Synopsis: Dale and Ellen-Beth Fullwood appear in court Tuesday for a hearing on the custody of their four children, taken from them by the Department of Children and Families. The court is also hoping for a clarification as to who will be representing Ellen-Beth and the children. Both parents now have new lawyers.
SARASOTA - Ellen-Beth Fullwood left the courthouse alone Wednesday. Unlike prior hearings, this time she didn't have her husband or an attorney to shield her from the television cameras and reporters.
What was supposed to be a custody hearing for Ellen-Beth and Dale Fullwood, the parents of 6-year-old Coralrose, slain in North Port in September, turned into a ruling that the couple needed separate attorneys.
Coralrose was found Sept. 17 at a construction site two blocks from her Calabash Lane home. Two days later, a judge found the living conditions in the Fullwood home deplorable and awarded temporary custody of the other four Fullwood children, ages 4 to 13, to their grandparents in Cape Coral.
Ellen-Beth, 41, who entered the courtroom with Fort Myers lawyer John Coleman, was reassigned a court-appointed attorney by Circuit Court Judge Rick DeFuria.
Coleman represented the couple in court several times. However, Dale Fullwood, 46, was arrested on Oct. 11 on two counts of possession of child











. He is being held at the Sarasota County Jail on $50,000 bond.
Shortly after, Coleman filed a brief with the court to withdraw from representing Dale, stating there was a conflict of interest between the couple and the grandparents. However, Coleman later changed his mind.
On Wednesday, Coleman told the judge several times the only reason he thought there was a conflict was because Dale was arrested. But he believed he could still represent the couple equally.
"I haven't spoken to Dale since he was arrested," Coleman said. "Therefore, I have no information that would contradict either of the Fullwoods' testimonies. His wife can not be forced to speak about the arrest because of marital privilege. We are on the same side. If anything, the state and DCF would be the opposing side."
But one of the five Department of Children and Families representatives told the judge there was a clear conflict. Additionally, a lawyer from the guardian ad litem program, representing the Fullwood children, also expressed concern about Coleman further defending the couple.
With his wrists and legs shackled and wearing an orange jumpsuit labeled "Jail," Dale Fullwood was accompanied by his court-appointed attorney Debra Salsbury. As he entered the courtroom, Ellen-Beth shook her head and looked away. The two stood at separate podiums.
"It is irrefutable that there is a conflict just by the nature of the relationship between the attorney and client," Salsbury said.
Salsbury told DeFuria she would be representing Dale's best interests. Then she asked Dale who he wanted to represent him.
"I would rather have you," he told Salsbury.
The judge granted his wish.
He explained that Coleman would be disqualified. He also called Coleman "well-prepared and passionate" about representing the couple, however, he believed a conflict existed, DeFuria said.
He asked Ellen-Beth to disclose her finances. As the sole provider in her household, Ellen-Beth told DeFuria she is paying her parents every other week to help with the children, and she is paying their insurance. Ellen-Beth also said she has $147,000 in student loans.
"I am planning to move to Lee County," Fullwood told the judge.
DeFuria appointed public defender Linda Griffin to represent Ellen-Beth.
As the attorneys and the judge were setting a Feb. 14 trial date, Ellen-Beth clutched her chest in objection.
"My children are still grieving at the loss of their sister," Ellen-Beth said. "And yet they still are out of my care. What's being done by the state is harming them. My 4-year-old tells me, 'The judge said I can stay.' He doesn't understand why I have to leave (due to court-ordered supervised visits)." The couple was ordered not to live in the same house as the children and can visit them only under the grandparents' supervision.
Ellen-Beth said she understood the new lawyers needed time to review the case but asked that the court hearings be moved up.
"Just because the trial is in February, that doesn't mean you can't possibly get your children back sooner," DeFuria told her.
Ellen-Beth said she was told her mother would have custody of the children for six months.
"That's plain wrong," DeFuria said. "I'm the one who will tell you when you can get your children back."
Dale Fullwood is scheduled for a bond reduction hearing Friday.
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