In re Ka.R.

2024 Ohio 5302
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 29, 2024
Docket24CA4057
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Ohio 5302 (In re Ka.R.) 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 Ka.R., 2024 Ohio 5302 (Ohio Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

[Cite as In re Ka.R., 2024-Ohio-5302.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT SCIOTO COUNTY

In re: Ka.R. and Ke.R., : : Case No. 24CA4057 Adjudicated Neglected/Dependent : Children. : : DECISION AND JUDGMENT : ENTRY : : RELEASED: 10/29/2024 _____________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

Valerie M. Webb, Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellant.

Shane A. Tieman, Scioto County Prosecutor, and S. Andrew Sturgill, Scioto County Assistant Prosecutor Portsmouth, Ohio, for appellee. _____________________________________________________________________

Wilkin, J.

{¶1} Appellant, F.C., appeals a judgment of the Scioto County Court of Common

Pleas, Juvenile Division, that granted Scioto County Children Services permanent

custody of her two-year-old twin children, Ka.R. and Ke.R. Appellant raises one

assignment of error that asserts that (1) the trial court’s judgment placing the children in

the agency’s permanent custody is against the manifest weight of the evidence and (2)

sufficient evidence does not support the court’s judgment. After our review of the record

and the applicable law, we do not find any merit to appellant’s assignment of error.

Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

{¶2} On May 19, 2021, the agency filed a complaint that alleged the children,

who had been born seven weeks earlier, were “neglected/dependent children.” The

agency asked the court to place the children in its temporary custody and also asked Scioto, 24CA4057 2

the court to issue an ex parte temporary custody order. An affidavit attached to the

complaint averred the following. On April 20, 2021, the agency received a referral

regarding the children. The parents took the two infants, who had been prematurely

born, to a pediatrician. The pediatrician advised the parents “to take the children

immediately to the emergency room due to their dangerously low temperature.” Several

hours later, the parents still had not taken the children to the emergency room. Instead,

appellant had taken the children to a different doctor’s office.

{¶3} The agency caseworker contacted this doctor’s office and learned that “the

children had been brought in around noon, and the children were treated and sent home

with instructions on how to keep their body temperatures up.” The caseworker met with

appellant, and appellant stated that “the children were now OK, and her instructions

were to wake the children up every two hours to eat, keep them bundled and warm, and

return to the doctor in two days.”

{¶4} On May 4, 2021, Ka.R.’s pediatrician examined him and found that the child

had “a temperature of 81 and was showing signs of skin breakdown and redness on his

bottom.” The child “began to ‘code’ at the office; he was given CPR and taken to the

ER where he was intubated before being” life-flighted to Nationwide Children’s Hospital.

{¶5} The caseworker went to the family’s home to check on the other child, Ke.R.

The caseworker discovered that Ke.R. “was cold to the touch.” The putative father

agreed to have the child taken to the emergency room. Ke.R. subsequently was life-

flighted to Nationwide Children’s Hospital. Scioto, 24CA4057 3

{¶6} A hospital psychologist evaluated the parents and reported that “they are at

the 4th grade level.” The psychologist expressed concern “with the parents’ ability to

provide the care that the children need.”

{¶7} The trial court subsequently placed the children in the agency’s temporary

custody pending adjudication and disposition.

{¶8} On June 28, 2021, the court adjudicated the children “neglected/dependent”

children. The court later entered a dispositional order that placed the children in the

agency’s temporary custody.

{¶9} On February 3, 2023, the agency filed a motion that asked the court to

modify the disposition to permanent custody. The agency alleged that the children have

been in its temporary custody for 12 or more months of a consecutive 22-month period

and that placing the children in its permanent custody is in their best interest.

{¶10} On March 29, 2023, the court held a hearing to consider the agency’s

permanent custody motion. Dr. Kerry Rosen, a pediatric cardiologist, testified as

follows. On May 4, 2021, Ka.R., who had been diagnosed with a rhythm abnormality,

arrived at Southern Ohio Medical Center Pediatrics for a scheduled routine visit. Upon

examination, Dr. Rosen discovered that the child “was actually fairly near

unresponsive,” was “very cold,” had an “abnormally low temperature,” and had a low

heart rate. Thus, the routine office visit turned into an emergency visit, with the child

ultimately being life-flighted to Nationwide Children’s Hospital.

{¶11} Dr. Rosen reported that he had “never seen a baby show up for a routine

office visit in that sort of dangerous of [sic] situation.” He stated that it gave him and the

medical team concerns for the child’s “long-term welfare.” Dr. Rosen indicated that Scioto, 24CA4057 4

most parents “would have recognized the concerns, the grave concerns,” and would

have sought immediate medical care rather than presenting the child for a routine office

visit.

{¶12} In September 2022, Dr. Rosen wrote a letter to the agency “to share some

of [the medical] team’s observations about [the] family showing up for visits and their . . .

interactions and involvement with the visits.” He stated that appellant “had no eye

contact or questions” and that she “was not very engaged within the appointment.”

Additionally, appellant attended only about half of the child’s medical appointments. Dr.

Rosen explained that he continues to treat Ka.R. and remains concerned about

appellant’s lack of engagement.

{¶13} Dr. Rosen testified that Ka.R.’s twin, Ke.R., also was brought to the

hospital in dire shape. He stated that both Ka.R. and Ke.R. had a serious infection that

required life-supporting care. Dr. Rosen elaborated that the children “had acute, renal

kidney failure” and required “a form of dialysis.”

{¶14} Brinley Curtis, a family support specialist with Help Me Grow, testified that

she worked with appellant for approximately one year and last saw appellant in October

2022, during a supervised visit at the agency. Curtis explained that she worked with

appellant to help her learn how “to interact positively with the children.” Curtis reported

that appellant appeared “uncomfortable” playing with the children on the floor, and

during every visit, she seemed “overwhelmed.” Curtis does not believe that appellant

can manage caring for the two young children, plus a third child due to be born in July

2023. Scioto, 24CA4057 5

{¶15} Caseworker Emma Liles1 testified as follows. The agency’s initial concerns

regarding the family involved “the parents’ lack of understanding for caring for” the two

prematurely born children. Additionally, appellant tested positive for marijuana when

she delivered the children. The agency also had concerns that the home environment

was unsanitary.

{¶16} The agency developed a case plan to help address these issues. The

case plan required the parents to (1) expand “their knowledge for caring for infants,” (2)

follow “doctors’ orders,” (3) take the doctors’ orders “seriously,” (4) learn “signs of

medical illnesses,” (5) undergo psychological evaluations, and (6) maintain a clean

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