Filed 3/26/13 In re J.B. CA3
                                           NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.



              IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
                                      THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
                                                     (Sacramento)
                                                            ----



In re J. B., a Person Coming Under the Juvenile Court
Law.

SACRAMENTO COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF                                                              C071191
HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES,
                                                                                 (Super. Ct. No. JD231069)
                   Plaintiff and Respondent,

         v.

D. B.,

                   Defendant and Appellant.




         D. B. (father) appeals from the juvenile court’s jurisdictional and dispositional
orders which removed the minor J. B. from his custody and granted him reunification
services. (Welf. & Inst. Code,1 §§ 355, 358.) Father contends no substantial evidence
supported the court’s findings under section 300, subdivision (b), that father’s drug habit




1        Undesignated section references are to the Welfare and Institutions Code.

                                                             1
put the minor at substantial risk of serious physical harm, and that removal from his
custody was required. We affirm.
       Mother’s appeal was dismissed on September 27, 2012, pursuant to In re
Phoenix H. (2009) 47 Cal.4th 835.
                   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
       By a section 300 petition filed May 27, 2011, Sacramento County Department of
Health and Human Services (the department) alleged:
       Father failed to protect the minor in that he left her in the care of mother (A. H.),
knowing that mother had a substance abuse problem and a mental health problem, and
thereafter gave the department misleading information regarding mother’s and the
minor’s whereabouts.
       Mother had an active and untreated mental health condition and a long history of
abusing methamphetamine and other illicit substances, and had refused or failed to
benefit from voluntary services to deal with these problems. Mother had previously lost
custody of two half siblings of the minor due to her drug problem, and both had since
been adopted. On or about the date of the minor’s birth (August 7, 2010), the minor
tested positive for methamphetamine.
       In July 2011, the juvenile court sustained the petition as to mother, but found the
department had failed to meet its burden of proof as to father. The court placed the minor
with father on condition that the parents refrain from living together and that father
submit to random drug testing for 30 days; mother received reunification services. The
department was authorized to require father to submit to an alcohol and other drug
assessment (assignment).
       In November 2011, alleging that father tested positive for methamphetamine on
three different dates in July and August 2011, the department filed a section 388 petition
seeking court-ordered drug treatment for him. On December 28, 2011, the court ordered



                                              2
father to participate in the specialized treatment and recovery program (program) and
dependency drug court, and to test for drugs until he reported to the program intake.
       On January 4, 2012, the department filed a status review report recommending
continued dependency for the minor, continued placement with father (but only if he
tested negative for drugs and actively engaged in substance abuse treatment), and
termination of mother’s services.
       The report stated that mother was arrested on October 24, 2011, for felony
possession of narcotics and was incarcerated in county jail with an expected release date
of June 22, 2012. Father was arrested at the same time on an outstanding misdemeanor
warrant; both parents were found by law enforcement together in father’s vehicle. Father
had not informed the social worker of his arrest and the social worker did not know
where the minor had been during father’s arrest and incarceration.
       Mother’s program case was closed for nonparticipation in August 2011. Mother
had not contacted the department or enrolled in parenting and counseling groups since the
minor was released to father’s care in July 2011. Mother had not visited the minor in the
last six months.
       Father tested positive for methamphetamine at his program intake on
December 29, 2011. He had been referred to strategies for change for outpatient
treatment, but would be reassessed for a higher level of treatment if he continued to test
positive. He did so again on January 3, 2012, but denied methamphetamine use and
blamed his positive results on kidney stones.
       At an in-home review hearing on January 6, 2012, the parties submitted on the
report. The juvenile court continued the minor’s placement with father and extended
mother’s reunification services.
       On February 3, 2012, the department filed a subsequent supplemental petition
requesting placement of the minor in foster care. (§§ 342, 387.) The petition alleged that
father had tested positive for methamphetamine nine times from July 2011 to January

                                             3
2012, had missed a test in January 2012, had not acknowledged his substance abuse
problem, and had refused to enter residential treatment as recommended by his program
worker on January 19, 2012.
       The department’s application for protective custody further alleged: At the
January 19, 2012, program meeting, father was offered the chance to place the minor in a
voluntary placement so that he could enter residential substance abuse treatment. He
declined, indicating he could refrain from further methamphetamine use. Nevertheless,
he had two subsequent positive tests for methamphetamine. He still blamed these results
on kidney stones, but this explanation seemed implausible. His program worker said the
results came from “oral swabs” which showed recent methamphetamine use and could
not have been processed or affected by the kidneys; in any event, the social worker knew
of no information suggesting that kidney stones can cause a positive methamphetamine
test. Moreover, father had recently obtained a prescription for pain medication. The
program’s policy would preclude testing father for up to 30 days while he was taking
such medication, and if he continued to do so after 30 days, it would close his case.
Therefore, he had been referred to strategies for change for interim testing.
       On February 10, 2012, over father’s objection, the juvenile court ordered the
minor detained.
       On February 28, 2012, father was dismissed from dependency drug court for
failure to participate.
       The department’s jurisdictional report, signed February 29, 2012, recommended
continued placement for the minor in the foster home, where she was adjusting well. The
report also recommended bypassing services to both parents because they had failed to
address their drug problems.
       On January 31, 2012 (before the minor’s detention), a social worker intern met
with father and the minor at father’s residence. It was organized, clutter-free, and well



                                             4
stocked with food. The minor stayed with father’s roommate, “Jimbo,” while father was
working.
       Mother had never had any concerns about father’s alleged methamphetamine use
and was very surprised by the current allegations. She said she and father were still
together, but she was willing to separate from him if he did not rehabilitate from his
substance abuse problem.
       Father went to the hospital in late January 2012, because of pain from kidney
stones; he was prescribed Vicodin among other drugs. Due to his prescription, he was on
a 30-day leave from the program effective January 27, 2012. If he were dismissed from
dependency drug court (as he subsequently was), his program case would be closed. The
social worker intern had referred him for biweekly testing at strategies for change, but
that organization had no test results for father more recent than August 9, 2010. As of
March 2, 2012, he had not enrolled in a substance abuse treatment program.
       Father had made minimal progress in his case plan services and had not
participated in substance abuse treatment services, general counseling, and parenting
classes. He had failed to take the minor to medical and dental appointments.
       The juvenile court held a contested jurisdiction/disposition hearing from May 1 to
May 7, 2012. The witnesses included social workers Margaret Salvemini and Jennifer
Butcher.
       Salvemini, who had long experience in substance abuse assessment, counseling,
and treatment, testified that parents addicted to drugs such as cocaine and
methamphetamine are likely to neglect their children because the parents put pursuit of
the drug ahead of the children’s needs, especially their emotional needs. Children of
addicted parents often experience bonding problems and developmental delays;
methamphetamine can create “anger issues” and has an impact on “emotions and
learning.”



                                             5
       Because the parents’ pursuit of the drug can bring about an irregular way of life,
including the frequent presence of strangers in the home, children tend to seek out other
adults in the hope of getting attention, which often leads to physical and sexual abuse.
Addicted parents frequently have unstable housing situations, entailing homelessness,
temporary housing, and leaving children with unsafe caretakers, all of which is especially
detrimental for children under the age of three. The parents also frequently divert
essential funds from providing for the children to obtaining drugs, leaving their homes
without food, clothing, or power.
       Methamphetamine tends to be used in “runs” where the user will go for three to
five days on the drug without sleeping or eating regularly, while the children are left to
fend for themselves. Social workers often find small children left alone or uncared for in
the early morning hours because their parents had gone on a run and crashed.
       Because it is in powder form, methamphetamine permeates its surroundings.
Thus, children are exposed when they touch contaminated surfaces and put their hands in
their mouths.
       The fact that a parent uses methamphetamine regularly raises concerns of risk to a
child, because drugs are “seductive.” Moreover, drug users seek out other drug users
because nonusers will not tolerate users’ behavior.
       Children under age three are at greater risk of abuse and neglect from
methamphetamine-using parents than older children: “[A] child under the age of three
cannot make themselves a peanut butter sandwich, cannot generally walk next door and
tell someone what is going on, cannot fend for themselves, no one see [sic] those
children. They’re not in school, they’re kind of stuck in their situation. They would be
highly vulnerable.”2



2      Salvemini had not assessed or worked with the parents in this case and was not
familiar with the minor.

                                             6
       Butcher, the case-carrying social worker from late May 2011 to the present, stated
that there would be a risk in returning the minor to father “based on mainly everything
that [Salvemini] testified to earlier which is the poor decision making that you see
associated with methamphetamine abuse, prioritizing the use of the drug over meeting the
child’s needs, making bad decisions about who you’re leaving the child with, who you’re
allowing in and out of the home, whether or not you’re feeding them on schedule,
changing their diaper on schedule, sleeping and not monitoring the children, things of
that nature.”
       Father’s living arrangements had changed several times since Butcher got the case.
The juvenile court initially continued disposition because father did not have a place to
stay with the child.3 He stayed at a motel for two days; then he stayed with friends,
sleeping in someone’s living room for months; then he rented a room. Now he had
another new address, which Butcher did not know anything about. When father was
discharged from the hospital in August 2011, the discharge papers showed a different
address from his home address.
       When Butcher visited father’s residence, he was not always there, but the minor
usually was. Willie Ray Miller (known as Jimbo), the friend father stayed with after
leaving the motel, normally watched her. Although Butcher would not have chosen him
as a caretaker, she did not have “substantial concerns” about him.
       Father was in denial about his substance abuse problem. His lack of honesty on
this subject meant that everything he said had to be questioned.4




3     Butcher acknowledged that father returned to California from Wisconsin when the
case was opened and did not have a home in California then.
4     The first time Butcher asked him about a positive drug test, he claimed that “it was
from performing oral sex on a female . . . [who] had used.” Butcher did not know of any
evidence that a positive test for methamphetamine could come about that way.

                                             7
       When father was confronted at the January 2012 program meeting and offered
treatment, he was told that “nobody is believing these explanation[s], they’re completely
implausible and you’re about to lose your child. Let us do this . . . placement and get you
the help that you need before you lose this child.” His statement that he thought he could
stop using methamphetamine on his own was a “slight acknowledgement” of his
problem, but the only one so far. After the program meeting, he tested positive again. In
Butcher’s opinion, he could not be worked with on this problem.
       Butcher acknowledged that the minor’s developmental, mental, and physical needs
were currently being met. She had not seen any bonding problems between father and
the minor. Although she was concerned that father’s drug use might lead him to keep
odd hours, she had not observed that he was actually doing so. When she did not find
him at home, it was during daytime working hours; if she visited in the early evening, he
was there.
       Father did not testify or present evidence. He opposed jurisdiction, arguing that
even if he had a substance abuse problem, there had been no showing of harm or risk of
harm to the minor in his care.
       The juvenile court sustained the section 387 petition, making the following
findings:
       When the court heard the original section 300 petition in July 2011, it ordered
father to test for drugs (initially for 30 days). From then until January 29, 2012, he had
tested positive for methamphetamine 10 times and failed to test another four times, which
counted as additional positive results. Two presumptive positive tests were confirmed as
positive for methamphetamine by the laboratory; father had the opportunity to have the




       The next time Butcher raised the topic with father, he blamed his kidney stones.
Another time he mentioned an asthma inhaler; “then it went back to the kidney stones
again.”

                                             8
other presumptive positive tests confirmed or not confirmed by paying $20 for lab
testing, but he declined to do so.
       Despite these results and the court’s offer of services for substance abuse, father
denied for six months that he was taking methamphetamine. He had “not been candid at
all about this. He claimed it was the result of kidney stones, that his doctors would
provide proof, would provide evidence, that he would prove it. That’s what he said. He
said it in court in prior hearings. He said it to me. There is no proof. No proof has been
offered and that’s because the proof does not exist.”
       Faced in January 2012 with the choice of doing drug treatment or seeing the
department file a petition to remove the minor from his care (“choose meth or choose
your child”), father “folded”: he acknowledged he was using methamphetamine, but said
he could stop if he wanted to. Unfortunately, those were “famous last words.” After one
negative test, “he resumed his positive tests which is to say he resumed using
methamphetamine.”
       “In view of the father’s consistent use of methamphetamine, his persistent false
denials for months, his refusal to take up numerous offers of treatment, his final decision
to choose methamphetamine over his child, in view of the extraordinary dangers of meth,
the havoc that it inevitably brings to those who use it and to their families, and in view of
the child’s very young age and total dependency on its caregiver, the Court finds that
there has been adequate showing of a substantial risk of serious physical harm both as a
result of the father’s inability to adequately protect and to provide regular care due to his
substance abuse.” By clear and convincing evidence, there was substantial danger to the
minor if returned to father. The department did not have to wait to petition to remove the
minor until she had suffered actual physical harm in father’s care.
       As to disposition, the juvenile court found insufficient evidence to justify
bypassing services to father under section 361.5, subdivision (b)(13), the only provision
cited by the department. Father’s 1997 conviction for methamphetamine use, the

                                              9
evidence of “some use in 2006 to 2008,” and the current evidence did not amount to the
“history of extensive, abusive, and chronic . . . use” of methamphetamine required by that
provision. Therefore, the court ordered six months of services for father.5
                                         DISCUSSION
                                                 I
                                    Jurisdictional Findings
       Father contends the juvenile court abused its discretion by exercising jurisdiction
because there was no substantial evidence that the minor was at risk in father’s custody.
According to father, there was no nexus between his positive drug tests or refusal to enter
a recommended residential treatment program and risk of serious physical harm or illness
to the minor, there was no substantial evidence that the minor was adversely affected by
father’s positive drug tests, and the court’s finding of potential risk was based only on
speculation. We disagree.
       Under section 300, subdivision (b), a child is subject to juvenile court jurisdiction
if the child “has suffered, or there is a substantial risk that the child will suffer, serious
physical harm or illness, as a result of the failure or inability of his or her parent . . . to
provide regular care for the child due to the parent’s . . . substance abuse.” This finding
must be made by a preponderance of the evidence. (§ 355, subd. (a).) Once the court has
found that the minor is a person described by section 300, the minor may be removed
from the parents’ physical custody if the court finds clear and convincing evidence that
there is or would be a substantial danger to the minor’s physical health, safety, protection,



5      The court bypassed services to mother under section 361.5, subdivision (b)(10),
(b)(11), and (b)(13).

       Mother’s appellate counsel filed an opening brief pursuant to In re Phoenix H.,
supra, 47 Cal.4th 835. Counsel states that she advised mother of her right to file a
supplemental opening brief within 30 days. We have received no such brief from mother.
Accordingly, mother’s appeal is dismissed. (Id. at p. 838.)

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or physical or emotional well-being if the minor were returned home, and there are no
reasonable means by which the minor can be protected without removal. (§ 361,
subd. (c).) The same standards apply to a subsequent petition alleging new facts and
circumstances. (§ 342; see In re Carlos T. (2009) 174 Cal.App.4th 795, 806.)
       “A jurisdictional finding under section 300, subdivision (b) requires:
‘ “(1) neglectful conduct by the parent in one of the specified forms; (2) causation; and
(3) ‘serious physical harm or illness’ to the child, or a ‘substantial risk’ of such harm or
illness.” [Citation.]’ [Citations.] The third element ‘effectively requires a showing that
at the time of the jurisdictional hearing the child is at substantial risk of serious physical
harm in the future (e.g., evidence showing a substantial risk that past physical harm will
reoccur.’ [Citation.]” (In re James R. (2009) 176 Cal.App.4th 129, 135.)
       “Evidence of past conduct, without more, is insufficient to support a jurisdictional
finding under section 300. There must be some reason beyond mere speculation to
believe the alleged conduct will recur. [Citation.]” (In re James R., supra,
176 Cal.App.4th at p. 136.)
       On appeal, we apply the substantial evidence test to jurisdictional findings. We
view the evidence most favorably to the findings and affirm if they are supported by
evidence which is “ ‘reasonable in nature, credible, and of solid value.’ [Citation.]” (In
re A.S. (2011) 202 Cal.App.4th 237, 244.)
       We note at the outset that father’s opening brief does not quote, summarize, or
paraphrase the juvenile court’s findings, but merely states how the court ruled. Because
father does not squarely address the evidence cited by the juvenile court, we could find
that his insufficient-evidence claim is forfeited. (See Foreman & Clark Corp. v. Fallon
(1971) 3 Cal.3d 875, 881; Niederer v. Ferreira (1987) 189 Cal.App.3d 1485, 1510.)
However, we shall reach the merits of the claim. Doing so, we find that substantial
evidence supported the court’s findings.



                                              11
       The testimony of substance abuse expert Salvemini as to the usual effects of
untreated methamphetamine addiction on a parent’s capacity to care safely for a child,
especially one as young as the minor, was undisputed. The testimony of case-carrying
social worker Butcher as to father’s addiction, his consistent denial thereof, and his
chronic dishonesty in manufacturing excuses for his long string of positive test results,
together with his failure or refusal to take advantage of the treatment programs he had
been offered, established that father was an addict with no apparent motivation to change
-- even when told “choose meth or choose your child.” Although father was currently
working and living with a roommate who could tend to the child in father’s absence, the
court could reasonably doubt whether either father’s capacity to work or his ability to
remain in association with a responsible roommate would last, given the typical
instability of methamphetamine addicts’ lives. In short, the court could reasonably find,
based on substantial evidence, that father’s untreated substance abuse problem put the
minor at serious risk of potential harm, even if she had not yet suffered such harm. (See
In re R.R. (2010) 187 Cal.App.4th 1264, 1283-1284; see generally In re Rocco M. (1991)
1 Cal.App.4th 814, 824-825 [children of tender years at greater risk from absence of
adequate supervision and care].)
       Father asserts without citing authority that his “positive drug tests did not pose a
substantial risk of future risk of serious physical harm.” (Capitalization omitted.) Father
merely recites the evidence that the minor has not yet suffered harm in his care, which is
insufficient to rebut the evidence of potential future harm we have set out above. The
same shortcoming defeats his assertion that any prediction of future harm was merely
speculative.
       Father asserts, citing In re J.O. (2009) 178 Cal.App.4th 139, that there was no
“causal nexus [shown] between the court’s findings of serious injury and the findings
related to the parent.” In re J.O. is inapposite. First, the court there was considering
evidence of actual harm to the child, not evidence of the risk of future harm. (Id. at

                                             12
p. 152.) Second, the court found a lack of causal nexus as to the appellant (father)
because the physical injury was caused by the conduct of the child’s mother, not of the
father. (Ibid.)
       Finally, father asserts, citing In re James R., supra, 176 Cal.App.4th at pages 135-
136, that there was no evidence of actual risk, but only “[p]erceptions of risk,” which are
not substantial evidence under section 300, subdivision (b). But in James R., the parents
were together, maintaining a stable home, and caring for the minors well, and neither had
any demonstrated current substance abuse problem; the only evidence of risk to the
minors was that the mother had a negative reaction to combining ibuprofen and beer. (In
re James R., supra, 176 Cal.App.4th at pp. 136-137.) These facts are far different from
the present case, where both parents are addicted to methamphetamine and father remains
in denial about his addiction.
       Substantial evidence supported the juvenile court’s jurisdictional findings.
                                             II
                                 Protection Of The Minor
       Father contends no substantial evidence supported the court’s finding that no
reasonable means existed to protect the minor without removal from his custody. (§ 361,
subd. (c).) However, father offers no new argument on this point, but merely reiterates
the arguments we have rejected in part I of the Discussion. For the reasons given above,
we conclude that the court correctly found there were no reasonable means to protect the
minor without removing the minor from father’s custody. So long as father chose
methamphetamine over his child, she could not be protected in his care.




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                                 DISPOSITION
     The judgment is affirmed.



                                   ROBIE       , Acting P. J.



We concur:



     BUTZ        , J.



     DUARTE         , J.




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