Amanda Walker and Randalle Sanders v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children

2022 Ark. App. 21, 640 S.W.3d 9
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 19, 2022
StatusPublished

This text of 2022 Ark. App. 21 (Amanda Walker and Randalle Sanders v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children) 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
Amanda Walker and Randalle Sanders v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children, 2022 Ark. App. 21, 640 S.W.3d 9 (Ark. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Cite as 2022 Ark. App. 21 Elizabeth Perry ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS I attest to the accuracy and integrity of this document DIVISION III 2023.08.15 11:26:13 -05'00' No. CV-21-88 2023.003.20269 AMANDA WALKER AND Opinion Delivered January 19, 2022 RANDALLE SANDERS APPELLANTS APPEAL FROM THE CROSS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 19JV-18-59]

ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HONORABLE ANN HUDSON, HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR JUDGE CHILDREN APPELLEES AFFIRMED

N. MARK KLAPPENBACH, Judge

Amanda Walker and Randalle Sanders appeal from the order of the Cross County

Circuit Court terminating their parental rights to their four children: RS, ES, JS, and NS.

Walker and Sanders have filed separate briefs on appeal alleging that the Arkansas

Department of Human Services (DHS) offered insufficient proof to terminate their parental

rights. We affirm the circuit court’s order.

A protective-services case was opened on the family in May 2018 when NS tested

positive for illegal substances at birth. Services offered to the family included drug-

assessment referrals, but Sanders missed both of his appointments. Walker completed her

assessment but failed to follow through with the recommendation for substance-abuse

counseling. During a home visit in August 2018, two-year-old JS was the only person to

initially come to the door. Eventually, an unknown man opened the door and said that the parents were on vacation in Florida, and he was babysitting. However, Sanders then

appeared. Sanders was drug screened and was positive for amphetamines,

methamphetamine, and THC. He admitted using drugs the day before and claimed that he

had not seen Walker in a week. JS, six-year-old RS, and five-year-old ES all had head lice,

and JS had a rash with blisters. A pipe was found on the kitchen table. Due to Sanders’s

continued drug use, the drug paraphernalia found in the home, and the lack of an

appropriate caregiver, DHS took the children into custody.

The children were subsequently adjudicated dependent-neglected due to both

parents abusing illegal substances and leaving the children with an inappropriate caregiver.

The goal of the case was set as reunification with a concurrent goal of relative placement.

Sanders was found to be an Indian parent under the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA).

The parents were ordered to complete parenting classes, follow the recommendations of a

drug-and-alcohol assessment, remain drug-free, and obtain stable housing. After several

review hearings, a permanency-planning hearing was held in August 2019 wherein the goal

was changed to adoption. The evidence at the permanency-planning hearing established

that the parents had not maintained stable housing, that they had not submitted to court-

ordered hair-follicle tests, and that Walker had given birth to another child that tested

positive for drugs at birth and was in the custody of the state of Mississippi. 1 Overall, the

parents had failed to show stability or compliance with the case plan.

The termination hearing was held over the course of three dates in July, September,

and October 2020. Tashiria Montgomery of the Mississippi Department of Child

1 Walker reported that Sanders is not the father of this child.

2 Protection Services testified that Walker had given birth in July 2019 to a child who tested

positive for amphetamines. The child was now in the Mississippi foster-care system.

Montgomery said that Walker had not been compliant with her family-service plan, which

provided that she should maintain stable housing, maintain contact with the agency and the

child through visitation, maintain employment, submit to drug screens, and participate in

therapy. Prior to a July 2020 visit, Walker had last visited the child in February 2020.

Walker had also failed to sign a release to have the results of her drug screens in Arkansas

sent to Mississippi.

Carla Washington, the family’s Cross County caseworker, and Kim Bliss, the county

supervisor, testified that Walker and Sanders had been only partially compliant with the case

plan and court orders. They had lived at four different addresses during the case and had

failed to maintain stable employment. At the time of the hearing, they were living in the

home of Walker’s mother, which was the same place they were living when the children

were removed. The home was clean, but the parents had not allowed Washington and Bliss

into the children’s rooms and told them they were not yet set up for the children.

Walker had six positive drug tests throughout the case and five additional tests that

registered an invalid temperature. She completed inpatient treatment on December 31,

2019, but had two positive tests following treatment. Walker challenged a screen in July

2020 that was positive for methamphetamine, but it was confirmed by the lab. On the final

day of the termination hearing, DHS introduced into evidence another lab result from a

September 19, 2020 screen that was positive for methamphetamine. Sanders tested positive

twelve times throughout the case and had two screens with invalid temperatures. He

3 completed inpatient treatment in December 2018 and again in February 2020. As with

Walker, he tested positive for methamphetamine in July 2020, and the result was confirmed

by the lab. On the same date as this screen, both parents obtained a private drug screen that

was negative, but DHS was informed that the parents were not observed giving their urine

samples. A subsequent positive test from Sanders on August 11, 2020, was admitted into

evidence. Neither parent completed outpatient treatment, and Sanders had failed to submit

to a second court-ordered hair-follicle test.

Walker and Sanders had completed parenting classes, but neither were consistent

with visitation. In October 2019, ES reported that Sanders had cornered him in the

bathroom and threatened to take him away from the foster parents. ES was very upset by

this, and ES and RS became afraid to visit with Sanders. DHS stopped visits between

Sanders and ES and RS due to the children’s fear and later stopped their visits with Walker.

The visits with the younger children continued. Of the twenty-three visitations scheduled

in 2020, Walker had missed nine, and Sanders had missed seven. Bliss testified that the

parents had not been honest and forthright with DHS in the last year, and they were still

dealing with the same issues as in the beginning of the case.

Chelsea Brawner testified that she had been the counselor for ES and RS since

January 2020. She was treating RS for trauma and ES for anxiety. She had conducted four

family sessions with Walker, Sanders, RS, and ES. Brawner had recommended that the

sessions be stopped due to the children’s worsening symptoms. RS had night terrors,

frequent unexplained crying, anxiety, and flashbacks. ES had an increase of anxiety and

defiance. The CASA court report admitted into evidence states that all parties involved

4 agreed at a staffing that having family counseling sessions with RS and ES in lieu of

traditional visitations was the best option. Due to differing perspectives on how the sessions

were going after the second visit, all parties agreed to have the sessions video recorded.

CASA volunteer supervisor Kim Hunt Thornhill reported that the children exhibited fearful

reactions to the parents as previously described by their therapist, and they repeatedly stated

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Related

Duncan v. Ark. Dep't of Human Servs.
2014 Ark. App. 489 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2014)
Courtney Holmes v. Arkansas Department of Human Services
2016 Ark. App. 495 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2016)
Swangel v. Ark. Dep't of Human Servs.
547 S.W.3d 111 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2018)

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