Jeff AC, Jr. v. State

117 P.3d 697, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 103, 2005 WL 1654328
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 2005
DocketS-11366
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 117 P.3d 697 (Jeff AC, Jr. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeff AC, Jr. v. State, 117 P.3d 697, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 103, 2005 WL 1654328 (Ala. 2005).

Opinions

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A father appeals the termination of his parental rights for his young daughter. Incarcerated shortly after impregnating the mother, the father did not know of the child’s existence until about one year later. By that point, the child had been judged a child in need of aid and the state had taken numerous steps to terminate the parental rights of the mother and her boyfriend, the putative father, and to permanently place the daughter for adoption with her foster parents. A termination hearing was held regarding both parents about one year after the father learned of the existence of the child. The mother voluntarily relinquished her rights, and the court terminated the father’s rights on the grounds of abandonment and neglect. The father contends that his procedural due process rights were violated, and that the superior court erred in its findings that he had abandoned and/or neglected his daughter, that the state had made reasonable efforts to reunify, and that the termination was in the best interests of the daughter. Concluding that the father’s due process rights were observed by the superior court and that the court’s findings are supported by the record, we affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

After his March 2000 release from prison, Jeff C. resumed a relationship with Melanie G.1 Their relationship was strained by physical and verbal aggression and heavy drug use. Jeff engaged in drug distribution and may have been Melanie’s supplier of crack cocaine. In early June 2000 Melanie suffered nausea and her period was late. She testified that she told Jeff that she thought she was pregnant; Jeff denied this. Shortly thereafter, she reported a domestic assault incident to the police. When the police stopped Jeff in his vehicle, they also discovered scales with drug residue on them. He was accordingly arrested for violating probation and re-incarcerated from June 15, 2000 [700]*700to August 15, 2001. After the arrest, Jeff had no further contact with Melanie.

Melanie continued using cocaine and marijuana during the pregnancy. On February 14, 2001, Jasmine G. was born cocaine-positive. In light of her critical medical condition, the state successfully sought an emergency petition for child-in-need-of-aid (CINA) adjudication and temporary placement. Jeff, in prison, was unaware of Jasmine’s birth or emergency CINA adjudication. After two weeks in intensive care, Jasmine went home with a foster family, with whom she has resided her entire life.

At the birth, Melanie named her then-current boyfriend, Jimmy D., as the father. Jimmy agreed that he was the father. However, Melanie mentioned Jeff as another sexual partner. In the words of a social worker present, Melanie “was not the greatest historian regarding the period of time from when she became pregnant.” The state listed Jimmy as the “putative father” and requested that the court order him to be tested for paternity of Jasmine.2 Because of Jimmy’s frequent jail transfers and lack of a stable residence, the paternity testing proved difficult to obtain.

In May 2001 Melanie told her social worker that Jeff could be the father, adding that the baby looked like Jeff and that Jeff was incarcerated in the Palmer Correctional Center. Accordingly, while continuing to seek Jimmy’s DNA, the social worker also requested Jeffs DNA sample. The prison replied that they had no prisoner named Jeff C. The state was unable to further pursue Jeff at this point because it had no identifying information and because there were several persons named Jeff C. in Alaska. In addition, Melanie was regularly out of contact with the department, and when she was in contact, she was often unhelpful.

In July 2001 the superior court accepted a stipulation by Melanie and Jimmy, listed as the father, and adjudicated Jasmine as a child in need of aid. The CINA grounds were AS 47.10.011(8) (mental injury) and (10) (intoxicant use), resulting from Melanie’s prenatal drug use and both parents’ history of assaultive behavior. The parents consented to treatment plans.

In August 2001 Jeff was released from prison. Concluding that Anchorage had become a bad environment for him, Jeff moved home to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to live with his father and grandmother. Before his departure, Jeff met with his social worker to discuss outstanding issues related to his two daughters from a prior relationship who had been adjudicated as children in need of aid.3 He was unaware of Jasmine or the proceeding involving her. Since his return to Pennsylvania, Jeff claims that he has avoided drugs, assaultive conduct, and other unlawful behavior.

On November 20 the state received the results of Jimmy’s paternity testing, which excluded Jimmy as Jasmine’s biological father. Shortly thereafter, a social worker in Jasmine’s case happened to notice the existence of a Jeff C. who was involved in another CINA case.4 The state arranged for a paternity test of Jeff to be conducted using a DNA sample already collected in the other case.

In December 2001 the superior court held a disposition hearing on Jasmine. The resulting order concluded that efforts to return the child to Melanie or Jimmy — who tele-phonically appeared in court as the putative father — were unsuccessful, that Melanie had not complied with her case plan and Jimmy was incarcerated, and that the state should continue with custody. The court set a permanency hearing for February 13, 2002.

By January 2, 2002 the state received the results of Jeffs paternity test, which established him as the biological father. Jeff learned of this result on January 30 during a [701]*701telephone conversation with the social worker from his other case. On February 5 Jeff received in the mail a summons for Jasmine’s permanency hearing, with a copy of the earlier disposition order attached. Jeff failed to respond to the summons. After the permanency hearing — in which only the mother participated — the court concluded that Jasmine remained in need of aid and that out-of-home permanent placement was in the child’s best interests. Accordingly, the court instructed the state to “proceed to finalize permanency for the child by filing a petition to terminate parental rights by March 13, 2002.” The state filed this petition on March 12. Jeff received a copy in the mail on April 1.

Jeff contacted Jasmine’s social worker in early April. After numerous messages back and forth, the two finally communicated on April 23 — by which point Jasmine was fourteen months old. The social worker told Jeff of the birth and of Jasmine’s developmental problems and medical needs resulting from the prenatal substance exposure. Jeff expressed anger that they had obtained and tested his DNA sample without his knowledge or permission. He also asked for additional information, including medical reports. When asked what he planned to do, Jeff responded that he did not know and that he would call back that Friday. He did not call back on Friday. The social worker then contacted Melanie, who gave a highly unfavorable impression of Jeffs personality and past behavior.5 In later conversations, Jeff did not express a firm intent or desire to parent Jasmine.

On May 2, the social worker informed Jeff that the case plan for his other daughters would be adopted in this case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Miranda T. v. State of Alaska DHSS, OCS
524 P.3d 1105 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2023)
Mariah B. v. State of Alaska, DHSS, OCS
499 P.3d 1021 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2021)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 P.3d 697, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 103, 2005 WL 1654328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeff-ac-jr-v-state-alaska-2005.