In the Interest of D.B., T.B., A.M., and A.T., Minor Children, State of Iowa, Jami Hagemeier, Guardian Ad Litem

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 27, 2017
Docket17-0740
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of D.B., T.B., A.M., and A.T., Minor Children, State of Iowa, Jami Hagemeier, Guardian Ad Litem (In the Interest of D.B., T.B., A.M., and A.T., Minor Children, State of Iowa, Jami Hagemeier, Guardian Ad Litem) 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 the Interest of D.B., T.B., A.M., and A.T., Minor Children, State of Iowa, Jami Hagemeier, Guardian Ad Litem, (iowactapp 2017).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 17-0740 Filed September 27, 2017

IN THE INTEREST OF D.B., T.B., A.M., and A.T., Minor Children,

STATE OF IOWA, Petitioner-Appellant,

JAMI HAGEMEIER, Guardian Ad Litem, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Susan C. Cox, District

Associate Judge.

The State and guardian ad litem appeal from the dismissal of the child-in-

need-of-assistance petitions. AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND

REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Mary A. Triick, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellant State.

Jami J. Hagemeier of Williams & Hagemeier, P.L.C., Des Moines,

guardian ad litem for all appellant children, and attorney for A.M. and D.B.

Sharon M. Wegner of Graham, Ervanian & Cacciatore, L.L.P., Des

Moines, attorney for T.B. & A.T.

Thomas P. Graves of Graves Law Firm, P.C., Clive, for appellee mother. 2

Aaron H.R. Ginkens of Ginkens Law Firm, P.L.C., West Des Moines, for

appellee father of D.B. & T.B.

Daniel M. Northfield, Urbandale, for appellee father of A.M.

Dale D. Mays of Mays and Clausen Law Office, Newton, for father of A.T.

Considered by Danilson, C.J., and Tabor and McDonald, JJ. 3

DANILSON, Chief Judge.

The State and the guardian ad litem appeal from the dismissal of the child-

in-need-of-assistance (CINA) petitions, which alleged the children were CINA

pursuant to Iowa Code section 232.2(6)(b) and (c)(2) (2017). Because the State

proved by clear and convincing evidence that A.T., T.B., and D.B. should be

adjudicated CINA, we reverse and remand with directions. We affirm the

decision of the juvenile court dismissing the CINA petition as to A.M.

I. Background Facts.

Alicia and Christopher are married and have five children between them.

A.M., age fourteen, is Alicia’s child with Michael. M.B., age eleven, is

Christopher’s child with A.L. (who lives in Florida).1 A.T., age twelve, is Alicia’s

1 M.B. is a behaviorally challenging child. M.B., A.L., and Christopher received informal services from the department of human services (DHS) from November 2007 through March 30, 2009. The juvenile court was formally involved beginning March 30, 2009, when a CINA petition was filed. On July 16, 2009, M.B. was placed with her father and his then-fiancé, Alicia. Fifteen days after placement, M.B. had an unexplained injury. On August 20, 2012, M.B. was removed from the home of Christopher and Alicia upon a finding by the juvenile court that she “is clearly the target child of physical and emotional abuse.” The juvenile court found T.B., A.M., and A.T. “also experienced or witnessed corporal punishment and are in imminent risk of the significant abuse levels already perpetrated against” M.B. That court stated further, If only M.B. is removed, it is likely that one of the other children will be targeted, especially if one has a toileting accident. The parents must resolve their anger, bullying, and blaming behaviors, understand and accept their role in the harm they have perpetrated, learn and practice positive parenting techniques, and heal their relationship with their children before they can provide minimally adequate parenting. Those juvenile proceedings were closed in 2014. A therapist and former child protective service worker with DHS, Angye Jones, was familiar with the family through earlier juvenile court proceedings. Ms. Jones testified at the instant hearing, stating M.B. had disruptive behaviors including dishonest, sneaky, stealing behaviors. She testified further: When I left in April 2014, the case was transitioning to Jona Parks who had just started at the department and had been the [Family Safety, Risk, and Permanency] FSRP worker on the case. In consultation with [the children’s therapist] Eileen Swoboda and several people I told Jona that my recommendation at that time would be for the case to close . . . . 4

child with Randy. T.B., age six, and D.B., age seven months, are Alicia’s

children with Christopher. Alicia is employed as a certified medical assistant.

Christopher is a trucker who is on the road several days a week. Due to

Christopher’s absence, Alicia was the primary caregiver for all the children.

Alicia and M.B. have had a difficult relationship. M.B. continued to see a

therapist after the previous juvenile court proceedings were closed. In August

2016, Alicia and Christopher had M.B. undergo a psychological examination,

which indicated M.B. is mentally lower functioning, has “strong emotional

reactions,” and “directs her negative emotions towards others in her life

[particularly Alicia, so] that she can then blame them for the loss of her fantasized

perfect relationship with her father.”

Q. Do you have any other problems in that case you think should be addressed? A. I don’t know that I call them problems. I think it was a very complex case. I think there was a lot of factors. There was a lot of emotion involved I think from all the parents, but the biggest, I think, discovery for me as the case went on, I felt like [M.B.] had a lot of behavior problems that maybe weren’t . . . focused on in the initial assessment . . . . Q. At the end though when you left the case, did you feel that the children were safe in the [B.] household? A. I felt that it was safe to send them home largely because we had had so much work with the children’s therapist, especially Eileen Swoboda, which at that time was seeing [M.B.], and we had so many meetings and so many consultations, and at that time Judge Cohen was very clear that she was going to base her decision on—largely on what Miss Swoboda recommended. And so at the time I was leaving Miss Swoboda was recommending that [M.B.] be returned to the home at this time. Q. Do you have any personal concerns about safety of any of the children in the [B.] home? A. When I closed the case I felt like things were safe at that time. 5

Also in August 2016, five days after giving birth to D.B., Alicia had a

“massive heart attack,” which requires a lifelong need for medication. She is to

keep her “stress level down.” 2

In November 2016, A.M. went to live with his father, Michael.

On January 25, 2017, by ex parte order, M.B., A.T., T.B., and D.B. were

removed from Alicia and Christopher’s home based upon a report to DHS that

Alicia had hit M.B. and caused a bloody nose.

Six-year-old T.B. was interviewed and stated that M.B. gets spanked with

a spatula, Christopher slapped M.B., and M.B. had a bloody nose. In an

interview with a child protective worker, M.B. reported being hit in the face by her

father and being consistently grounded or in trouble. She also reported having to

eat hot sauce with added cayenne pepper as punishment; not receiving any gifts

for Christmas; being told she is “fat, stupid and bad”; being punished for loading

the dishwasher wrong; being beaten with a spatula; being forced to perform wall

squats or run up and down the stairs for extended periods of time; and being

forced to stand at the dinner table while everyone else got to sit.

The State sought to have D.B., T.B., A.T., and A.M. adjudicated CINA

pursuant to Iowa Code section 232.2(6)(b) and (c), asserting they were at risk of

physical or emotional harm as a result of abuse or neglect by Alicia and

Christopher. After the removal and adjudication hearing had begun,3 and before

2 Prior to D.B.’s birth, Christopher was home about one day a week.

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In the Interest of D.B., T.B., A.M., and A.T., Minor Children, State of Iowa, Jami Hagemeier, Guardian Ad Litem, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-db-tb-am-and-at-minor-children-state-of-iowactapp-2017.