If she tells her school counselor, an outside counselor and child protective services. Sure.
They need to file a "child in need of care" motion in the court with evidence showing the child is not beng cared for properly, or abused in the family home. Simply being a teenager not wanting to listen to your parents is not abuse.
Take it to court, and fight for the guardianship.
No, she cannot, without a court order specifically stating that she can. "Mentally abused" is really easy to claim, and really hard to prove. So don't expect to be able to get such a court order.
An onlooker is a term that can be used for people who attend any court session just to listen to the cases.
Judge Karen's Court - 2010 An Abused Horse Comes from Compton and Causes Chaos 2-35 was released on: USA: 29 April 2011
serve in court and listen to what the defendant and the verdict has to say
Eighteen. In the later teens the court can listen to what you want and they might agree.
Audience is answer
Only as spectators, and they must have adult supervision.
A court would never award custody or visitation rights to a convicted child abuser.
Phil Sanders
I'm pretty sure that a judge will listen to your argument about the abuse and the drugs and probably agree that it's not a sutible place for a child to grow up. Set up a court day.