Jeffery Stanfield v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children

2026 Ark. App. 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 11, 2026
StatusPublished

This text of 2026 Ark. App. 180 (Jeffery Stanfield v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffery Stanfield v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children, 2026 Ark. App. 180 (Ark. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Cite as 2026 Ark. App. 180 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION III No. CV-25-579

Opinion Delivered March 11, 2026

JEFFERY STANFIELD APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SHARP COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 68JV-24-37]

ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN HONORABLE ADAM G. WEEKS, SERVICES AND MINOR CHILDREN JUDGE APPELLEES AFFIRMED; MOTION TO WITHDRAW GRANTED

MIKE MURPHY, Judge

Appellant Jeffery Stanfield appeals the termination of his parental rights to his

children MC1 and MC2, who were ages one and nine months, respectively, when they

entered the custody of the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS). Pursuant to

Linker-Flores v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 359 Ark. 131, 194 S.W.3d 739 (2004),

and Rule 6-9(j) of the Rules of the Arkansas Supreme Court and Court of Appeals,

Stanfield’s counsel filed a no-merit brief and a motion to withdraw asserting there are no

issues of arguable merit to raise on appeal. The clerk of this court provided Stanfield with a

copy of his counsel’s brief and notified him of his right to file a pro se statement of points

for reversal. Stanfield filed points for reversal. We affirm the termination of Stanfield’s

parental rights and grant counsel’s motion to withdraw. DHS received a call about Stanfield’s family in August 2023 when DHS received a

Garrett’s Law report that MC2 was born with illegal drugs in his system. MC2’s mother,

Amanda (who is not part of her case), and Stanfield had been using methamphetamine and

marijuana. A protective-services case was opened, and the family began receiving services. On

April 9, 2024, DHS petitioned the court for dependency-neglect, alleging that it had received

information that Standfield had been arrested for domestic battery and endangering the

welfare of a minor, and Amanda had tested positive for methamphetamine and other

substances. DHS did not seek immediate custody.

A hearing on the petition was held on May 14, 2024, and the children were

adjudicated dependent-neglected due to parental unfitness because of Amanda’s drug use.

Jeffery also was found to be unfit because a no-contact order in a criminal case prevented

him from having contact with Amanda or the children. DHS took custody of the children,

and the goal of the case was reunification. The next month Stanfield was found to be the

children’s father. He was mostly compliant with the case plan and was awarded four hours

of visitation each week. On February 7, 2025, DHS filed a petition to terminate Stanfield’s

parental rights, alleging that he was not fit to parent the children because he did not have

housing appropriate for the children, he had failed to complete services, he had ongoing

criminal charges that resulted in the loss of his driver’s license and vehicle, and he had not

demonstrated the skills necessary to be the sole caretaker for the children. As to grounds,

DHS pleaded that he had failed to remedy issues that prevented placement with him and

2 that aggravated circumstances existed because there were no other services that could be

offered that would make reunification likely.

A hearing on DHS’s petition was held on June 17, 2025; at that hearing, the court

heard the following evidence.

Stacy Sutton, a DHS program assistant, testified to two visits Stanfield had with his

children. Her testimony was that on one visit, he did not bring an appropriate lunch for the

children (beef jerky, pepperoni slices, and Cheetos); the one-year-old choked on the beef

jerky. She further stated that he would hold the children in his lap for about ten minutes,

then the children would play on the floor. When one child threw a block that hit the other

child, Stanfield did not comfort the hurt child appropriately or do anything to address the

other’s behavior in throwing.

Stanfield testified. He lives with his girlfriend, Cheyenne. They have a house they just

moved into the night before the hearing. Two months prior, they had lived in a two-bedroom

house with Cheyenne’s parents and her three children. They’re still fixing up the house, it

needed carpet in a room and had an unfinished wall in the laundry room. He has a job and

takes home about $500 a week. He had trouble reading and comprehending his parenting-

class materials and had to retake the class because Cheyenne was helping him too much with

it. He has pending charges for felony fleeing and some minor traffic misdemeanors. He did

not testify any further to the charges.

He was asked whether he could take the children home with him that day. He replied,

“Besides the house needing a couple more things.” When asked how the visits with his

3 children had gone, he replied, “Most of them not that good.” He said a lot of his visits were

cut short because he could not calm them down. His visits had been suspended in December

2024 and reinstated in May 2025. He had had three visits since visitation was reinstated in

May. At the visit where the older child threw the block at the younger child, he testified that

he got on to the older child: “I kind of raised my voice and told him ‘no’.”

Cheyenne was still married to someone else. He said she would help him parent the

children.

The DHS caseworker testified. She said the children are adoptable. They both have

developmental issues, but with services, they are getting closer to meeting their milestones

on time. DHS became involved with the family when MC2 tested positive at birth for drugs

in her system. Originally, the family received intensive in-home services with a family-

intervention specialist who visited the home two to three or more times each week. They

received almost a full year of services before the children were removed due to the mother’s

suspected drug use. She said that Stanfield tested positive for drugs at the beginning of the

case but tested clean thereafter. He had not completed his parenting classes and had to redo

portions of the classes. When asked about the assignments, “he had no knowledge,” but even

when he redid the lessons, his parenting ability at visitations never improved.

DHS had not yet been to his new house; when DHS asked to come see it, Stanfield

had told DHS that the house was not yet ready for them. In light of the testimony at the

hearing, she did not believe the house was presently appropriate. She believes that Stanfield

cannot safely or appropriately parent his children, and that is why DHS does not believe

4 custody could be returned to him today. DHS also had concerns about Cheyenne—they

offered her the opportunity to participate with Stanfield in family-centered treatment court

and submit to drug screens and participate in other services. She took one drug screen, which

was positive for drugs, and then she refused to take any further drug screens. DHS believed

it would not be appropriate for her to come to the visits with the children and Stanfield.

Moreover, the purchase contract for the home was in Cheyenne’s name alone.

DHS had offered Stanfield parenting classes and accommodations with the parenting

classes in the event that he had a learning disability. Stanfield said that he did not need any

accommodations. She concluded that DHS simply did not believe Stanfield had

demonstrated the skills necessary to be the sole caretaker of the children, and he had even

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Bluebook (online)
2026 Ark. App. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffery-stanfield-v-arkansas-department-of-human-services-and-minor-arkctapp-2026.