In the Interest of E.C., Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 7, 2022
Docket22-1458
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of E.C., Minor Child (In the Interest of E.C., Minor Child) 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.

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In the Interest of E.C., Minor Child, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-1458 Filed December 7, 2022

IN THE INTEREST OF E.C., Minor Child,

L.T., Mother, Appellant,

G.C., Father, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Muscatine County,

Gary P. Strausser, District Associate Judge.

Parents separately appeal the termination of their parental rights.

AFFIRMED ON BOTH APPEALS.

Esther J. Dean, Muscatine, for appellant mother.

Christopher J. Foster of Foster Law Office, Iowa City, for appellant father.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and Ellen Ramsey-Kacena and

Mackenzie Moran, Assistant Attorneys General, for appellee State.

Jean Pfeiffer of Muscatine Legal Services, Muscatine, attorney and

guardian ad litem for minor child.

Considered by Bower, C.J., and Greer and Badding, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

The child who is the subject of these termination appeals—E.C., born in

October 2020—has an older brother who suffered non-accidental brain injuries

twice while in the care of the mother. Because the juvenile court considered the

mother to be dangerous, E.C. was removed from her care the day after she was

born. After more than a year of services, a termination hearing was held, following

which the juvenile court entered a ruling terminating both parents’ rights. E.C.’s

mother and father separately appeal, challenging the sufficiency of the evidence

supporting the grounds for termination and arguing they should be given more time

to work toward reunification. We affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

E.C.’s older brother, J.T.,1 was born in June 2019. The next month, the

mother took J.T. to the hospital when she noticed that he was having seizures

while they were at a friend’s house. After admission to the hospital, J.T. was found

to have subdural and retinal hemorrhages. Medical staff said the child’s injuries

could only be from someone shaking him “excessively and aggressively with

force.” Because three people were caring for the child when the injuries occurred,

the mother included, a child protective assessment was founded against an

unknown perpetrator. The mother agreed to a safety plan with the Iowa

Department of Health and Human Services and moved in with her great-

grandparents, who supervised her contact with J.T.

1 J.T. has a different father than E.C. All references to the father are to E.C.’s father. 3

The department eventually determined that the mother’s contact with J.T.,

who was doing well, no longer needed to be supervised. Soon after, in October

2019, the mother found J.T. unresponsive, “blue and not breathing,” in his pack

and play. He was rushed to the hospital where it was determined that he sustained

severe trauma to his brain. J.T.’s medical team found these were new injuries and

much more serious than before, though they were once again caused by “being

shook repetitively over and over again and/or with she[e]r force.” A department

caseworker testified that J.T. will likely “never walk, talk, have voluntary movement

on his own, eat on his own. He will be permanently blind, and he does not have

the ability to maintain his own body temperature on his own.”

A criminal investigation into J.T.’s injuries discovered that in the days before

the mother found the infant unresponsive, she deleted the web searches on her

phone. But law enforcement was able to recover the following Google searches

from her phone: “symptoms of blindness in babies,” “what does it mean if there is

a film on my baby’s eyes,” “can spinal stenosis happen from trauma,” “can you go

paralyzed from being squeezed in the neck,” “my baby’s pupils are big,” “my baby

stopped breathing while sleeping,” “I’m not bonding with my baby,” and “reasons

for low temp and babies.”

The mother was found to be responsible for the injuries to J.T. on both

occasions.2 Criminal charges were filed against her for child endangerment

resulting in serious injury. Those charges were still pending when E.C. was born

in October 2020. As for E.C.’s father, he was possibly affiliated with a gang and

2J.T. was adjudicated a child in need of assistance, reasonable efforts for the mother were waived in July 2020, and her rights were terminated in May 2021. 4

incarcerated on a charge of terrorism at the time of her birth. Because of these

concerns, coupled with the department’s belief that the mother would flee the state

with E.C., the State obtained an order for E.C.’s temporary removal the day after

she was born, which was confirmed following a formal hearing in November. In

December, the child was adjudicated as in need of assistance.

As the case progressed, the department acknowledged that “[i]n terms of

services, [the mother] has done everything that she has been asked or court

ordered to do,” and more, including mental-health therapy, anger management,

and parenting education. And her visits with E.C. went “extremely well.” But, as

the caseworker pointed out, “there is one significant thing that she has failed to do.

She has failed to take responsibility for her son’s injuries,” which “makes it difficult

for the department to determine if [she] could safely parent [E.C].” Rather than

taking responsibility, the mother provided varying explanations about why J.T.’s

injuries were accidental. All of those explanations were ruled out by medical

professionals, who determined that the injuries were non-accidental.

In July 2021, the State petitioned to terminate both parents’ parental rights.

At the time of the termination hearing in November, the father was in prison with

no prospect for release in the foreseeable future. Because he had been

incarcerated since before E.C. was born, he had very little contact with her. As for

the mother, the department continued to have serious concerns about her ability

to safely parent the young child, so she never progressed beyond fully supervised

visits. In her testimony, the caseworker explained:

Our concern is that she’s not taken accountability for those injuries [to J.T]. So the concern is that the services that she has 5

participated in have not really been effective at addressing the abuse that occurred. And despite some of those services, she’s also continued to struggle. Throughout the course of this case, she’s struggled with substance abuse, and I think she struggles at times to regulate her emotions.

When asked why the child could not be returned to the mother’s care, the worker

said,

I believe she’s unsafe. I believe the adjudicatory harm has not been alleviated. There’s still a significant likelihood that she could be physically abused by [the mother], based on the fact that I don’t think services have effectively addressed the reason for the abuse because she hasn’t taken accountability.

In her testimony, the mother stated, “I don’t have any answers” when asked

about the cause of J.T.’s injuries. While the mother said that she took “full

accountability” for his injuries, she still asserted they were accidental. She also

testified that the opinions of medical professionals about the causes of the injuries,

and the searches recovered from her phone, were “not accurate.” The mother was

set to go to trial on the charges stemming from J.T.’s injuries in January 2022,

although she believed the trial would be continued.

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Related

In the Interest of N.F.
579 N.W.2d 338 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 1998)
In The Interest Of D.W., Minor Child, A.M.W., Mother
791 N.W.2d 703 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2010)
In the Interest of C.B.
611 N.W.2d 489 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2000)
L.N.S. v. S.W.S.
854 N.W.2d 699 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2013)

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