Delaware Code Title 16 Sec. 912 – Confidentiality; disclosure of records
(a) To protect the privacy of the family and the child named in a report, the Department shall establish guidelines concerning the disclosure of information concerning abuse, neglect, or risk of maltreatment involving a child. The Department may require a person to make a written request for access to a record that the Department maintains. The Department may release information only to a person who has a legitimate public safety need for the information or a need based on the health and safety of a child subject to abuse, neglect, or the risk of maltreatment. The information may be used only for the purpose for which the information is released.
Terms Used In Delaware Code Title 16 Sec. 912
- Child: means any person who has not reached that person's own eighteenth birthday. See Delaware Code Title 16 Sec. 902
- Department: means the Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families. See Delaware Code Title 16 Sec. 902
- Discovery: Lawyers' examination, before trial, of facts and documents in possession of the opponents to help the lawyers prepare for trial.
- Evidence: Information presented in testimony or in documents that is used to persuade the fact finder (judge or jury) to decide the case for one side or the other.
- Multidisciplinary team: means a combination of the following entities as required by law to investigate or monitor multidisciplinary cases: the Division, the Department's Institutional Abuse Investigation Unit, the appropriate law-enforcement agency, the Department of Justice, and the Investigation Coordinator. See Delaware Code Title 16 Sec. 902
- Neglect: means as defined in § 901 of Title 10. See Delaware Code Title 16 Sec. 902
- Report: means the communication of an allegation of child abuse or neglect to the Department pursuant to § 903 or § 905 of this title. See Delaware Code Title 16 Sec. 902
- Subpoena: A command to a witness to appear and give testimony.
(b) A member of a multidisciplinary team may share all information and each record received, prepared, or maintained by or amongst members of the multidisciplinary team to carry out the responsibilities of the multidisciplinary team under law to protect children from abuse and neglect as authorized by the federal Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (42 U.S.C. § 5106a(b)(2)). A multidisciplinary team record is confidential and may be disclosed to a person, including an entity, beyond the multidisciplinary team only as authorized by law or court rule. This chapter does not preclude a member of a multidisciplinary team from asserting a privilege available under the law related to the disclosure of information or a record.
(c) (1) In a Family Court civil proceeding, excluding a juvenile delinquency proceeding, a party may access a record that a children’s advocacy center creates and maintains and is related to a forensic interview and use the record in a court proceeding, but only if the Family Court has found all of the following:
a. The record is relevant under the Family Court rules governing discovery.
b. Access to the record will minimize trauma to the child.
c. Access to the record is in the best interest of the child.
(2) a. A subpoena for a record may not be served on a children’s advocacy center. Access to a record under paragraph (c)(1) of this section must be requested by a written motion filed with the Family Court and properly served on each party to the action and the Department of Justice Special Victims Unit for the county in which the action is pending. The party filing the motion may request that the motion be considered on an expedited basis in accordance with the Court’s rules and procedures.
b. The Department of Justice has standing to respond to a motion filed under this section.
c. If, after review of the motion and response to the motion, if any, the Family Court finds that the party who filed the motion failed to a make a prima facie showing under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the Court shall dismiss the motion.
d. If the Family Court determines that a prima facie showing under paragraph (c)(1) of this section has been made, the Court shall order the children’s advocacy center that conducted the forensic interview to produce the record to the Court for a confidential review as the Court determines is appropriate.
e. If, after a confidential review of a requested record, the Family Court finds that the motion satisfies paragraph (c)(1) of this section by a preponderance of the evidence, the Court shall permit access to the record, subject to a protective order under paragraph (c)(4) of this section.
(3) This subsection does not preclude a member of a multidisciplinary team from obtaining a record under subsection (b) of this section and using the record in a Family Court civil proceeding.
(4) A Family Court order entered under this subsection that permits access to a record that a children’s advocacy center creates or maintains and is related to a forensic interview the center conducts must include a protective order that does at least all of the following:
a. Protects the identity of the child interviewee and any other child whose identity the Court determines should be protected.
b. Protects the confidentiality of the information contained in the record.
c. Limits the dissemination of the record and the information contained in the record to the person that the Family Court authorizes to receive or review the record.