program Specialist for
    DDD, testified concerning an assessment he performed on Carl in
    April 2012.         Defendant had called DDD to register Carl so that
    he could obtain services once he turned twenty-one, and she
    participated in the assessment.                  Wasserman explained that the
    purpose        of   the   assessment       was     to     verify    that   Carl      was
    developmentally disabled and eligible for services from DDD, as
    opposed to another agency such as the Division of Mental Health.
    Wasserman        found    that    Carl      has     "substantial     functional
    limitations" in his capacity for independent living, learning,
    self-direction, and receptive and expressive language.                        His full
    scale     IQ    was    measured    at    51.        His    overall     capacity      for
    independence was like that of a seven-year-old child.                         Wasserman
    was     "[a]bsolutely"         satisfied    that        Carl   qualified      for    DDD
    services and that he would receive those services for the rest
    of his life.          In Wasserman's opinion, Carl will never be able to
    live on his own.
    Ms.      Tillis,    an    assistant        principal     at    Carl's    school,
    testified that Carl has attended the school for four-and-a-half
    years.      His studies include English, Math, Music, Art, Physical
    Education, Health and Computers.                  The school does not offer a
    first aid course, but he has studied very basic safety skills in
    7                                   A-5370-13T3
    health    class.        Carl    also       participates        in    a       community       work
    program where he is assigned to jobs at an environmental center
    and at a local hospital.
    According to Tillis, Carl is a very sweet boy who tries
    hard     and    wants     to     be    successful          in       school.             He    is
    developmentally delayed, has a below average IQ, and functions
    well below age level both academically and cognitively.                                  He is
    performing well academically but his classes are taught at the
    second to third grade level.                 He has made progress slowly, but
    his    cognitive      ability    is    that      of    a   second        or     third    grade
    student.
    Tillis explained that when Carl gets upset he has trouble
    expressing himself.            He may be confused by questions and can
    become emotional when he gets into difficulty.                           He receives very
    strong supervision at school.                He is bused to and from school,
    and he cannot leave the school grounds unaccompanied.                                    A job
    coach stays with him at his work assignments, and does not leave
    him alone for more than ten minutes at a time.
    Carl was subpoenaed by the Division to testify at the fact-
    finding hearing.         He was able to identify the town where he
    lived, and said he wanted to "find a real job" when he finishes
    school.        When   asked     if    he    ever      talked    to       a    policeman,      he
    responded, "No.          Never . . . . Please, next question."                                 He
    8                                      A-5370-13T3
    became very upset when asked about the events of June 12, 2013,
    saying he did not remember a police officer coming to his house,
    but then saying, "I thought a robber."            Judge Kenny attempted to
    soothe Carl, but the attorneys' arguing increased his agitation.
    Carl exclaimed, "I don't want to hear this."               At that point,
    Judge Kenny took over the questioning to put Carl at ease.
    Carl told the judge he likes working at the environmental
    center where his job involves "[c]ut—cut, tracing.                No.     Cut
    footprints and–yeah, footprints, a lot of things. . . .                  [D]o
    more ventures outside, pick up leaf, acorn and pinecones."                  He
    said he preferred his job at the hospital where "[y]ou deal with
    trays . . . .         You do the stocking of drinks and stuff, the
    utensils, napkin, fork, knife . . . [s]weeping floors."             He said
    he was good at basketball and he played "probably defense or
    offense."
    When the Deputy Attorney General said she would like to ask
    Carl some questions about his baby brother, he responded, "Okay.
    Do   that   crap."     Carl    testified   that   he   likes   playing   with
    Valentine, and he feeds him baby food that he gets from the
    pantry at his house.         Carl could not remember how old Valentine
    is, but did recall that Valentine likes to eat "[t]hat little
    vegetable    soup."     He    had   trouble   explaining   what   Valentine
    drinks.     He said that to make a bottle for the baby, he would
    9                             A-5370-13T3
    "[m]easure the formula" and "[h]eat it up in the microwave and
    give it to him."      He thought that he heated it in the microwave
    for "25 minutes."
    Carl testified that Valentine has never started coughing
    while eating baby food, but if he did, Carl would "give him the
    vegetable juice."      Carl changes Valentine's diapers without his
    mother's    help:     "I   like     to   change   my   little      baby    brother's
    diaper."      He likes to spend one-on-one time with his brother.
    If Valentine cries, Carl gives him a bottle or plays with him.
    Carl stated that he "[p]robably" watches Valentine when his
    mother is not home.          He never leaves the house with the baby.
    He testified that he had an iPhone and a house phone and was
    able to tell the judge his cell phone number.                   If something bad
    happened while he was watching Valentine, Carl would call 911
    and tell them that there is "[a] fire at my house."                    Carl stated
    that if a police officer came to the house, he would not answer
    the door.      When asked again if he would answer the door for a
    police officer, Carl replied, "No.            Never.     Wow."
    Carl became agitated when the Law Guardian started cross-
    examination, saying, "Oh, God.            Her?"   He responded to questions
    with "Why you ask that question?", "Now you got the question.
    Go   ahead.      Go   ahead.        Go   ahead.",      and    "Ask    your     stupid
    questions."      He   also    had    a   "laughing     fit"   in     the   midst    of
    10                                  A-5370-13T3
    questioning.
    Carl was more cooperative with defense counsel, testifying
    that there is a baby monitor at his house and that he knows how
    to use it.      He also described how he would make a call using
    numbers stored on his cell phone.            He explained Valentine's
    feeding schedule, how he bathes the baby, and how he checks the
    baby's temperature with a thermometer.           He said that Valentine
    loves him but is not attached to his mother.
    Zachary B., who testified on behalf of defendant, stated
    that he has known Carl his entire life and has often seen him
    interacting    with   Valentine.   Zachary      observed    Carl    preparing
    Valentine's    bottle,   feeding   him,   and    changing     his    clothes.
    Sometimes defendant would go out, leaving Carl and Valentine
    home with Zachary and Zachary's father.          During those occasions,
    Carl took care of Valentine for the whole day and never asked
    for any help.
    Elizabeth     B.,    a   long-time    friend   of      defendant,    also
    testified on defendant's behalf.          Elizabeth stated that Carl
    loves Valentine very much and is good with him.               She has seen
    Carl taking care of Valentine ever since the baby's birth and
    has never observed him doing anything inappropriate.                He knows
    how to give Valentine a bath and to set up the baby monitor in
    Valentine's room.
    11                                A-5370-13T3
    Vincent Nardone testified that he was at defendant's house
    on June 12, 2013, doing some maintenance work in the garage and
    yard.    He recalled that defendant left the house around 7:00
    p.m. and returned home with the baby at 7:30 p.m.                 Nardone left
    for the day at 8:00 p.m.           At that point, there were no police
    officers at the house.
    Dr.   Lidia      Dengelegi      Abrams,       a     psychologist      with
    considerable relevant experience, evaluated Carl at defendant's
    request in October 2013 to assess whether he could safely care
    for Valentine.      She testified that for the first half hour of
    the appointment, she spoke with Carl while he held Valentine on
    his lap.    Later, Carl gave the baby to defendant so that he
    could take a battery of tests that Abrams had prepared.
    Abrams observed that Carl was pleasant and cooperative.                  He
    focused on Valentine, held him appropriately, and was very aware
    of his needs.     In fact, even after Valentine was given back to
    defendant, Carl was more attuned to what the baby was doing in
    the   waiting   room   than   to    what   Abrams       was   saying.    Abrams
    concluded that Carl has an extremely strong bond with Valentine.
    Indeed, it appeared to Abrams that the baby was more attached to
    Carl than to defendant.        At the end of the visit, Carl took
    Valentine to defendant's car, locked him into his car seat, and
    then waited for defendant to finish speaking to Abrams.                       She
    12                                A-5370-13T3
    observed that Carl handled the baby very well and there was an
    easy relationship between the two.
    With regard to the testing, Abrams found that Carl has a
    cognitive    impairment      and    that     his   basic    skills    in   reading,
    writing, and math are very poor.                She found that he is in the
    mildly mentally disabled range with an IQ of 62.                     According to
    Abrams, individuals with Carl's IQ can work and can do many
    other things.      While some people with cognitive impairments have
    other     issues   such      as    behavioral      outbursts    or    psychiatric
    disorders,    Carl    does    not.      He    is   emotionally       and    mentally
    stable.      Abrams    testified      that     a   person    with    a     cognitive
    impairment may be capable of caring for a baby under the right
    circumstances:
    A certain amount of cognitive ability is
    necessary to take care of another person.
    And the environment where that is done, if
    it's a more complex environment, then it's
    harder to take care of that person. If it's
    a simple environment where the individual
    has learned how to handle all the potential
    situations that might come up, then such a
    high IQ is not required.
    Abrams opined that even though Carl's academic skills are
    at a second-grade level, he is at an adult level in terms of his
    understanding of the importance of keeping his brother safe.
    While Abrams agreed with DDD's determination that Carl has a low
    IQ and is "substantially functionally limited[,]" she did not
    13                                  A-5370-13T3
    think that his limitations impacted his ability to care for
    Valentine "within the constraints of his home."                         She believed
    that it was safe for Valentine to be left in Carl's care on June
    12,     2013.         In    rendering    that    opinion,    Abrams      stated    her
    understanding that Carl had "a long history of caring for [the]
    baby" and "has never done anything inappropriate."                         She also
    explained       her    understanding      that    Carl    did     not   "have     panic
    attacks."
    Abrams further based her opinion on her belief that Carl
    was able "to call his mother or 911 if there was something
    wrong."     She was told by Carl that when caring for the baby, he
    "always     has       his   phone   in   his     hand."      She    explained      her
    understanding that during the June 12, 2013 incident, Carl saw
    one or more strangers at the door, and rather than answering the
    door, he locked himself in a closet with the baby monitor and
    called his mother.             She opined that he did so "[b]ecause he
    didn't know who the people were, and he didn't want to deal with
    them"    and    "because       he   understands     his     own    limitations     and
    doesn't want to expose himself and his brother to situations
    which he may not be able to handle."
    Abrams opined that Carl could care for his baby brother by
    himself "in his own home . . . with intermittent phone calls at
    least from his mother."             She recommended that to safely care for
    14                                A-5370-13T3
    the baby, Carl should always have a working phone and defendant
    should always be available by phone to respond to a potential
    problem.
    On     cross-examination,      Abrams         said    she    thought     it    was
    established   that   Carl   had    a   cell       phone    on    the   day   of    the
    incident, had hidden in the closet, and had called his mother.
    However, her understanding of what happened that night was based
    on information that defendant had provided.                     She admitted that
    if Carl had been left alone with Valentine without a working
    phone it would not be acceptable:             "[T]hat would be endangering
    the welfare of [the baby] if . . . [Carl] was left in the home
    without a phone."
    Abrams    admitted   that     Carl      had    difficulty     explaining       his
    daily routine to her, he had trouble telling time, and he was
    very dependent on having a set daily routine.                    If there were "a
    difficulty thrown into that routine," she admitted that "[h]e
    might have a problem."      She was "not sure" what Carl would do if
    there were a fire in the house and a fire fighter came to the
    door.    She testified that Carl "could be further educated on
    that, and then he would know" to open the door for a police
    officer or fire fighter.        Otherwise, in an emergency, they would
    have to "break the door down" to get into the house.
    15                                    A-5370-13T3
    When asked what Carl would do if the baby started choking,
    Abrams responded: "Not sure what he would do in that case. It's
    a good question."             When further asked, "Do you think he would
    panic?" she replied, "I don't know what he would do."                     Abrams
    also admitted that Carl typically "retreats" when he is "unhappy
    with a situation."             Nevertheless, she did not think he would
    ever leave the baby alone, because his love for the baby would
    be stronger than his need to retreat.
    Although she based her opinions, in part, on Carl's past
    history of successfully caring for the baby, Abrams admitted on
    cross-examination that she did not know on how many occasions
    prior to June 12, 2013 Carl had been left alone to care for the
    baby, or for how long he was left alone with him. Apparently she
    never asked defendant or Carl that question.                    She stated, "I'm
    just guessing here."
    Defendant     also     testified     at   the   hearing.    According   to
    defendant, when Garcia visited her home to investigate the May
    18, 2013 complaint, Garcia told her that V.M., Sr., had alleged
    that she left Carl alone with the baby for days at a time and
    left    no    baby     care    supplies     in   the   house.      According   to
    defendant, she told Garcia that she only allowed Carl to watch
    the baby if she ran out for "an occasional errand or nearby to a
    grocery      store."        Contrary   to      Garcia's   testimony,   defendant
    16                            A-5370-13T3
    testified that when Garcia visited her home on May 19, she was
    able    to   interview     Carl.         Defendant    testified    that     Garcia
    inspected    her   entire    house    and     left    without   expressing      any
    concerns.    Defendant received a letter from the Division in July
    2013   notifying     her   that    the    May   18,   2013   allegations      were
    determined to be unfounded.4
    As to the events of June 12, 2013, defendant testified that
    she picked Valentine up from daycare at about 7:00 p.m.                   She got
    home with him at 7:30 p.m., started a load of laundry, changed
    him into his pajamas, gave him a bottle and put him down for bed
    around 7:50 p.m.         At that time, Carl and Nardone were loading
    trash into Nardone's truck.          Defendant got into her car to go to
    the grocery store to buy bread and milk.               She testified that she
    left   her   house   at    about   the     same   time   that     Nardone    left.
    4
    The July letter, which is in the record, stated that the May 18
    neglect allegations were unsubstantiated but that the Division
    would continue to provide services to defendant and her family.
    However, the Division's contemporaneous reports corroborate
    Garcia's version of her visit to the home, particularly her
    inability to interview Carl. Although Garcia was not permitted
    to testify about details, the allegation about Carl caring for
    the baby was but a small part of the May investigation. Garcia
    was also investigating other serious allegations that V.M., Sr.
    had made about defendant, including that she used illegal drugs,
    engaged in prostitution, and involved Carl in her prostitution
    business. We have not considered the substance of any of those
    allegations; however, in context, the Division's overall
    determination that child abuse or neglect was not substantiated
    did not signal approval of defendant leaving the baby alone with
    Carl.
    17                               A-5370-13T3
    Before she left she told Carl that Valentine was asleep for the
    night, she would not be gone long, and he should "just call me"
    if he needed her.
    Defendant asserted that she always had a working telephone
    at her house including on the night of June 12, 2013.                        She
    stated that she had three land-line phones, one in the kitchen,
    one   in   her   bedroom   and   one   in   Carl's   room.     According      to
    defendant, Officer Pearson used one of the kitchen telephones to
    call his supervisor that night.             She also testified that Carl
    had an iPhone with her telephone number and other important
    phone numbers pre-programmed into it.
    According to defendant, she was only gone from the home for
    a total of fifteen minutes; she contended that the Division
    report memorializing her admission that she was at the store for
    thirty-five      to    forty     minutes     was     the     result     of      a
    "miscommunication."        Defendant testified that she left the house
    at about 8:00 p.m., and called Elizabeth B. on her cell phone
    while she drove to a local ShopRite supermarket.                      Defendant
    testified that she walked into the ShopRite while on the phone
    with Elizabeth.       A call then came in from Carl, who said that
    there was an intruder in the house and he thought it was a
    robber.    Defendant "clicked" to Elizabeth to tell her that she
    had to go and then "clicked" back to Carl but he had already
    18                              A-5370-13T3
    hung up.     Defendant testified that she abandoned her groceries
    and "jumped" in her car, and was driving home when she got a
    call from Pearson.         She arrived home at 8:15 or "8:20 at the
    max."     When she arrived, she found that Carl had locked himself
    in his bedroom closet, with the baby monitor and his cell phone.
    Defendant testified that she was very angry with Pearson,
    and berated him for frightening Carl.            She denied ever telling
    Pearson that she did not have a land-line phone in the house.
    She     testified   that   she   had    a   "miscommunication"   with   the
    Division caseworker, who thought Valentine had been left with
    Carl for a longer period than he really was.              The caseworker
    said that Carl was unfit to supervise the baby, and defendant
    signed the safety plan that the caseworker prepared even though
    she disagreed with it.
    Defendant testified that Carl has been caring for Valentine
    ever since the baby was born.          Carl is very attuned to the baby,
    and loves to play with him.        She has observed Carl changing the
    baby's diapers, feeding him, and mixing formula.           He helps with
    the baby's baths and knows how to take the baby's temperature.
    He can warm food in the microwave and cook simple things if he
    has directions.      Further, Carl has known the basic instructions
    for emergencies ever since he was seven years old, and knew how
    to call her in case of an emergency.
    19                         A-5370-13T3
    Defendant acknowledged that Carl has significant academic
    limitations,        but   insisted      that      he    has     strong     daily       living
    skills.      He does not wander from the house and does not put
    himself in situations that he cannot handle.                               She testified
    that, within the last year, the police were probably at her home
    four or five times due to problems she was having with V.M.,
    Sr., and when Carl was at home, he reacted appropriately by
    taking the baby and going to his room.
    Defendant      testified       that    she      is   a   "corporate          franchise
    representative" who formerly owned three fitness centers.                                  She
    testified that she would not be able to find anyone to invest in
    her fitness centers now that she has a substantiated finding of
    child neglect on her record.
    On   February      21,   2014,    Judge       Camille      M.    Kenny       issued    a
    comprehensive oral opinion, finding by a preponderance of the
    evidence that defendant neglected the baby by leaving him alone
    with   Carl.           Judge    Kenny    noted         that     everyone      agreed     that
    Valentine      was     "happy,    healthy,          clean,       fed,    bathed,        [and]
    clothed."           However,    she     found       that      defendant       was    grossly
    negligent      in    leaving     Valentine        home      alone      with    Carl,     whom
    defendant knew to be cognitively impaired and developmentally
    20                                      A-5370-13T3
    disabled.5
    In     rendering     her    opinion,        the    judge     found    that    the
    Division's witnesses were credible in their recollections of the
    events that occurred on June 12, 2013, and in their observations
    and assessments of Carl.            On the other hand, the judge found
    that defendant's testimony was not credible.                     The judge also did
    not   accept    the   testimony     of     defendant's       expert      witness,    Dr.
    Abrams,     because      her    opinions        were    premised    on     defendant's
    inaccurate version of events.
    The     judge   noted      that      her     impressions      of     Carl     were
    consistent with the observations made by Pearson, Garcia and
    Tillis      concerning    his    limited         cognitive    abilities      and     his
    inability to handle stressful situations.                    His typical mode of
    dealing with difficult situations was to run away and hide, as
    he did when Pearson arrived at the house.                          The judge noted
    Carl's testimony that he would "never" allow a police officer to
    enter the house.
    The judge found that, while Carl could feed, diaper, and
    play with the baby "[u]nder his mother's supervision," he was
    5
    The judge made clear that she did not consider any inadmissible
    hearsay in reaching her decision. During the trial, the judge
    stated that she would disregard hearsay statements contained in
    the Division's case records. She also precluded the Division
    from admitting in evidence reports containing prejudicial
    hearsay statements from defendant's former boyfriend, V.M., Sr.,
    with whom defendant had a hostile relationship.
    21                                 A-5370-13T3
    unable to safely care for the child alone.   The judge found that
    Carl did not like confrontation of any sort, had difficulty
    communicating when he was upset, and became upset very easily.
    Most importantly, Judge Kenny found that Carl would not be able
    to handle an emergency situation, should one arise while he was
    caring for Valentine, and that defendant exposed the baby to a
    serious, unjustified risk by leaving Carl alone with the baby
    for an extended period of time.
    Judge Kenny credited Pearson's account of the amount of
    time defendant was gone from the house on the evening of June
    12.   She concluded that defendant did not come home until at
    least forty minutes after Pearson arrived at the house, meaning
    that Carl was alone with the child for more than an hour.      The
    judge found defendant's testimony on the timing issue to be
    completely incredible.   She did not believe that defendant was
    able to drive from her house in Union County to a ShopRite store
    several towns away and then return home within fifteen minutes. 6
    Nor did she believe defendant's testimony that she only intended
    to run out for a few minutes to buy a few items.
    The judge also did not believe defendant's testimony that
    6
    During defendant's testimony, the judge asked her a series of
    questions which elicited defendant's turn-by-turn explanation of
    her route from her home to the ShopRite, including her admission
    that she needed to pass through at least two other towns between
    her home and the municipality in which the store was located.
    22                     A-5370-13T3
    Pearson phoned her around 8:15 p.m., shortly after she entered
    the ShopRite, to tell her to return home.                   Rather, she believed
    the officer's credible testimony that he did not even arrive at
    defendant's     home     until    8:50   p.m.,     that    a     police   dispatcher
    called defendant after finding her phone number in a police
    file, and that it took defendant forty minutes to arrive home.
    The judge did not believe defendant's testimony that Carl phoned
    her   that    evening,    crediting      instead    Pearson's       testimony    that
    Carl did not know how to reach his mother or call for help.
    Judge     Kenny     found     that       there      were     no     extenuating
    circumstances to excuse defendant's leaving the baby with Carl
    for an extended period of time.               She noted that if the baby were
    sick, it might be reasonable to leave Carl in the car with the
    baby for a few minutes while defendant ran into a pharmacy to
    buy medicine.     But there was no emergency on the evening of June
    12.    The judge noted that if defendant needed groceries, she
    could have picked them up on the way home with Valentine, whose
    daycare center was near the ShopRite.
    The judge did not credit Abrams' expert opinion, finding
    that it was based on a misapprehension of the facts.                        Contrary
    to what Abrams believed to be the case, the judge found that
    Carl did not hide in a closet and call his mother, he did not
    know how to call 911 on the evening of June 12, 2013, defendant
    23                                  A-5370-13T3
    was not readily available to him by phone and Carl was not able
    to communicate with Officer Pearson in any helpful way.               The
    judge found that Carl was simply unable to handle the situation
    with   which   he   was   presented.    The   judge   noted   that   "any
    reasonable 12-year-old . . . could have handled that situation
    and, in addition, been able to call his mother.         [Carl] can't do
    that."
    The judge concluded that a reasonable person would not have
    left Valentine alone with Carl for a prolonged period of time on
    June 12, 2013, and that defendant was grossly negligent in doing
    so.
    II
    Under Title 9, an "abused or neglected child" includes a
    child whose "physical . . . condition . . . is in imminent
    danger of becoming impaired" as a result of his parent's failure
    "to exercise a minimum degree of care . . . in providing the
    child with proper supervision[.]"        N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21(c)(4)(b).
    Even if a child is not actually harmed, "a finding of abuse and
    neglect can be based on proof of imminent danger and substantial
    risk of harm."      N.J. Dep't of Children & Families v. A.L., 
    213 N.J. 1
    , 23 (2013).        Under those circumstances, "the Division
    must show imminent danger or a substantial risk of harm to a
    child by a preponderance of the evidence."            
    Ibid.
       "Moreover,
    24                           A-5370-13T3
    '[c]ourts      need    not       wait   to   act    until   a    child       is   actually
    irreparably      impaired         by    parental      inattention       or     neglect.'"
    Dep't   of    Children       &    Families    v.    E.D.-O.,     
    223 N.J. 166
    ,   178
    (2015) (quoting In re Guardianship of DMH, 
    161 N.J. 365
    , 383
    (1999)).
    A parent "'fails to exercise a minimum degree of care'"
    when her conduct is grossly negligent or where she "'recklessly
    creates a risk of serious injury'" to the child.                         Id. at 179-80
    (citation omitted).              "Any allegation of child neglect in which
    the conduct of the parent or caretaker does not cause actual
    harm is fact-sensitive and must be resolved on a case-by-case
    basis."      Id. at 192.
    In reviewing Judge Kenny's decision in this Title 9 case,
    we do not write on a clean slate.                         We may not disturb the
    judge's      factual   findings         so   long    as   they    are    supported        by
    sufficient      credible         evidence.         N.J.   Div.   of     Child     Prot.     &
    Permanency v. C.W., 
    435 N.J. Super. 130
    , 139 (App. Div. 2014).
    And we owe particular deference to the judge's evaluation of
    witness credibility.              N.J. Div. of Youth and Family Servs. v.
    F.M., 
    211 N.J. 420
    , 448 (2012).
    We    afford   particular    deference   "to
    factfindings of the family court because it
    has the superior ability to gauge the
    credibility of the witnesses who testify
    before it and because it possesses special
    expertise in matters related to the family."
    25                                    A-5370-13T3
    This "'feel of the case' . . . can never be
    realized by a review of the cold record."
    Consequently,   a  family   court's factual
    findings "should not be disturbed unless
    'they are so wholly insupportable as to
    result in a denial of justice[.]'"
    [C.W., supra, 435 N.J.     Super.   at   139-40
    (citations omitted).]
    A trial judge's legal conclusions are subject to plenary
    review.     Id. at 140 (citing Manalapan Realty, L.P. v. Twp. Comm.
    of Manalapan, 
    140 N.J. 366
    , 378 (1995)).         We review a trial
    judge's evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.          State v.
    J.A.C., 
    210 N.J. 281
    , 295 (2012).      We also apply the abuse-of-
    discretion standard to a judge's decision to grant or deny a
    mistrial.    State v. Smith, 
    224 N.J. 36
    , 47 (2016).
    On this appeal, defendant presents the following points of
    argument for our consideration:
    POINT I.
    THE   TRIAL   COURT'S    FINDING  OF GROSS
    NEGLIGENCE AS TO K.G. WAS IN ERROR AND
    SHOULD BE GROUNDS FOR REVERSAL OF THE
    FINDING OF ABUSE AND NEGLECT AS TO K.G.
    UNDER N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21(c)(4)(b).
    A.    THE TRIAL COURT'S ANALYSIS OF THE
    FACTS AS IS APPLIED TO THE LAW WAS
    IN ERROR.
    B.    THE TRIAL COURT'S RELIANCE UPON
    THE COURT'S DECISION IN D.C.P.P.
    V. E.D.O. WAS IN ERROR AND SHOULD
    BE GROUNDS FOR REVERSAL OF THE
    TRIAL COURT'S FINDING AS TO K.G.
    26                          A-5370-13T3
    C.      THE    TRIAL    COURT     ERRED    IN
    CONSIDERING THE DDD DETERMINATION
    OF       SUBSTANTIAL        COGNITIVE
    IMPAIRMENT      AND      THE     ECLC
    CLASSIFICATION OF [CARL] AS A
    BASIS   OF   A   FINDING   OF   GROSS
    NEGLIGENCE AS TO K.G.
    D.      THE    TRIAL   COURT    ERRED   IN
    DISCOUNTING THE OPINION OF DEFENSE
    EXPERT, DR. LIDIA ABRAMS, PHD.,
    AND IN FINDING GROSS NEGLIGENCE AS
    TO K.G. AND, SHOULD BE GROUNDS FOR
    REVERSAL AS TO K.G.
    POINT II.
    THE TRIAL COURT'S DETERMINATION THAT THE
    DIVISION MET ITS BURDEN OF PROOF BASED ON A
    GROSS NEGLIGENCE STANDARD, WHERE NO ACTUAL
    HARM, IMMINENT DANGER OR SUBSTANTIAL RISK OF
    HARM WAS ESTABLISHED, SHOULD BE THE BASIS OF
    REVERSAL AS TO K.G.
    POINT III.
    THE TRIAL COURT'S DENIAL OF THE MOTION FOR A
    MISTRIAL WAS IN ERROR AND THE TRIAL COURT'S
    DENIAL OF THE DEFENSE'S APPLICATION TO
    REOPEN CROSS EXAMINATION OF DCPP WORKER
    GARCIA WAS IN ERROR.
    POINT IV.
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN NOT PERMIT[T]ING
    THE DEFENSE TO INTRODUCE CERTAIN TESTIMONY
    OF WITNESSES AS TO ALL THE DAY CARE RECORDS
    AND MEDICAL RECORDS OF THE MINOR CHILD AND
    OF [CARL].
    POINT V.
    K.G.'S NAME SHOULD BE ORDERED REMOVED FROM
    THE CENTRAL REGISTRY BECAUSE THE CONCLUSION
    OF NEGLECT IS NOT SUPPORTED BY THE EVIDENCE
    AND THE STIGMA WILL DISADVANTAGE HER.
    27                          A-5370-13T3
    We find no merit in any of those contentions.                     Defendant's
    appellate arguments rely heavily on her version of the facts,
    which the judge rejected.            Having reviewed the record, we find
    no   basis     to    disturb     Judge     Kenny's     evaluation      of   witness
    credibility.        Her findings of fact are supported by sufficient
    credible evidence and her decision is legally correct in light
    of those factual findings.           See C.W., supra, 435 N.J. Super. at
    139-40.
    Turning to the central issue in the case, we find no reason
    to   second-guess       the    judge's     conclusion       that    defendant      was
    grossly negligent in leaving the baby alone with Carl, who was
    cognitively impaired and unable to safely care for the child.
    Carl's    incapacity     was     demonstrated      through    the     testimony     of
    multiple     witnesses,       including    the    assistant    principal     of    his
    school,    a   DDD    evaluator,     his    own    trial    testimony,      and   his
    conduct on the evening of June 12, 2013.                   It is clear from this
    record     that     leaving    Valentine       alone   with    Carl    could      have
    resulted in serious harm to the baby.                  The fact that Carl was
    able to care for the child under his mother's supervision did
    not mean that it was safe to leave Carl in sole charge of the
    baby for extended periods of time.                Whether defendant's conduct
    resulted from extremely poor judgment or willful blindness to
    the danger is immaterial; her actions constituted child neglect
    28                                A-5370-13T3
    within    the   meaning   of     N.J.S.A.    9:6-8.21(c)(4)(b).         E.D.-O.,
    supra, 223 N.J. at 178-79.7
    Moreover, this was neither an isolated lapse in parental
    judgment    nor   a   one-time    response    to    an   emergency    situation.
    Rather, based on defendant's own testimony and her statements to
    the Division, she made a practice of leaving Carl in sole charge
    of the child, while she shopped and ran other errands.                          That
    conduct    constituted    gross    negligence      because,   as     this    record
    illustrates, Carl lacked the capacity to safely care for the
    baby without supervision.
    None of the cases on which defendant relies are on point,
    because they involved understandable one-time mistakes, simple
    as opposed to gross negligence, or insufficient proof of risk to
    the child.      See Dep't of Children & Families v. T.B., 
    207 N.J. 294
     (2011); N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. J.L., 
    410 N.J. Super. 159
     (App. Div. 2009); A.L., supra, 213 N.J. at 8-9.
    For example, in T.B., the court overturned a finding of
    child neglect against a mother who, on one occasion, "left her
    four-year-old     child    unsupervised       for    two    hours     under       the
    mistaken belief that his grandmother was home."                     T.B., supra,
    7
    The record strongly suggests that defendant was aware of Carl's
    significant limitations, which she sought to conceal from the
    Division during its May investigation.    See N.J. Div. of Child
    Prot. & Permanency v. K.N.S., 
    441 N.J. Super. 392
    , 399 (App.
    Div. 2015).
    29                                   A-5370-13T3
    
    207 N.J. at 296
    .        The Court acknowledged that "[t]here exists a
    continuum between actions that are grossly negligent and those
    that    are    merely   negligent"      and   a    "parent's     conduct    must        be
    evaluated in context based on the risks posed by the situation."
    
    Id. at 309
    .
    The Court considered that, while it was "a close case," the
    mother's      conduct   was    not    grossly     negligent.     "This     is     not    a
    situation in which she left her four-year-old son at home alone
    knowing there was no adult supervision."                 
    Ibid.
           Instead, based
    on longstanding arrangements with the grandmother, the mother
    believed that the grandmother was home in bed, because her car
    was    parked    outside,     and    therefore     believed    she    could      safely
    leave the child tucked in bed while she went out to dinner.
    However, unknown to the mother, the grandmother had unexpectedly
    left the house.         "What occurred on the date in question was
    totally out of the ordinary."             
    Id. at 310
    .         The Court concluded
    that the defendant was negligent in not making absolutely sure
    that    the     grandmother     was    home,      but   she    was    not       grossly
    negligent. 
    Ibid.
    Similarly, in J.L., a mother was negligent but not grossly
    negligent in allowing her young children to walk home from a
    playground near the family's home.                J.L., supra, 
    410 N.J. Super. at 161
    .       She was able to see the children at all times on their
    30                                     A-5370-13T3
    trip     home,    but    when       they   entered          the    house,     the      door
    unexpectedly slammed shut without her knowledge. The children
    were     frightened      and    the    older      child      called       911.        After
    considering the entire context of the incident, we concluded:
    [W]e are satisfied, in this case, that
    J.L.'s     conduct,     although     arguably
    inattentive or even negligent, did not meet
    the requisite standard of willful or wanton
    misconduct. In this regard, we note that the
    children were almost four and almost six
    years   of  age,   respectively.  They   were
    returning to a home that was within view of
    their mother, and they were not required to
    cross any streets to reach it. The home,
    itself, was deemed safe by [the Division],
    and with the exception of this incident,
    J.L.'s conduct toward her children was
    deemed appropriate.
    [J.L., supra, 
    410 N.J. Super. at 168
    .]
    We also considered that the mother had trained her children
    to leave the door ajar if they walked home from the playground
    ahead of her, that the door had unexpectedly swung shut and
    locked on this occasion, and that the older child knew how to
    call 911 and had done so.             "These circumstances suggest that the
    child    exercised      good    judgment        and   was    well       trained   by    his
    parents to deal with the crisis that he perceived to exist."
    
    Id. at 169
    .
    Most    recently,       in   E.D.-O.,     the   Court       addressed      a    case
    where,    on     one    occasion,     a    mother      left       her    sleeping      baby
    unattended in a car for about ten minutes while she shopped in a
    31                                     A-5370-13T3
    nearby   store.    E.D.-O.,    supra,       223   N.J.    at   169.    The     Court
    rejected the Division's application of "a categorical rule" that
    any parent who leaves a child unattended in a car must be found
    to have committed gross negligence under Title 9.                     Id. at 192-
    93.      Rather,    the   Court      held     that       the   totality   of    the
    circumstances must be considered:
    Those circumstances include but are not
    limited to the actual distance between the
    vehicle   and  the   store,   [the   mother's]
    ability to keep the vehicle in view, the
    length   of   time   she    left   the   child
    unattended, the number of vehicles and
    persons in the area, the ability to gain
    access to the interior of the car, and the
    temperature inside and outside the car.
    [Id. at 194.]
    Based on our reading of the foregoing cases, we derive some
    principles   appropriate       to    this    case.        We   acknowledge     that
    parents are called upon to make many judgment calls in raising
    their children, and deciding on a child care provider is one of
    them. Under the minimum degree of care standard, in evaluating a
    parent's decision that someone is capable of caring for a child
    in his or her absence, the age and abilities of the child are
    important factors, as are the age and abilities of the potential
    caretaker,   considered       with   all     other   relevant     circumstances.
    Whether there is an unacceptable risk of harm and whether the
    parent has been grossly negligent are fact sensitive issues that
    32                                A-5370-13T3
    must be resolved on a case by case basis, in light of the
    legally competent evidence.
    In this case, defendant left a helpless infant in the care
    of Carl who, while he was a caring and loving brother, had the
    functional capacity of a seven-year-old and lacked sufficient
    mental capacity to safely care for the baby.   There is a quantum
    difference between allowing a young child, or a person with a
    very limited mental capacity, to act as a mother's helper under
    supervision, and leaving that individual alone to care for a
    baby.
    Unlike T.B., J.L., or E.D.-O., this was not an accidental
    or unusual circumstance. Defendant made a practice of leaving
    the baby alone with Carl.     In this case, she left Carl in sole
    charge of the baby for an extended period of time.       Further,
    unlike A.L., where the Division failed to prove the risk of harm
    to the child, here there was ample evidence to support Judge
    Kenny's finding that the baby was placed "in peril." See A.L.,
    supra,   213 N.J. at 8-9.
    Defendant contends that a finding of gross negligence is
    unwarranted, and her name should not be placed on the Central
    Registry pursuant to N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.11, because no actual harm
    befell the baby, and at the time of the fact-finding hearing he
    33                       A-5370-13T3
    was well cared for and in no danger.              We cannot agree.         As the
    Supreme Court recently held:
    We   reject   the    interpretation    of   the
    definition of abuse and neglect, N.J.S.A.
    9:6-8.21(c)(4)(b), advanced by the mother
    that the statute requires a finding that the
    parent's conduct presents an imminent risk
    of harm to the child at the time of fact-
    finding rather than at the time of the event
    that triggered the Division's intervention.
    Such an interpretation is not supported by
    the text of the statute, the legislative
    history,     the      Court's     long-standing
    interpretation    and    application   of   the
    statute, or common sense.
    [E.D.-O., supra, 223 N.J. at 170.]
    Defendant's       remaining      appellate    arguments       are     without
    sufficient    merit    to   warrant    discussion    beyond    the       following
    comments.     R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).           We find no abuse of discretion
    in   the     judge's    evidentiary      rulings    and     case     management
    decisions.     Defendant's mistrial motion was filed on the second
    day of the trial, by a newly-retained attorney who essentially
    wanted either a mistrial or a re-run of the first trial day.
    The judge appropriately denied the motion, for the reasons she
    stated on the record on February 6, 2014.              Likewise, the judge
    thoroughly     addressed    defendant's       evidentiary     arguments,        and
    based her decision on legally competent evidence.
    Finally, we cannot agree with defendant's argument that her
    name should not be placed on the Central Registry because it may
    34                                 A-5370-13T3
    harm her business interests:
    [W]hether a parent's or caretaker's conduct
    causes an imminent risk of harm is evaluated
    through the lens of the statutory standard
    as interpreted and applied by the Court,
    rather   than   through   the   lens of   the
    consequences   of   a   finding   of neglect,
    specifically, enrollment in the Central
    Registry.   Enrollment in the Registry is a
    consequence of a finding of abuse or
    neglect. N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.11.
    [E.D.-O., supra, 223 N.J. at 195.]
    Affirmed.
    35                        A-5370-13T3