In re J.S., T.K., & C.K.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 6, 2017
Docket17-1536
StatusPublished

This text of In re J.S., T.K., & C.K. (In re J.S., T.K., & C.K.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re J.S., T.K., & C.K., (iowactapp 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-1536 Filed December 6, 2017

IN THE INTEREST OF J.S., T.K., & C.K., Minor Children,

P.S., Mother, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Bremer County, Peter B. Newell,

District Associate Judge.

The mother appeals the termination of her parental rights to her children,

C.K. and T.K., and the permanency order placing her child, J.S., in the sole

custody of his father. AFFIRMED.

Mark A. Milder of Mark Milder Law Firm, Waverly, for appellant mother.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Anagha Dixit, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee State.

Linnea Nicol of the Juvenile Public Defender’s Office, Waterloo, for minor

children.

Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Doyle and Mullins, JJ. 2

DANILSON, Chief Judge.

The mother appeals the termination of her parental rights to her children,

C.K. and T.K.,1 and the permanency order placing her child, J.S., in the sole

custody of his father.2 The mother asserts the district court erred in giving weight

to the mother’s hair-stat test results in reaching its determinations. The mother

also contends it is in C.K. and T.K.’s best interests to be returned to her care, or

in the alternative, to be placed in a guardianship. Because we conclude there

are grounds for termination of the mother’s parental rights to C.K. and T.K. and

for the placement of J.S. in the sole custody of his father, and the court’s

determinations are in the children’s best interests, we affirm.

I. Background Facts & Proceedings.

At the time of the combined termination and permanency hearing, J.S.

was fourteen years old, C.K. was eight, and T.K. was seven. The Iowa

Department of Human Services (DHS) became involved with the family in

September 2015 due to concerns of methamphetamine use by the mother. This

was not the first time the family had formal interactions with DHS due to

methamphetamine-related concerns.3 The children were removed from the

mother’s care in December 2015. C.K. and T.K. were placed in family foster

care, and J.S. was placed in the sole custody of his father. The children’s

1 C.K. and T.K.’s father’s parental rights were also terminated. He does not appeal. 2 J.S. has a different father than C.K. and T.K. 3 DHS became involved with the family in 2007, when J.S. tested positive for methamphetamine, and again in 2009, when the father of C.K. and T.K. was arrested for manufacturing methamphetamine. 3

removal stemmed from the mother’s continued use of methamphetamine and the

mother’s and father to C.K. and T.K.’s continued ties to the drug culture.4

Though the mother obtained substance-abuse and mental-health

treatment, consistently attended visitation with the children, and participated in

DHS services throughout the pendency of this matter,5 she was not able to

demonstrate honesty about her use of methamphetamine or provide negative

hair-stat tests. The mother tested positive for methamphetamine by hair-stat

testing on August 5 and September 2, 2016, and January 18, February 22, April

9, June 22, July 3, and August 23, 2017. The last positive hair-stat test was on

the second day of the termination and permanency hearing—the district court left

the record open for admission of the test results. The mother contended her last

use was September 2016; however, a DHS caseworker testified hair-stat testing

can only provide positive results if a person has used within the last ninety days.

When asked at the termination and permanency hearing, the DHS

caseworker explained the meaning of the string of hair-stat test results showing

methamphetamine in the mother’s system:

It meant that from each one of those dates there was a use and what they tell us, train us, what they say, is that for it to show up in a hair-stat there had to be three uses in that 90-day time period. We’re not going to catch one use, so what that would tell me is that well, we have consistently had use from January through June.

4 At one point during the pendency of this matter there was concern for C.K. and T.K.’s safety due to their father’s involvement and self-admitted prominent position in the drug culture, requiring C.K. and T.K. to be placed in a sequestered foster home. 5 The mother also obtained employment about three months prior to the termination and permanency hearing. The mother had not been employed for approximately two years. She was terminated from her last job as a nurse in 2015 after she was charged with crimes related to taking medication from the care center. 4

The mother argued the hair-stat tests could be coming back positive due

to exposure from her environment rather than actual methamphetamine use.

The mother pointed out that her urinalysis tests through her substance-abuse

treatment at Pathways and those submitted as a part of the mother’s probation

were negative for illegal substances. The mother submitted twenty-nine

urinalysis tests through Pathways and three as a condition of her probation—all

negative for illegal substances. However, the DHS caseworker testified the

urinalysis tests were submitted in correlation with her scheduled Pathways

appointments and two out of three of the tests submitted as part of the mother’s

probation were scheduled, meaning “of the [thirty-one] tests I talked about that

were conducted by Pathways or Corrections, one of those tests w[as] done

where [the mother] couldn’t have anticipated the probability of testing.” The DHS

caseworker further testified the window for picking up methamphetamine in a

person’s system by way of urinalysis is typically only forty-eight hours. The DHS

caseworker also testified Pathways does not typically send urinalysis tests to a

laboratory for further testing. The mother’s Pathways treatment coordinator

testified all the urinalysis tests taken through Pathways are observed but

admitted “there’s probably always a way” to substitute urine even while being

observed. Ultimately, the district court determined:

[T]he hair-stat testing is credible evidence of ongoing methamphetamine usage. The mother’s ability to avoid the detection of her methamphetamine usage while providing urine samples is evidence of duplicity and not abstinence. The urine tests that the mother took did not occur randomly. She submitted urine samples when she was scheduled to have appointments with her substance abuse counselor. These tests were not forwarded to a laboratory for further testing. 5

After a combined termination and permanency hearing held July 21 and

August 23, 2017, the court terminated the mother’s parental rights to C.K. and

T.K. pursuant to Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(f) and (l) (2017). The court also

ordered the sole custody of J.S. to be transferred to his father pursuant to section

232.104(2)(d)(2). The mother appeals.

II. Standard of Review.

We review termination-of-parental rights and child-in-need-of-assistance

(CINA) proceedings de novo. In re A.M., 843 N.W.2d 100, 110 (Iowa 2014)

(termination); In re J.S., 846 N.W.2d 36, 40 (Iowa 2014) (CINA). “We are not

bound by the juvenile court’s findings of fact, but we do give them weight,

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In the Interest of J.S. & N.S., Minor Children, A.S., Mother
846 N.W.2d 36 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2014)
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In the Interest of J.B.L., Minor Child, Q.S., Father
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