In Re K T L Lynch Major Minor

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 2026
Docket375169
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re K T L Lynch Major Minor (In Re K T L Lynch Major Minor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan 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 K T L Lynch Major Minor, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

UNPUBLISHED March 17, 2026 11:26 AM In re K. T. L. LYNCH MAJOR, Minor.

No. 375169 Wayne Circuit Court Family Division LC No. 2024-000939-NA

Before: MALDONADO, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and TREBILCOCK, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Respondent-father physically and sexually assaulted his minor niece, pleaded guilty to two counts of criminal sexual conduct, and served several years in prison. While on parole, officials discovered he was KLM’s father and that he took steps to hide living with KLM and his wife, respondent-mother, despite his parole conditions prohibiting any contact with minor children. Respondent-father appeals from the trial court’s order terminating his parental rights to KLM, asserting the evidence was insufficient to establish the statutory grounds for terminating his parental rights, and that termination was not in KLM’s best interests. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

KLM tested positive for marijuana when she was born, triggering an investigation by Child Protective Services (CPS). That investigation revealed respondent-father1 and respondent-mother previously had their parental rights terminated to two sons for “serious and chronic neglect or physical or sexual abuse” after they physically injured respondent-mother’s minor nieces in the name of “heavy handed” punishment—hitting them with belts and hangers. See In re Ewing Minors, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued May 9, 2013 (Docket

1 Respondent-father is allegedly not KLM’s biological father, but that matters not for these proceedings given he has legal rights to KLM—as he admitted at the Preliminary Hearing, he is KLM’s legal father because he was married to KLM’s mother at the time of KLM’s birth, see MCL 722.1433(f).

-1- Nos. 313313 and 313315), pp 1-2. Respondent-father also “fondled . . . and penetrated [the] mouth and anus” of one of them. Id. at 2. He pleaded guilty to first-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-I), MCL 750.520b(1)(a), and second-degree criminal sexual conduct (CSC-II), MCL 750.520c(2)(b), and served about 10 years’ imprisonment. Upon his release on parole in May 2022, respondent-father was required to comply with the Michigan Sex Offenders Registration Act (SORA), MCL 28.721 et seq.

Before the Michigan Department of Corrections released respondent-father, his parole officer took steps to reinforce one of his parole conditions—no contact with minor children. The parole officer first explained this to respondent-father during parole orientation. He also visited respondent-father’s intended residence in Detroit and spoke to respondent-mother about the conditions of respondent-father’s parole, including the no-minor-contact requirement. She reported he would be living in their home with her and would help him with transportation and finding employment. Importantly, the parole officer again confirmed respondents understood the condition that respondent-father was prohibited from having contact with minor children.

Respondent-father was largely compliant with his parole conditions. He was not charged with any criminal activity, and there were no complaints about him sexually assaulting or touching children. Respondent-father also completed his sex offender treatment program and obtained a job with respondent-mother’s employer. His parole officer reported that respondent-mother never mentioned domestic issues or divorcing respondent-father, and respondents did not mention having another child in their conversations.

Shortly before respondent-father’s parole was set to expire, a CPS investigator spoke to respondent-mother at the Detroit home about KLM. Respondent-mother told the investigator she did not know respondent-father’s whereabouts. Two days later, the investigator discovered respondent-father likely lived in the Detroit home with respondent-mother—that was the address he registered both under SORA and with the Secretary of State. Police officers then went to the house to check whether respondent-father was living at the home with KLM in violation of his parole conditions. He answered the door and claimed he did not know where respondent-mother was, saying she did not reside at the home, and he had not seen her for some time. Police searched the house and found respondent-mother hiding with KLM upstairs.

The investigator immediately moved respondent-father out of the home and CPS obtained a court order removing KLM from the residence and suspending respondent-father’s parenting time. After a preliminary hearing, the trial court accepted the permanency plan of adoption and ordered respondent-father’s parenting time remain suspended, indicating: “[E]ven if supervised, those visits may be harmful to the child due to his criminal conviction for CSC and his two prior terminations of parental rights.” A few days later at a pretrial hearing, respondent-father noted his interest in releasing his parental rights to KLM.

At the outset of adjudication, the trial court took “judicial notice of the file, findings of facts, and prior court orders,” including respondent-father’s criminal history. The CPS investigator opined it was in KLM’s best interests to terminate respondent-father’s parental rights because of his past case history with CPS, his CSC convictions, and his current parole status. KLM’s case worker agreed, testifying it was in KLM’s best interests to terminate respondent-father’s parental rights because his charges were “against underaged girls. It’s just a scary situation to put a child

-2- into.” And, the case worker emphasized, respondent-father said, “he wanted to terminate his rights at the last hearing.” Before the conclusion of that hearing, the trial court denied respondent- father’s request for supervised, structured parenting time because that would violate the conditions of his parole.

By the time of the continued adjudication, respondent-father’s parole ended. KLM’s case worker maintained her position concerning termination of parental rights because respondent- father allegedly is not the biological father, had no contact or parenting time with KLM, and is a registered sex offender. The case worker’s supervisor agreed: “There were two youths that were forced to endure horrific trauma, and that trauma has to be carried with them for the rest of their life [sic]. It would be an injustice to [KLM] to subject her to be at risk to be the third child to undergo that trauma as well.”

The trial court ultimately terminated respondent-father’s parental rights to KLM under MCL 712A.19b(3)(i) (parental rights to one or more siblings terminated due to serious and chronic neglect or physical or sexual abuse, parent failed to rectify conditions); MCL 712A.19b(3)(j) (reasonable likelihood, based on conduct or capacity of parent, child will be harmed if returned to home of parent); and MCL 712A.19b(3)(m)(i) (parent is convicted of violating MCL 750.520b and MCL 750.520c, and termination is in child’s best interests because continuing the parent-child relationship would be harmful to child). The trial court also concluded that it was in KLM’s best interests to terminate respondent-father’s parental rights because of his CSC convictions, his parole violation, and the lack of a meaningful bond with her. But it did not terminate respondent-mother’s parental rights, concluding that was not in KLM’s best interests.2 This appeal by right followed.

II. STATUTORY GROUNDS

We first consider and reject respondent-father’s argument that the evidence was insufficient to establish statutory grounds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In Re K T L Lynch Major Minor, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-k-t-l-lynch-major-minor-michctapp-2026.