Prompted by a petition citing the 2021 alleged murder of a 6-year-old Waimanalo girl by her adoptive parents, the Hawaii Supreme Court issued a stunning opinion Tuesday that would open up to the public otherwise secret family court records under certain circumstances and guidelines.
The court ordered the disclosure of the case records involving Isabella Kalua, born Ariel Sellers, who was reported missing in 2021 and was determined in 2023 by the probate court to have died in August 2021.
“It is a significant shift in how the Department of Human Services (DHS), Family Court and others involved in the foster system should be looking at the secrecy surrounding these types of decisions,” said Brian Black, executive director of Public First Law Center, which petitioned the Supreme Court on the matter.
He said the intent of the petition was to resolve questions as to when the public should gain access to records when it involves children who have been in the foster system or who have been adopted “and something goes mortally wrong.”
The court found that state law sets standards for disclosing confidential Child Protective Act (CPA) and adoption case records to those not party to the case when “such access is in the best interests of the child or serves some other legitimate purpose” and in the case of adoption records, when there is a “showing of good cause.”
“Public access to CPA records may be warranted not only when a child has died or nearly died, but also when a child is missing or has been critically injured,” the court said.
Tuesday’s ruling explains situations where the records should be made public, which stands in contrast to the Peter “Peter Boy” Kema Jr. cases in which the court restricted what could be disclosed, Black said. “The difficulty has been over the last couple of decades, the way that DHS and family court have interpreted the decision in Kema v. Gaddis case, which has been very restrictive.”
Kema was a 6-year-old Hawaii island boy severely abused by his father, who claimed his son was left with a woman on Oahu, and disappeared in 1998. Peter Kema Sr. confessed 20 years later to killing his son in 1997 by failing to get medical help after inflicting multiple assaults. He said he unsuccessfully tried to burn his son’s body, which he eventually dumped in the ocean in Puna.
(In 2005, Lillian Koller, former Human Services director, helped push for the release of 2,000 pages of confidential documents detailing the abuse Peter Kema Jr. had undergone.)
The opinion, written by Associate Justice Todd Eddins, reflected that of all five Supreme Court justices, including Chief Justice Mark Recktenwald, on his last day in office. The justices ordered the family court to transmit the case records to them, which they reviewed before issuing their opinion.
The case, Public First Law Center v. Matthew Viola, senior judge of the First Circuit Family Court, also names as respondents Isaac and Lehua Kalua, the adoptive parents of Isabella Kalua.
The Kaluas are awaiting trial in the murder case, and were initially foster parents of Ariel Sellers and three of her four sisters, one of whom is likely to be called as a witness for the state.
The high court opinion, however, said that to protect the minors, their names, initials, dates of birth and other personal information must be redacted.
It cited Public First’s argument, saying, “Because Ariel died after being placed in foster care by DHS, Public First argued that a legitimate purpose supported public disclosure of the CPA records,” citing state law, “‘The death of any child by parents that DHS recommended deserves the hard light of public scrutiny to assess what went wrong and how to fix it.’”
“We agree,” the opinion says.
There will be a 30-day window for others to object to the opinion and to make more proposals on redacting other information.
The petition also names DHS, which also objected to the release of the records.
However, after the opinion was filed, DHS Child Welfare Services responded to the Honolulu Star-Advertiser seeking comment, saying: “DHS respects the decision of the Hawai‘i Supreme Court and will work with the Court to implement that decision.”
DHS raised the Kema v. Gaddis case to support the confidentiality of the records, saying “Ariel’s information is inextricably intertwined” with the surviving siblings’ information, as in the Kema case, and family court is prohibited from disclosing adoption records to those not party to the case.
Isaac Kalua also raised similar objections.
None of the representatives of Isabella Kalua’s siblings objected to the petition.
Steve Lane, a respondent and the court-appointed special master in the Kema and the Kalua cases, said in a written statement: “As the court-appointed Special Master on the Kalua case, I welcome and applaud the recent Supreme Court decision that holds that Child Protective Act records may be released and that appropriate redactions to those records are adequate to ensure the privacy interests of minors involved. The public has a right to know who is responsible for the rising tide of deaths and injuries that have plagued our foster care system for far too long, from those on the bench who approve the initial placements to those charged with their care and supervision. Truth isn’t the only thing that dies in darkness — so do too many of our children.”
The court did not specify whether the names of the judge(s) who made the decision to place the children in foster care with the Kaluas and to approve the adoptions, or the DHS employees involved in the placement, will be provided.
Black said it’s unknown what is in the case files. “It’s been kind of black boxes that the public doesn’t have access to.”
The court will need time to process the objections.
“Something will come out of this, but as far as what will come out has yet to be seen,” Black said.
Black said, “I do think it’s important for not only the judge’s decision in the foster proceedings and the adoption proceedings here to be public, but also what led up to it, the information provided to the judge by the Department of Human Services and others involved, and what the judge knew at the time the decision was made to place them in foster care or have them adopted.”
As far as the criminal case, he said, “I’m assuming they all have access to the information.”
“It’s really just the public that has been left in the dark,” Black said.
Source: The Garden Island