In re: J.D.W., A.R.W., Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedJune 3, 2026
Docket25-824
StatusUnpublished
AuthorJudge Donna Stroud

This text of In re: J.D.W., A.R.W., Jr. (In re: J.D.W., A.R.W., Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: J.D.W., A.R.W., Jr., (N.C. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA25-824

Filed 3 June 2026

Mecklenburg County, Nos. 23JA000320-590, 23JA000319-590

IN THE MATTER OF: J.D.W., A.R.W., Jr.

Appeal by respondent parents from order entered 4 June 2024 by Judge Faith

Fickling-Alvarez in District Court, Mecklenburg County. Heard in the Court of

Appeals 19 May 2026.

Mecklenburg County Attorney’s Office, by Kristina A. Graham, for Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services.

Administrative Office of the Courts, by GAL Staff Attorney Brittany T. McKinney, for guardian ad litem.

Lisa Noda for respondent-appellant-mother.

Jason Senges for respondent-appellant-father.

STROUD, Judge.

Respondent parents appeal an order terminating their parental rights to their

minor children, Jensen and Asher.1 Mother argues that the trial court erred in

denying her oral motion for the trial judge’s recusal. Father’s appellate counsel filed

1 We use pseudonyms throughout this opinion to protect the minor children’s identities. IN RE: J.D.W., A.R.W., JR.

Opinion of the Court

a no-merit brief under Rule 3.1(e) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.

We hold that Mother failed to present substantial evidence that the trial judge

harbored personal bias or that circumstances would lead a reasonable person to

question her impartiality. And we find no error in terminating Father’s parental

rights. We therefore affirm.

I. Background

In June 2023, the Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services, Division

of Youth and Family Services (YFS) received a report about Respondents’ household.

At the time, one-year-old Jensen and two-year-old Asher lived with Mother and

Father (collectively, Respondents), along with Father’s two other children—twelve-

year-old Aaron and fifteen-year-old Tina. The report came after emergency personnel

responded to a call at Respondents’ address. On arrival, they found Aaron “grievously

injured.” He died at the hospital shortly after.

On 15 June 2023, Father forced Aaron to hold a five-to-ten-pound weight over

his head for at least three hours as punishment. Eventually, Aaron could not bear

it—he “cried and begged for the punishment to stop.” When he tried to escape into a

nearby wooded area, Father caught him, punched him, and dragged him back to the

house. Once inside, Father whipped Aaron with a belt, slapped him, dragged him,

put him in a chokehold, pulled him by the hair, punched him, and beat him with a

wooden club until he passed out. Aaron suffered a spleen laceration, multiple bruises

and contusions, head injuries, and a fractured right humerus. His death was ruled a

-2- IN RE: J.D.W., A.R.W., JR.

“homicide by blunt force trauma.”

Mother was present throughout. In fact, she “instructed [Aaron] to perform

the punishment.” When he tried to escape, she helped Father drag him back inside.

Jensen and Asher—along with other half-siblings visiting that day—saw Aaron’s

“punishment, threats, beatings, and death.” Mother “recognized the punishment as

excessive.” But she never intervened. She did not call the police. She did not remove

Jensen and Asher from the home, even though, the court later found, she had

“opportunities to protect [Aaron] and to remove the juveniles.” Instead, she left home

twice that day: once to deliver marijuana and once to go to the grocery store.

Respondents were arrested and charged with Aaron’s murder on 16 June 2023.

Mother was later convicted of accessory after the fact and felony child abuse. Father

was convicted of second-degree murder, with “aggravating factors that it was

especially cruel, the victim was especially young, and he reasonably knew or should

have known that persons under the age of 18 could see and hear the offense.”

YFS filed a petition on 22 June 2023 alleging that Jensen and Asher were

neglected and dependent juveniles. Both children entered YFS’s nonsecure custody

that day. YFS voluntarily dismissed that petition and refiled on 18 July 2023.

The trial court conducted an adjudication hearing on 11 December 2023 and 5

January 2024. It heard testimony from several police officers, Respondents’ former

neighbor, and a social worker. The court also received over twenty exhibits into

evidence, including crime scene photos, Aaron’s hospital records, and Respondents’

-3- IN RE: J.D.W., A.R.W., JR.

criminal records.

On 22 January 2024, the court entered an order adjudicating Jensen and Asher

neglected and dependent. Its findings of fact recounted Respondents’ conduct on the

day Aaron died, as described above. They also detailed the conditions inside

Respondents’ home: unsecured firearms (including one in a closet with five rounds

chambered); soiled mattresses and broken furniture; a wooden club, refrigerator,

walls, and pillow all bearing “suspected blood”; a chainsaw lying on the floor; at least

eleven dogs and two cats; and dog feces and urine throughout the home. “These

conditions,” the court found, “were dangerous and injurious to the juveniles’ welfare.”

Based on these and other findings, the trial court adjudicated the children neglected:

they had not received proper care, supervision, or discipline, and they lived in an

environment “injurious to their welfare,” through their exposure to the home’s

conditions, to “cruel and heinous punishment,” and to Aaron’s death. The court also

adjudicated the children dependent; Respondents, both incarcerated, could not

provide for their care and lacked an alternative childcare arrangement.

The trial court held an initial disposition hearing two days later. A social

worker and the children’s guardian ad litem (GAL) testified. The court also received

into evidence YFS’s “Court Summary and Reasonable Efforts Report,” the GAL’s

report, and various documents from Mother.

On 15 February 2024, the court entered a disposition order. Among other

things, it found that Respondents’ “actions in relation to [Aaron’s] homicide in

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[Jensen and Asher’s] presence” were “egregious, and that their conduct increased the

enormity of the injurious consequences” of the children’s neglect. Based on those

findings, the court determined that “reunification efforts with [Father] and [Mother]

[we]re not required.” See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-901(c)(1)(f) (2025) (stating that

reasonable reunification efforts “shall not be required” when “aggravated

circumstances exist” based on a parent’s “conduct that increased the enormity or

added to the injurious consequences of the abuse or neglect”). It also found that “no

compelling evidence warrant[ed] continued reunification efforts,” and that ceasing

such efforts was “in the children’s best interests.” The court ordered adoption as

Jensen and Asher’s primary permanent plan and guardianship as their secondary

plan.

After a series of hearings, the trial court entered permanency planning orders

on 1 April 2024 and 20 September 2024. In both, the court found that reunification

remained contrary to the children’s best interests and confirmed adoption as their

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