MARY WILLIAMS v. ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR CHILD
No. CV-21-482
Arkansas Court of Appeals, DIVISION I
April 13, 2022
2022 Ark. App. 162
RITA W. GRUBER, Judge
APPEAL FROM THE FRANKLIN COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, NORTHERN DISTRICT [NO. 24OJV-20-5]. HONORABLE KEN D. COKER, JR., JUDGE. AFFIRMED; MOTION TO WITHDRAW GRANTED.
Mary Williams appeals the Franklin County Circuit Court‘s order terminating her parental rights to BW, born December 10, 2019. Pursuant to Linker-Flores v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 359 Ark. 131, 194 S.W.3d 739 (2004), and Arkansas Supreme Court Rule 6-9(j), her counsel has filed a motion to withdraw and a no-merit brief setting forth all adverse rulings from the termination hearing and asserting there are no meritorious issues to support an appeal. Our court clerk mailed a copy of counsel‘s motion and brief to Mary informing her of her right to file pro se points for reversal. She has filed none. We affirm the termination order and grant counsel‘s motion to withdraw.
On February 27, 2020, the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) exercised a seventy-two-hour emergency hold on BW. DHS filed a petition for emergency custody and
A probable-cause hearing took place on March 5. The circuit court found that probable cause existed at the time of BW‘s removal and continued to exist such that it was necessary for BW to remain in DHS custody. Mary was ordered to submit to random drug screens; to watch the video “The Clock is Ticking“; to attend and complete parenting classes; to obtain and maintain stable and appropriate housing and employment; to submit to a drug-and-alcohol assessment and complete all recommendations; and to resolve all criminal issues. Pursuant to an agreed adjudication order entered on April 21, the court found by a preponderance of the evidence that BW was dependent-neglected as a result of parental unfitness because of Mary‘s drug use and her incarceration due to her parole violation. The court set the goal of reunification.
Three review hearings took place, and the court entered review orders on July 28, October 15, and December 11. After the July hearing, the court entered an order continuing
A permanency-planning hearing took place on February 10, 2021, which Mary attended from jail via Zoom. In the February 22 order, the court found that Mary had not complied with the case plan and court orders and changed the goal of the case to termination and adoption. The prior orders of the court continued, and DHS was ordered to continue providing reunification services.
Following a status-review hearing, the circuit court entered an order on May 4 setting the case for a termination hearing on July 14. DHS filed a petition for termination of parental rights on May 4, alleging that termination was in BW‘s best interest and stating multiple statutory grounds. The grounds pleaded were failure to remedy under
After her release from Gateway, Mary admitted that outpatient drug treatment was recommended but that she did not participate. She also acknowledged using methamphetamine and marijuana between the time she left Gateway and her arrest in
Cheryl Warden, the caseworker assigned to Mary‘s case, testified that Mary completed inpatient drug rehabilitation but did not participate in outpatient treatment upon her release. Warden said that it was very likely BW would be adopted if Mary‘s rights were terminated and that he had no impediments to adoption. In addition, she said that the foster home BW had been in for the entirety of the case had expressed an interest in adopting him. Warden testified that BW was nineteen months old and had spent most of his life in foster care. She said that while Mary was not incarcerated, she attended ten visits and missed fifteen. Warden stated that giving Mary more time to get out of prison and establish stability would require BW to be in foster care in excess of two years. Warden, as well as the ad litem and CASA volunteer, recommended termination.
Termination of parental rights is a two-step process requiring a determination that the parent is unfit and that termination is in the best interest of the child. Houseman v. Ark. Dep‘t of Hum. Servs., 2016 Ark. App. 227, 491 S.W.3d 153. The first step requires proof of one or more statutory grounds for termination; the second step, the best-interest analysis, includes consideration of the likelihood that the child will be adopted and of the potential harm caused by returning custody of the child to the parent.
In regard to the termination, counsel correctly asserts that there can be no meritorious challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support termination of Mary‘s parental rights.
In the present case, BW was less than three months old when he came into DHS custody on February 27, 2020. Mary was incarcerated from that time until May 2020. She was arrested again on December 5, 2020, and charged with drug possession. She entered a negotiated guilty plea in that case and was sentenced to thirty-six months’ imprisonment and thirty-six months’ SIS. She also pleaded guilty in three separate revocations and received the same sentences, with all the sentences to run concurrently. The case had been open for seventeen months at the time of the July 2021 termination hearing, at which time BW was only nineteen months old and had already spent all but approximately two months of his life in foster care, and Mary had only served approximately seven months of her thirty-six-month sentence. This amounts to a substantial portion of BW‘s life. See, e.g., Sanford v. Ark. Dep‘t of Hum. Servs., 2015 Ark. App. 578, 474 S.W.3d 503; Hill v. Ark. Dep‘t of Hum. Servs., 2012 Ark. App. 108, 389 S.W.3d 72. This ground supports termination, and any argument to the contrary would be without merit.
Further, we agree with counsel that that any challenge to the potential-harm prong of the best-interest finding would be wholly frivolous. Potential harm must be viewed in a forward-looking manner and considered in broad terms. Dowdy v. Ark. Dep‘t of Hum. Servs., 2009 Ark. App. 180, 314 S.W.3d 722. In finding that there is significant potential danger to BW‘s health and safety should custody return to Mary, the court stated that the case began with Mary‘s incarceration on drug charges; Mary has a long history of drug addiction that has not been resolved; Mary attended inpatient drug treatment but continued to use methamphetamine; and Mary was arrested on possession charges while on parole. The court recognized Mary‘s testimony that she might be released by the end of 2021 but stated that under the best of circumstances, it would take Mary nine months to show stability and sobriety. On this record, it could not be meritoriously argued that there was insufficient evidence to support the circuit court‘s finding of potential harm.
Inasmuch as Mary‘s closing statement arguing that termination was not in BW‘s interest because she had a plan upon being released from prison could be interpreted as a
Beyond the termination decision, counsel has also adequately addressed four adverse evidentiary rulings. During the termination hearing, counsel objected to each of appellant‘s four sentencing orders being entered into evidence, arguing it was improper character evidence under
Having examined the record and the brief presented to us, we have determined that counsel has complied with the requirements established by the Arkansas Supreme Court for no-merit appeals in termination cases, and we hold that the appeal is wholly without merit. Accordingly, we affirm the termination order and grant counsel‘s motion to withdraw.
Affirmed; motion to withdraw granted.
VAUGHT and HIXSON, JJ., agree.
Tabitha McNulty, Arkansas Commission for Parent Counsel, for appellant.
One brief only.
RITA W. GRUBER
Judge
