Allura Ring and Carl Ring v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child

2020 Ark. App. 150, 596 S.W.3d 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 26, 2020
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2020 Ark. App. 150 (Allura Ring and Carl Ring v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allura Ring and Carl Ring v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child, 2020 Ark. App. 150, 596 S.W.3d 75 (Ark. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Cite as 2020 Ark. App. 150 Reason: I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS document Date: 2021-07-01 11:40:34 Foxit PhantomPDF Version: DIVISION II 9.7.5 No. CV-19-832

Opinion Delivered: February 26, 2020

ALLURA RING AND CARL RING APPEAL FROM THE SHARP APPELLANTS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 68JV-18-211] V. HONORABLE MICHELLE HUFF, ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF JUDGE HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR CHILD APPELLEES AFFIRMED

WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge

Appellants Allura and Carl Ring separately appeal the July 26, 2019 order of the

Sharp County Circuit Court adjudicating their daughter, M.R., dependent-neglected based

upon neglect and parental unfitness. We affirm.

The facts of this case are not in dispute. The Arkansas Department of Human

Services (DHS) was contacted through the child-abuse hotline on December 11, 2017,

concerning three-month-old G.R. who presented to White River Medical Center

(WRMC) with brain damage and skull fractures after Carl compressed his chest several times

causing G.R. to stop breathing. G.R. was subsequently transported to Arkansas Children’s

Hospital (Children’s) and further examination revealed a corner fracture of the tibia and

humerus bilateral fractures to the arm. DHS made a true finding against Carl on December 11 for suffocation, bone fracture, and skull fracture. A protection plan was put in place on

December 14, allowing Allura to keep G.R. in her custody under the stipulation that Carl

was to have no contact with the child. A seventy-two-hour hold was placed on G.R. on

January 29, 2018, after DHS learned that Allura had returned to the home of Carl with

G.R. DHS made a true finding against Allura on January 29 for failure to protect. Allura

and Carl stipulated on March 16 that G.R. was dependent-neglected “based on the child

having suffered an injury which is inconsistent with the medical history provided by the

parents.”1 On June 5, Allura and Carl executed consents to the termination of their parental

rights to G.R. The court entered an order terminating their parental rights by consent on

June 19.

DHS received another report through the child-abuse hotline on November 26, for

a threat of harm. DHS arrived at WRMC where Allura had just given birth to M.R.

According to the hotline report, Carl had been seen at the hospital following M.R.’s birth.

Allura was asked about Carl’s presence at the hospital as well as what her intentions were

upon being discharged, including what safety factors were in place to protect M.R. Allura

refused to answer DHS’s questions without having a lawyer present, and a seventy-two-

hour hold was subsequently placed on M.R. DHS filed a petition for emergency custody

and dependency-neglect with supporting affidavit on November 27. In the petition, DHS

alleged that M.R. was dependent-neglected as a result of neglect or parental unfitness.

The adjudication hearing took place on July 18, 2019, and recounted the facts

surrounding G.R.’s numerous injuries. Mark Counts of the Sharp County Sheriff’s Office

1 The adjudication order was not filed until July 24, 2018.

2 testified that he received a call on December 11, 2017, concerning a child being abused.

He stated that he went to WRMC and met with Allura and Carl. He said that he

subsequently traveled to Children’s and again met with Carl. He testified that Carl

“confessed to abusing his child.” According to Sheriff Counts, Carl’s father had called Carl

and asked him to go check on the chicken houses. When Carl received the call, Allura was

in the shower, so he took G.R. with him. Sheriff Counts further testified,

They live close to their family farm, across the road. And he said that the baby had been fussing, been talking how the baby had been fussing since it was born. The baby continuous [sic] cried. Got over to his parents’ house and the baby had got so upset that it was distressing him. And he demonstrated showing us how he - what I would consider CPR, pressing on the chest of the baby so it would quit breathing. He said the baby would quit crying for a short period of time and then the baby would start screaming again. And then he would press on his chest again and done that a series of three or four times: and then the last time the baby didn’t respond. And so that’s when he took the baby back to his wife over at their house and called 911. He just described in the description he just described doing CPR on the child till it quit breathing. I handcuffed him and escorted him out of the building and placed him under arrest. As a result of that arrest charges were filed against him[.]

Sheriff Counts stated that after the arrest, he had no further contact with Carl.

Dr. Rachel Clingenpeel, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of

Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and the associate director of the Team for Children

at Risk at Children’s, testified as an expert witness in child-abuse pediatrics at the

adjudication hearing. She stated that when she first evaluated G.R., “he had a period of

cardiac arrest” and had to be resuscitated. She said that G.R. was ultimately diagnosed with

six different bone fractures: two different fractures of his skull in two different locations; a

fracture of one of his scapulae; and three different metaphyseal fractures, also known as

3 corner fractures. She said that he also had a hypoxic ischemic brain injury.2 She opined

that corner fractures are “highly associated with physical abuse in infants,” and are located

at the ends of long bones. She testified that she made a medical diagnosis of child physical

abuse based on the totality of G.R.’s injuries. Dr. Clingenpeel stated that Carl told her he

had G.R. with him at the time of G.R.’s “collapse.” However, she stated that she received

histories from Allura and Carl separately and there was nothing in those histories that would

explain why G.R. went into cardiorespiratory arrest in the first place or that would explain

the numerous fractures. She testified that the injuries to G.R. were “a cause of serious threat

of death.” She stated that he was “clinically dead for a period of time before he was

resuscitated.” Dr. Clingenpeel said that G.R. suffers from profound permanent effects and

was “permanently and entirely disabled as a result of this. And he will require total care.

He will be dependent on caregivers for as long as he lives.” She testified that Carl told her,

“I am afraid I have killed my son.”

Wendy Holland, G.R.’s adoptive parent, testified that G.R. is quadriplegic and

functions on a level of zero to three months despite being twenty-two months old at the

time of the hearing.

Kim Lavespere, the caseworker assigned to M.R., testified that she, along with FSW

Karen Payne, went to WRMC on November 26, 2018, following a hotline call. She stated

that they talked to Dr. Genevieve White, the OB doctor, and the RN, Stephanie Wade.

She said that they attempted to talk to Allura, but Allura refused to answer without an

attorney present. She testified that she had concerns for M.R.’s health if Carl had access to

2 A type of injury to the brain due to deprivation of oxygen.

4 M.R. Lavespere stated that she was also the caseworker assigned to G.R. and that initially,

Allura was allowed to maintain custody of G.R. “for a short time” because there was a

protection plan in place and Allura had the “appropriate response to the incident.” She said

that G.R.

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Related

Allura Ring v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child
2021 Ark. App. 146 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2021)

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