It is dinner time at the Brown home in Oklahoma. As dusk
settles over the horizon, ground venison sizzles in a skillet on the stove as
Veronica Brown and her father, Dusten, feed two pet geese in the backyard. Two
small dogs trail behind, climbing over each other to stay with the little girl.
A joyful bundle of dimples and curly dark hair, Veronica Brown is the master
and commander of her backyard empire.
“Here is their swimming pool. It has sharks in it,” she
points authoritatively to the cartoon sharks on the bottom. “But they drink out
of it.”
In a remarkable act of equanimity, one of the geese
allows her to pick him up and put him in the water. She strokes his head and
gives him some more pellets from her hand. Not to be outdone, the other goose
jumps in the small pool and tries to horn in on the food.
“She knows her own mind,” says her father proudly. “She
knows exactly what she thinks, and she won't hesitate to tell you.”
Shortly after, Brown's wife, Robin, comes out to the
family's deep freezer and grabs an armful of more frozen venison. She is still
dressed in her scrubs from a long day at nursing school. Brown has taken the
day off from his construction job to work on the house and run errands.
Their home is modest but immaculate and it is clear that
the Brown's take great pride in keeping it up. They have painted and restored
most of the interior, but have taken a break—for the time being.
“Every time we go to Home Depot, we come out with three
more projects,” says Brown, smiling wearily. “We had to stop because it's
always something.”
This much is clear: If one did not know that this small
family was at the center of one of the most important Indian law cases in the
last 30 years, the Browns would seem like any other family at 6 o'clock in
America. Two tired parents, a three-year-old with endless energy, dinner on the
stove, dogs yapping, geese squawking and a house in the middle of remodeling.
In military-speak, they are squared away.
But
underneath the normalcy, Dusten Brown is fully aware of the enormous
implications—both personally and tribally—for the blandly named Adoptive
Couple v. Baby Girl now under review by the Supreme Court.
“It's always in the back of my mind,” says Brown, an Iraq
War veteran who is still enlisted in the National Guard. “But I just go through
every day being a parent, just acting like it's not going on.”
To summarize, after Brown asked ex-fiancee Christine
Maldanado to marry him, she became pregnant. Shortly there after, she broke off
the engagement and contact with Brown and quietly put the couple's child up for
adoption without notifiying him of her intentions—which ultimately pitted
Dusten Brown against the pre-adoptive parents, Matt and Melanie Capobianco, and
the Capobianco's adoption lawyers, who apparently were not prepared for the
fact that Brown turned out to be a tougher customer than they expected.
This story, however, did not begin with Maldanado's
pregnancy. Brown and Maldanado have known each other nearly 14 years,
having met as 16-year-olds in high school. As classmates in Bartlesville's
alternative education program, they dated off and on for nearly 11 years.
During that time, Brown and Maldanado had both married and divorced other
people. Maldanado had two children by her first marriage, Brown had a daughter
from his.
Sometime in the late 2000s, they began dating again and
Brown decided to propose to Maldanado, and she accepted. By December of 2009,
she was pregnant. Soon after, she sent him a text message telling him she
wanted to break up.
“It was all text messages,” he said, “because she didn't
want to talk to me.”
Brown said he did not understand why she wanted to break
up and that she was not clear in her reasons. But because they had dated off
and on for so long, he said, “I just thought we could repair our relationship
and get back together. We had done that a lot, so I thought we could do it
again.”
Instead, she texted Brown asking him to sign his “rights”
over to her. Initially, Brown said he was under the impression that she simply wanted
full custody. At no time, he said, did she ever mention that she was thinking
of giving their child up for adoption. He is adamant that had he known what her
plans were, he would've acted on the spot.
“I thought she wanted full custody, but that I would
still be a part of my child's life,” he said. “I was going to war. I didn't
know what was going to happen in Iraq, or even if I was going to come back home
alive. So I texted her back and said okay.”
Thinking that Maldanado needed time, Brown said he sent
the text message and gave Maldanado her space. In his mind, they were simply in
another “off” period, yet he remained hopeful that they would eventually work
things out.
This was not to be. Four months after Veronica's birth,
and six days before Brown was scheduled to deploy for Iraq, he received a
message from Maldanado's lawyer that he needed to come to Bartlesville, Okla.,
to sign “some paperwork.” Because he was leaving the country, he was in “lock
down” at his Army base in Ft. Sill and was told he would not be allowed
to make the five hour trip to sign the paperwork. After some
wrangling with his superiors and the lawyers, he was given permission only to
leave base and go to nearby Lawton to visit a local process server.
It was from the process server that Brown
finally learned the whole truth: That his daughter had been born
four months earlier; that Maldanado had not only signed her own rights away,
but had also put the girl up for adoption, something to which he did not,
nor would ever agree; and that the child had also been living in South Carolina
for four months with people he considered strangers.
“It was like somebody stabbed me in the heart,” said
Brown. “She's a good mother to her other two children, so it was shocking to me
that she would just give our child away. As far as I'm concerned, she sold her
child. But if she wasn't going to raise [Veronica], then I definitely
wanted her.”
To Brown, it was clear that Maldanado, the Capobiancos
and their lawyers had timed their legal ambush before his deployment in
the hopes that Brown would simply fold and walk away. They were all, he said,
mistaken. “That was never going to happen.”
“I went straight to the Judge Advocate General on base,”
he said. “And they got me a lawyers in Bartlesville and South Carolina.”
In the meantime, Brown assigned power of attorney to his
father and had his lawyers ask for a stay of adoption until his deployment in
Iraq was over, which was granted. During that time, it became evident that
Brown's rights as a tribal member and due process had not been followed,
according to court documents. In their rush to push the adoption through under
the radar, Maldanado, the Capobiancos and their attorneys had colluded to strip
Brown of his parental rights outside the purview of the Indian Child Welfare
Act.
Instead of a legal termination hearing, as is provided
for under the law even in non-ICWA cases, the plaintiffs zeroed in on that
fateful text message. This became the focal point of the subsequent legal
battle with the Capobiancos, who had spent a lot of money on the adoption, even
giving Maldanado $10,000 over and above her medical expenses, according to
court testimony. Their message to the world was clear: “He gave up his rights.
He abandoned his daughter. He is a 'bad dad.'”
But as in most custody battles, things are not always as
they seem.
Next Week:
The battle for Baby Veronica begins as the Capobiancos dig in, while their
lawyers and public relations team go viral.
Read more
at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/05/06/fight-baby-veronica-part-i-149219 (See photos at this website. It's a fantastic look at their lives...Trace)
I think the decision made by the mother is not correct.She should have consulted the father.
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