My name is Rachel Cooper, and I’m a child advocate attorney. In my line of work, I’ve seen pain dressed up in Sunday clothes and smiles that hide bruises. But nothing—and I mean nothing—could’ve prepared me for what happened in courtroom 3B that stormy Wednesday morning.
It started with an ordinary custody hearing. On one side, the biological father, Leonard Griffin—well-dressed, charming, and seemingly remorseful. On the other, 9-year-old Isla Merrin, her foster parents beside her, and her loyal service dog, Moose, curled at her feet.
Isla was tiny for her age, with honey-blonde hair and the kind of quiet presence that made you instinctively lower your voice when speaking to her. She rarely made eye contact. But that dog—Moose—he was always watching. Always alert.
Moose wasn’t just a therapy dog. He was her lifeline.

The hearing had been going on for two hours when the judge, a no-nonsense woman named Hon. Patricia Dawson, leaned forward and asked the question we’d all been dreading.
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