In the Interest of I.L., Minor Child

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedApril 29, 2026
Docket25-2201
StatusPublished

This text of In the Interest of I.L., Minor Child (In the Interest of I.L., 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 I.L., Minor Child, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 25-2201 Filed April 29, 2026 _______________

In the Interest of I.L., Minor Child, F.M., Mother, Appellant. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, The Honorable Rachael E. Seymour, Judge. _______________

AFFIRMED _______________

Sandra C. Johnson of Cunningham & Kelso, P.L.L.C., Urbandale, attorney for appellant mother.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Mackenzie Moran, Assistant Attorney General, attorneys for appellee State.

Angela Bohnenkamp of Youth Law Center, Des Moines, attorney and guardian ad litem for minor child. _______________

Considered without oral argument by Greer, P.J., and Buller and Langholz, JJ. Opinion by Langholz, J.

1 LANGHOLZ, Judge.

A mother appeals the juvenile court’s order terminating her parental rights to her now-one-year-old daughter. 1 She challenges the statutory grounds for termination and argues that termination is not in the daughter’s best interest. But on our de novo review, we agree with the juvenile court that the State proved a ground for termination under Iowa Code section 232.116(1)(h) (2025) and that termination is in the daughter’s best interest. We thus affirm the juvenile court’s termination order.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

The daughter came to the attention of the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) when she tested positive for amphetamine and cocaine at birth in January 2025. When a child protective worker visited the mother at the hospital, the mother “became verbally aggressive and kicked a tray table while holding the child.” The mother also admitted “that she had ‘used’ prior to finding out she was pregnant.” Based on that information, the juvenile court entered a temporary removal order when the daughter was two days old. The State filed a child-in-need-of-assistance (“CINA”) petition three days later. And HHS placed the daughter in relative care with the adoptive mother of her older half-sibling.2

1 The juvenile court also terminated the father’s parental rights. He does not appeal. We avoid using the parties’ names to respect their privacy because this opinion— unlike the juvenile court’s orders—is public. Compare Iowa Code § 232.147(2) (2025), with id. §§ 602.4301(2), 602.5110; see also Iowa Ct. R. 21.25. 2 The mother’s parental rights to that older child—who tested positive for THC and cocaine at birth—were terminated in 2023 due to the mother’s “substance use and mental health concerns.”

2 At the time of the removal hearing in late January, the mother was on probation in Polk County and had another pending criminal case in Warren County. Indeed, the mother was arrested and taken to the Warren County Jail at the end of the removal hearing. The juvenile court confirmed the daughter’s removal and “encouraged [the] parents [to] initiate services to address their long-standing substance abuse issues.”

In February, while the mother was still in jail, the court adjudicated the daughter as a child in need of assistance. The mother completed a mental- health and substance-abuse evaluation that month which diagnosed her with stimulant-use disorder, amphetamine-type substance, severe; cannabis-use disorder, severe, in early or sustained remission; and posttraumatic stress disorder. The evaluation also recommended residential treatment. The mother did not comply with HHS’s request to provide a drug screen the next month, but she “reported she would be starting the process to get into inpatient” treatment.

The court continued the daughter’s out-of-home placement after the dispositional hearing in late March. At that time, the court encouraged the mother to complete required medical testing so she could start inpatient treatment and directed her to “comply with all criminal court expectations” in her ongoing criminal cases. The court also noted that the mother had participated in visits with the daughter and was attending outpatient mental- health therapy, but she was “not currently engaged in substance abuse services,” and her missed drug screen was “considered positive.”

The mother did not engage in services, complete requested drug screens, or respond to any of the HHS case worker’s attempts to schedule visits with the daughter over the next four months. And she failed to appear for the scheduled permanency hearing at the end of July. The court

3 continued that hearing after granting the mother’s counsel’s motion to withdraw and appointing new counsel. Then, in August, the State petitioned to terminate her parental rights.

The court held a combined permanency and termination hearing in September. The mother again failed to appear. The court heard testimony from the HHS case worker and a Family-Centered Services (“FCS”) worker who supervised the mother’s most recent visits with the daughter.

The HHS case worker recommended termination because the mother, “unfortunately, has not addressed the reason why HHS became involved originally. She has struggled to maintain contact with the Department to demonstrate . . . sobriety and has failed to address her mental health as well.” The case worker testified that the mother had not engaged in substance-use treatment or complied with HHS’s requests for drug screens throughout the CINA proceedings,3 that the mother had a “history of domestic violence” and “making threats toward people,” and that the mother “struggles to understand the reasoning behind the Department’s recommendations.” She also testified that the mother had not consistently attended visits with the daughter. And to the case worker’s knowledge, the mother was homeless at the time of the hearing.

The FCS worker testified that the mother missed “about three visits” with the daughter the month before the hearing. When the mother attended visits, she would “on occasion” bring clothes, baby formula, and a suction device to clean the daughter’s nose. And the mother would hold the daughter and talk to her. But she would often ask how much time was left and try to

3 The mother’s probation officer told the HHS case worker that the mother tested “positive for methamphetamine and denied use” at the end of July.

4 leave the visits early. The worker was concerned that the mother “appeared to have trouble putting [the daughter] into the car seat at the end of a visit” and that “she was continually trying to bounce [the daughter], put a bottle in her mouth, change her diaper. It wasn’t like she could just be content with her.” The worker also testified that the mother sometimes “lashes out” and “does not emotionally regulate herself.” And the worker “believed [the mother] was under the influence of mood-altering substances” during two visits with the daughter—including on the day before the hearing.

At the end of the hearing, both the State and the daughter’s guardian ad litem recommended terminating the mother’s parental rights. The guardian ad litem highlighted that the daughter “has been with [her] current placement for the entirety of her life since she was sent home from the hospital, and she is in a safe place with her sibling. . . . She’s vulnerable, less than a year old, and she cannot self-report.” So, in her view, the daughter’s “current placement is the best option for her.” The mother’s counsel acknowledged that the mother was “still struggling” but urged that she had “tried to make attempts to address the things that we’ve discussed here today.” So the mother’s counsel requested “that the Court give her more time to work on those things.”

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Related

In Re P.L.
778 N.W.2d 33 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2010)
In the Interest of C.K.
558 N.W.2d 170 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1997)
In the Interest of A.M., Minor Child, A.M., Father
843 N.W.2d 100 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2014)
In the Interest of M.W. and Z.W., Minor Children, R.W., Mother
876 N.W.2d 212 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2016)
In the Interest of A.B. & S.B., Minor Children, S.B., Father
815 N.W.2d 764 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2012)
In the Interest of T.B.
604 N.W.2d 660 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2000)

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In the Interest of I.L., Minor Child, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-il-minor-child-iowactapp-2026.