BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> R (A Child : Care Order) [2017] EWHC 364 (Fam) (24 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2017/364.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 364 (Fam) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
London Borough of Islington |
Applicant |
|
- and - |
||
M - and - R (represented by his Guardian) |
1st Respondent 2nd Respondent |
____________________
Ms Sarah Morgan QC & Ms Daisy Hughes (instructed by Bindmans Solicitors) for the 1st Respondent
Ms Denise Gilling (instructed by Duncan Lewis Solicitors) for the 2nd Respondent
Hearing dates: 23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, 27th & 30th January 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hayden :
i) Tested positive for methamphetamine (crystal meth) between the middle of June 2015 to middle of September 2015;
ii) Tested positive for benzoylecgonine (cocaine metabolite) between the middle of June 2015 to the middle of August 2015; and
iii) Tested positive for MDMA between June 2015 and July 2015
"All I have to do at this stage is to consider whether there is a reasonable prospect of the mother successfully appealing the order made by the Judge. I do not at the moment feel in a position to say that. I am, however, concerned there are doubts as to the veracity of the hair strand testing which have, to all intense purposes, determined the future of this baby."
"Importantly also, it would appear when the hair strand test was taken that, contrary to good practice, either insufficient hair, or the manner in which the hair was taken, meant that it was not possible to do a second independent re-test: nor, it would appear, did FTAC adopt a procedure which is on offer from the hair strand testing company where by a hair strand test can be retested in the way that drink driving tests are re done where a party requests a second opinion."
It is important that I recall that no arguments of this nature have been presented to me. Indeed, all the experts have agreed that the laboratory procedures are unimpeachable. On 16th June 2016 Black and King LJJ granted permission to appeal and allowed the appeal.
Hair Strand Testing
"When an individual has regularly used a drug, stops and continues to abstain from using the drug it can take approximately 3 - 4 months for a person to return a 'Not Detected' result. This is due to the fact that at any one time approximately 15% of scalp hair is not actively growing. This resting hair can stay on the scalp for approximately 3 - 4 months before being shed. This resting hair would contain drugs that would have entered the hair during the period of drug use (Tsanaclis, 2007).
When tests looking for a particular drug are performed on hair samples, where possible Lextox also test for its metabolites, which are found after using the drug, for example 11-nor-9-carboxy-delta-9-THC (cannabis) or benzoylecgonine (cocaine). The presence of a metabolite indicates drug usage. When the parent drug is detected but a metabolite is not present, there is no evidence that the drug has been metabolised by the body (Tsanaclis, 2007). Explanations for this finding could be due to low/infrequent usage or passive/environmental contamination.
There are many factors that influence the amount of drugs in hair such as the purity of drug consumed, the effect of cosmetic hair treatment and individual variations to drug metabolism (Tsanaclis, 2007) (Skopp, Potsch, & Moeller, 1997) (Martins, Yegles, Thieme, & Wennig, 2008). Studies with individuals receiving the same dose showed substantially variable drug concentrations in hair (Henderson, 1993). Therefore, the levels of drug detected in the hair are best used as a guide to changes in use by the individual and not to the amount of drug consumed (Jurado, 2007)."
8. In this context, it must be understood that the Practice Direction "Experts in Family Proceedings Relating to Children" [2009] 2 FLR 1383 applies to all expert evidence. It provides, among other things:
…
(2) to provide advice to the court that conforms to the best practice of the expert's profession; …
[3.3] The expert's report shall ….:
(c) highlight whether a proposition is a hypothesis (in particular a controversial hypothesis) or an opinion in accordance with peer reviewed and tested technique, research and experience accepted as a consensus in the scientific community; …
(9) where there is a range of opinion on any question to be answered by the expert:
(a) summarise the range;
(b) highlight and analyse within the range of opinion an 'unknown cause', whether on the facts of the case (for example, there is too little information to form a scientific opinion) or because of limited experience, lack of research, peer review or support in the field of expertise which the expert professes;
…
9. This guidance in the Practice Direction is not advisory, it is mandatory, subject only to the qualification that its terms have to be applied purposively to the specific circumstances of each case. It is applicable, as I have said, to all expert evidence in family proceedings relating to children.
10. I have referred to the Practice Direction because some of the expert evidence which has been produced in this case appears to have been treated as though it was not expert evidence. It may well be that results obtained from chemical analysis are such as to constitute, essentially, factual rather than opinion evidence because they are not open to evaluative interpretation and opinion. Although I would add that it is common for such analysis to have margins of reliability. However, the Practice Direction applies to all expert evidence and it will be rare that the results themselves are not used and interpreted for the purposes of expert opinion evidence.
22. …
(i) When used, hair tests should be used only as part of the evidential picture. Of course, at the very high levels which can be found (multiples of the agreed cut off levels) such results might form a significant part of the evidential picture. Subject to this however, both Professor Pragst and Mr O'Sullivan agreed that "You cannot put everything on the hair test"; in other words that the tests should not be used to reach evidential conclusions by themselves in isolation of other evidence. I sensed considerable unease on the part of Professor Pragst at the prospect of the results of the tests being used, other than merely as one part of the evidence, to justify significant child care decisions;
Further, as referred to earlier in this judgment, at these cut off levels the research evidence suggests that 10% of the results will be false positives.
The cut off levels set out in the Consensus have been agreed because they represent the optimal level at which there were the lowest number of false positives and the lowest number of false negatives. As a result of the variables present, such as the fact that metabolism varies from person to person, it is not possible to identify a clear divide. In Professor's Pragst research (and, I believe, others) the cut off level was set, through empirical research and ROC analysis, at the point where the results were understood to produce 10% false negatives and 10% false positives.
2-3 cm - From the middle of June 2015 to the middle of July 2015
1-2 cm - From the middle of July 2015 to the middle of August 2015
0-1 cm - From the middle of August 2015 to the middle of September 2015
Analyte |
0-1cm Hair Section |
1-2cm Hair Section |
2-3cm Hair Section |
Cocaine Group |
|||
Anhydroecgonine methyl ester |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
Benzoylecgonine |
Negative |
0.07 ng/mg |
0.13 ng/mg |
Cocaethylene |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
Cocaine |
Negative |
*0.22 ng/mg (**Low) |
*0.42 ng/mg (**Low) |
Norcocaine |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
Methamphetamine Group |
|||
MBDB |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
MDA |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
MDEA |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
MDMA |
Negative |
Negative |
0.30 ng/mg (**Low) |
Methamphetamine |
0.80 ng/mg (**Low) |
1.03 ng/mg (**Low) |
1.39 ng/mg (**Medium) |
Opiate Group |
|||
6 Acetylmorphine |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
Acetylcodeine |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
Dihydrocodeine |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
Morphine |
Negative |
Negative |
Negative |
Codeine |
1.45 ng/mg (**High) |
0.43 ng/mg (**Low) |
0.24 ng/mg (**Low) |
"Cocaine
Stephen Edward Ramsay does not exclude cocaine use. This is based on the identification of benzoylecgonine at 0.07 and 0.13 ng/mg in the last 2 segments, higher than the 0.05 ng/mg recommended by the SoHT (2012). Cocaine, the parent drug was not detected.
This is a complete misinterpretation of the SoHT guidelines (Table 1). To qualify for a positive, first, the parent cocaine must be above 0.5 ng/mg andthen its metabolites, benzoylecgonine or others (cocaethylene, norcocaine …) must be above 0.05 ng/mg. In the case of [M], no parent cocaine was found and therefore the result must be read negative."
"There is no doubt that methamphetamine was detected in the hair of [M]".
The measured concentrations were:
TT214677: from 0.21 to 0.44 ng/mg in the last 4 segments
TT229238: from 0.80 to 1.39 ng/mg in all 3 segments
In the body, methamphetamine is converted into amphetamine, at a rate of 5 and 10 % of the initial dose in blood and urine, respectively. One can expect more conversion in hair. For example, in a controlled study, Polettini et al (Anal Chim Acta, 2012, 13, 726) found that after methamphetamine administration the % of amphetamine was between 7 and 37 %, with a mean value of 15 %.
Using a 15 % ratio, one can expect amphetamine at 0.12 and 0.21 ng/mg with a methamphetamine reading at 0.80 and 1.39 ng/mg, respectively. Using LCMS/ MS, these concentrations are easy to catch … but amphetamine was not detected in the hair of [M]. The absence of the metabolite supports a potential external contamination and therefore I do not share the interpretation of Stephen Edward Ramsay.
"Professor Kintz was of the view that the 2016 results could not be as a result of usage in November 2015. He said if you take drugs in November 2015 you would have 100% result and decreasing incremental to 10%, then 1% and then 0. Hence, this could not account for the results seen in March and April 2016 as it is not possible. It takes 3-4 months for the results to be totally negative.
Professor Kintz accepted in his evidence that when considering the earlier 2014/5 results from December 2014 to May 2015 which are results when [M] reported having taken drugs it is reported positive for methamphetamine but not for the metabolite amphetamine. He says this is why HST is only one part of the picture.
With regards to the differing opinion of Professor Kintz and Mr Ramsay concerning the 2015 cocaine/benzoylecgonine results it is open to the Court to find that Mr Ramsay is more likely to be correct in his conclusion about cocaine having been ingested by [M] when taken together with other evidence."
"As the case has developed that regime of urine testing leading to a block of unchallenged clear tests has provided crucial evidence to be placed into the equation when the court evaluates the scientific evidence and places it in the wider context. There is a period of overlap – whatever the length of that overlap may be – arising from the 7 week period when abstinence is confirmed by urine testing and the hair strand test returns a positive report. The import of that is to highlight that the hairstrand test alone cannot confirm use. So it is that when the mother submits that recognising – for example – the view of the experts in relation to the 2016 tests, the court must nevertheless look at the other evidence available to it, she does so not on the basis of wishful thinking but on the basis of other scientific evidence in this case which runs counter to the hair strand readings.
In addition to the block testing, the mother has been subject the prospect of random ("unannounced") testing from 1 October 2016 to date. In fact, the LA has availed itself of this on only 4 occasions in the past 5 months, but on each occasion the mother, having received notification of the test on the morning of the same, has made herself available to give the requisite sample in supervised circumstances, and on no occasion have illicit drugs been detected."
i. She has not ingested drugs since the day after [R]'s initial removal – ie 30th January 2015; save and except for a lapse in November 2015 following his second removal from her care after "positive" hair strand tests were returned;
ii She does not know why it is that there have been hair strand test with readings indicating the presence of drugs said to correspond to periods of time when she has not ingested them. Although she has tried to offer explanations for why it might be, she has done so not from a position of knowledge or expertise. In doing so she is in a position akin to a parent in an NAI case who offers possible explanations for otherwise unexplained fractures;
iii An analysis of the evidence as a whole, does not form a sound basis for making findings that she has ingested illicit drugs other than at times when she has admitted doing so;
iv She would comply with any condition or order (howsoever it might limit her personal freedom) which the court might see fit to impose so as to permit R to return to her care. A supervision order with a regime of unannounced drug testing is one possibility mooted by the mother.
The Mother
" … it is quite clear that the test for severing the relationship between parent and child is very strict: only in exceptional circumstances and where motivated by overriding requirements pertaining to the child's welfare, in short, where nothing else will do"
'we emphasise the words "global, holistic evaluation". This point is crucial. The judicial task is to evaluate all the options, undertaking a global, holistic and (see Re G para 51) multi-faceted evaluation of the child's welfare which takes into account all the negatives and the positives, all the pros and cons, of each option. To quote McFarlane LJ again (para 54): "What is required is a balancing exercise in which each option is evaluated to the degree of detail necessary to analyse and weigh its own internal positives and negatives and each option is then compared, side by side, against the competing option or options."
"the court's assessment of the parents' ability to discharge their responsibilities towards the child must take into account the assistance and support which the authorities would offer. So "before making an adoption order … the court must be satisfied that there is no practical way of the authorities (or others) providing the requisite assistance and support"