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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Girl to be reunited with parents following ruling


Jack and Casey He talk to reporters Tuesday in Memphis, Tenn., after learning that the Tennessee Supreme Court cleared the way for them to be reunited with their  daughter, Anna Mae He. 
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Jenny Jarvie Los Angeles Times

ATLANTA – The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a Chinese immigrant couple should be reunited with their daughter almost eight years after she was placed in foster care with a U.S. family.

In a case that has prompted fierce debate about ethnic and cultural bias in the U.S. judicial system, the court unanimously overturned a 2004 decision by a Memphis, Tenn., judge who removed the parental rights of Jack and Casey He. The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled that the couple did not willfully abandon Anna Mae and were penalized because of their financial disadvantages and misunderstanding of the U.S. legal system.

Jerry and Louise Baker, a white suburban couple who have cared for Anna Mae since she was three weeks old, have to give the girl up within 12 days.

The He family is ecstatic at the prospect of being reunited with Anna Mae, whom they have not seen for nearly four years. Jack He said her younger siblings – a girl and a boy – could not wait to teach their older sister Chinese.

“She will wake up every morning to see all Chinese faces surrounding her,” he said. “Her mommy’s face, her daddy’s face, her brother’s face, her sister’s face. Finally, with Chinese faces all around her, she will have a permanent, peaceful mind.”

For most of Anna Mae’s life, the Hes and the Bakers have been locked in a battle over who should have custody. The Hes, who are illegal immigrants, say they sent Anna Mae to live with the Bakers only temporarily because of legal and financial hardships. The Bakers say Anna Mae has no connection to her biological parents, and they can provide her with more opportunities in the U.S.

Larry Parrish, the Bakers’ attorney, said the Bakers are “grieving” over the Supreme Court decision, but planned to tell Anna Mae Tuesday evening. “Until now, she has refused to talk about it,” he said. “Every attempt to talk about it she goes running under her bed.”

After the ruling, Jack He said he would give the Bakers, whom he called “good Christians,” ample opportunity to visit Anna Mae. “We have no hatred for the Bakers at all,” he said.

In a 20-page opinion, Chief Justice William M. Barker of the Tennessee Supreme Court concluded that the evidence “overwhelmingly showed” that the Hes relinquished custody as a temporary measure.

Any evidence that Anna Mae would be harmed from a change in custody because she had grown attached to the Bakers, he wrote, would not constitute sufficient “substantial harm” to prevent the Hes from regaining custody. “Financial advantage and affluent surroundings simply may not be a consideration in determining a custody dispute between a parent and a non-parent,” Barker wrote.

Anna Mae was born in January 1999 shortly after her father, a doctoral student at the University of Memphis, was charged with sexually assaulting a student. He was subsequently acquitted of the charges, but in the meantime he lost his job, his stipend and his student visa.

Unable to afford to provide for Anna Mae, her mother and father arranged 90-day foster care placement with the Bakers. When the term ended, both couples agreed to continue the arrangement, and Anna Mae’s parents signed papers granting the Bakers custody.

But before Anna Mae’s second birthday there was disagreement: Her biological parents said they thought the Bakers were taking care of her temporarily; the Bakers said they had been asked to raise Anna Mae until she was an adult.

In 2004, Circuit Judge Robert Childers terminated the Hes parental rights on the grounds of willful abandonment.