In Re: Jackson, Unpublished Decision (8-13-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 13, 1999
DocketC.A. Case No. 17514. T.C. Case No. 97 JC 1609.
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: Jackson, Unpublished Decision (8-13-1999) (In Re: Jackson, Unpublished Decision (8-13-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Jackson, Unpublished Decision (8-13-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION
Kenya Thompson appeals from a judgment of the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, which terminated her parental rights over Kambon Jackson, Jr. ("Kambon") and awarded permanent custody of Kambon to the Montgomery County Children Services Board ("MCCSB").

On March 12, 1997, MCCSB filed a sworn complaint alleging that Kambon, born September 2, 1996 to Thompson and Kambon Jackson, Sr. ("Jackson"), was a neglected child. Thompson was sixteen years old at the time the complaint was filed. MCCSB became involved with the case in January 1997 while Kambon was hospitalized for bronchiolitis. At a meeting with the family on February 12, 1997, MCCSB instituted a "safety plan," which required Thompson to stay with Kambon at the home of her mother, Kimberly Gresham, to provide for his medical needs, to seek welfare assistance, and to obtain her G.E.D. The complaint alleged that, in violation of the safety plan, Thompson had been "running the streets, and/or staying with alleged father who has a criminal record related to possession of crack cocaine and who reportedly sells crack cocaine outside of maternal grandmother's home," had not attended to Kambon's medical needs, had failed to follow through with a welfare program for teenage mothers, and had failed to attend G.E.D. classes. MCCSB took Kambon into emergency care on March 11, 1997, and a medical examination revealed that he had fluid in his lungs and other medical and hygiene problems. MCCSB sought temporary custody of Kambon and requested child support and visitation orders.

A guardian ad litem was appointed to represent Kambon. Counsel were appointed to represent the interests of Thompson, Jackson, and Gresham. Thompson's counsel also served as her guardian ad litem. At the shelter care hearing, a magistrate placed Kambon in shelter care and committed him to the interim temporary custody of MCCSB. The magistrate noted that the case management and substitute care services that MCCSB had been providing "did not prevent the removal of the child from the child's home or enable the child to return home because the minor mother has a history of unruly behavior and of not meeting the child's medical needs."

On April 10, 1997, the magistrate adjudicated Kambon a neglected child and placed him in the legal custody of his maternal grandfather, Charles Thompson. The magistrate stated that the "information/referral; diagnostic; case management; counseling" services provided by MCCSB had not prevented the removal of Kambon because Thompson had put Kambon at risk by failing to cooperate with the safety plan. The magistrate approved the case plan, which required Thompson to pursue her G.E.D. at Longfellow school, to meet Kambon's basic needs, to be home by 11:00 p.m. during the week, to learn appropriate parenting skills by successfully completing teen parenting classes, and to attend supervised visits with Kambon. On April 15, 1997, MCCSB filed a motion seeking temporary custody of Kambon following Charles Thompson's decision that "he no longer wants custody of the child because he saw the mother and alleged father selling drugs."

That same day, the magistrate granted interim temporary custody to MCCSB and scheduled adjudicatory and dispositional hearings for May 15, 1997. Following the hearings, which Thompson did not attend, the magistrate awarded temporary custody of Kambon to MCCSB until April 13, 1998. The magistrate approved the updated case plan, which added the objectives that "Kenya will refrain from substance abuse which interferes with her ability to parent her child," by undergoing a drug/alcohol assessment and following through with recommendations and that she will work with school counselors to find an appropriate job placement. The visitation plan stated that Thompson would visit Kambon at the MCCSB office once a week for two hours. When Thompson's case plan was reviewed on August 12, 1997, the caseworker noted that she had dropped out of the G.E.D. program and that she was not motivated, that Kambon was doing well in foster care, and that she had made "no progress" on learning appropriate parenting skills. In the "Semiannual Administrative Review (SAR)" form, the caseworker noted that Thompson needed to undergo a drug test at "Pathways" and would be referred to "Independent Living" after its completion and that her visitation with Kambon had been "irregular."

Thompson's case plan was again reviewed in late December 1997, and caseworkers reported that Thompson had been expelled from G.E.D. classes for poor attendance, that she had been attending parenting classes at Lutheran Social Services, but did not complete the program, that her contact with caseworkers had been inconsistent, and that she had not visited with Kambon since October 1997.

On January 27, 1998, MCCSB filed a motion for permanent custody of Kambon with an affidavit from caseworker Kobie Edwards swearing that Thompson and Jackson had each visited him five times, that Jackson had not provided care or support for him since his birth, that they had failed continuously and repeatedly to substantially remedy the conditions causing Kambon to be removed from the home, and that they had demonstrated a lack of commitment toward Kambon. Edwards noted that Thompson had failed to complete her case plan objectives and had made no contact with her caseworker between August 1997 and January 1998. According to the affidavit, Jackson was incarcerated and had expressed a desire for Kambon to be adopted by his foster parents, and Gresham was not an appropriate relative placement because she had an open case with MCCSB.

On April 30, 1998, Kambon's guardian ad litem filed a report recommending permanent custody because Thompson had "done little to comply with the case plan," had "done nothing to ensure the agency that she can appropriately parent this child," and had no relatives available to assist her in becoming an appropriate parent. In a supplemental report, Kambon's guardian ad litem stated that Gresham was not an appropriate relative placement because she had not shown an interest in Kambon and she would have trouble finding child care while she worked second shift. Kambon's guardian ad litem also indicated that Jackson had sent him a letter stating that he was "no longer interested in the child" and that he would support an adoption by Kambon's foster parent.

On June 10 and 17, 1998, the magistrate conducted a permanent custody hearing. Neither Thompson nor Jackson attended, but both were represented by appointed counsel. Caseworker Doris Edelmann testified that she had provided case management services, information/referral services, and environmental resources to the family between February 1997 and April 1997. Edelmann stated that Kambon had been removed from Thompson's custody because Thompson had "continued to run the streets and was not home when she was supposed to be." Edelmann testified that Thompson had been referred to a teen parenting program and G.E.D. classes and had been directed to complete a drug and alcohol assessment, but Thompson had not followed through with the programs. She explained that MCCSB could not transport Thompson to these programs because she was not "an available person" due to her frequent relocations and short stays at different addresses.

Edelmann testified that MCCSB had dealt with Gresham since 1984 involving the alleged neglect of her children and that Gresham had failed to complete any treatment programs. She stated that, at the time of the hearing, Gresham had an "open case" due to Thompson's allegations that Gresham abused drugs and alcohol, physically abused Thompson, and suffered mood swings and that Gresham's "paramour" had pulled a knife and a gun on Thompson and Jackson.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re: Jackson, Unpublished Decision (8-13-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-jackson-unpublished-decision-8-13-1999-ohioctapp-1999.