Court decides if girl to return to ex-drug-addict mother
Expanded panel of nine Supreme Court justices convenes to deliberate fate of seven-year-old girl who was taken out of custody at the request of biological parents.
By RON FRIEDMAN
An expanded panel of nine Supreme Court justices convened on Sunday to deliberate the fate of a seven-year-old girl.The expanded hearing was held at the request of the attorney-general’s office after the court decided in January to return the girl into the custody of her mother, a recovering drug addict.The girl, who was born in 2004, was taken out of the custody of her biological parents months after she was born at the request of the parents, who claimed that they were incapable of tending to her needs and that the girl would be better off in the care of the state.A few years later, the mother began a rehabilitation process and the child was returned to her custody, while she was living in a halfway house. During her rehabilitation, the mother underwent a drug test, which found traces of narcotics in her system and the young girl was once again removed from her custody. It was then decided that she would begin an adoption process with an adopting family.The mother appealed the decision in the district court, but the judge ruled against her. The mother then appealed once more to the Supreme Court, which was convinced that she had completed the rehabilitation process and granted her custody.The state however was unconvinced and requested that the case be debated once more in the Supreme Court, this time by an expanded panel. Supreme Court President Justice Dorit Beinisch granted the request. On Sunday, the panel began hearing from the mother, in a closed-door session, about her recovery process and her deep-seated desire to have custody of her daughter.Ronen Daliyahu, the mother’s attorney, said that he came out of the courtroom with mixed emotions.“On one hand, I can understand the court’s reluctance to grant custody of the girl to the biological mother, taking into account her history and the risks involved, but on the other hand, it is clear that in a modern welfare state, there is no better option than granting custody to a biological parent, when they have turned their life around. The state must give the biological mother all the tools possible so that she can raise her daughter,” Daliyahu told reporters.“It is no small thing that nine judges meet to discuss the future of a single little girl,” the lawyer added. “The mother hopes that they will rule in her favor and that she will be able to have her daughter with her for Pessah.”The mother herself said that she was optimistic and that she prayed that she could keep her daughter.