Kintina Jodi v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children

2024 Ark. App. 619
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 11, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 619 (Kintina Jodi 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
Kintina Jodi v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children, 2024 Ark. App. 619 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 619 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-24-410

Opinion Delivered December 11, 2024 KINTINA JODI APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE GREENE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT [NO. 28JV-23-246] V. HONORABLE MARY LILE ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN BROADAWAY, JUDGE SERVICES AND MINOR CHILDREN APPELLEES AFFIRMED

WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge

Kintina Jodi appeals an order of the Greene County Circuit Court adjudicating her

children dependent-neglected and terminating reunification services. She challenges the

sufficiency of the evidence supporting the finding of dependency-neglect regarding four of her

five children, arguing that the circuit court erred in treating the children as an “amorphous

group” in determining that all the children were at substantial risk of serious harm. She also

argues that the evidence was insufficient to support the court’s termination of reunification

services. We affirm.

Jodi is the mother of MC1 (07/24/09) and her four sisters: MC2 (09/16/11), MC3

(11/15/14), MC4 (01/10/16), and MC5 (12/01/22). An affidavit by an investigator from the

Arkansas State Police Crimes Against Children Division (CACD) attached to the petition for

emergency custody and dependency-neglect revealed the following details. The case began on

November 14, 2023, when the CACD received a hotline-report referral involving allegations of sexual abuse. MC1 had disclosed that her stepfather, Ajai Jemnor, had been sexually abusing

her since she was six years old. According to CACD Investigator Lesley Faulkner, Jemnor had

sexually abused MC1 when she was between the ages of six and ten by touching, fondling, and

penetrating her vagina with his hands and fingers. MC1 said that when she was between the ages

of eleven and thirteen, Jemnor began “penile-vaginal penetration,” “penile-anal penetration,”

and oral sex. MC1 said that she had disclosed the abuse to numerous family members and

friends, and Faulkner was able to corroborate that at least four family members and two friends

had been told about the abuse from less than a week to two years before MC1’s interview with

the CACD. MC1 told Faulkner that her mother “potentially caught” Jemnor sexually abusing

her one night. MC1 said she was not sure if he abused her that night, but when she woke up,

Jemnor was standing behind her, and Jodi was looking at them crying.

According to Faulkner’s affidavit, Jemnor was arrested on November 14 and confessed

to sexual acts with MC1. Jemnor also told police that Jodi had been suspicious of his relationship

with MC1. He said that he and Jodi had argued about it, and one argument had ended in

Jemnor’s slapping Jodi’s face. Faulkner expressed concern that despite numerous family

members having been made aware of the abuse throughout the years, no one intervened, and

the family referred to MC1 as a “bad child, a liar, and a troublemaker.” The CACD requested

that the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) conduct a safety assessment of the

family.

DHS family service worker Carrie Robinson stated in her affidavit that she met with Jodi

to discuss ways she could ensure that MC1 and the other children were safe. Jodi told her that

there was nothing to worry about because Jemnor had been arrested and was not at the home.

2 When Robinson told Jodi that he could be released and allowed to go home, Jodi had no solid

plan to protect the children but said she would “watch and make sure [he] does not hurt or

touch [them].” After Robinson told Jodi that she was exercising a hold on the children and

placing them in foster care, Jodi talked with the four younger children but “did not express any

emotions of sadness with [MC1].”

According to Robinson’s affidavit, in a November 16 meeting with Jodi, Jodi’s family

members, Faulkner, and several DHS workers, Jodi and her family members continued to deny

that they knew Jemnor had been sexually abusing MC1. Jodi denied ever having seen any

inappropriate conduct between Jemnor and MC1. Even after being told that Jemnor had

confessed to the abuse, Jodi and the family stated they did not know if they believed MC1.

However, Jodi stipulated at the probable-cause hearing on November 21 that probable cause

necessitating removal of the children from her custody existed and continued to exist.

On February 7, 2024, DHS filed a motion to terminate reunification services to all five

children, asserting that aggravated circumstances existed warranting an immediate goal of

adoption or relative placement. DHS alleged that Jodi had failed to protect the children from

harm by Jemnor and that despite “credible disclosures from her child, statements from family

members, and a confession of the abuse by the offender, [Jodi] continues to deny that the abuse

has occurred.” DHS argued that, given this attitude, Jodi could not protect her children from

future sexual abuse. DHS asked the court to find that the children had been subjected to

aggravated circumstances because there is little likelihood that services will result in successful

reunification.

3 That same day, DHS also filed an emergency motion to terminate visits between MC1

and Jodi, alleging that, according to MC1, Jodi blamed her for the children being in foster care.

The DHS supervisor stated in an attached affidavit that MC1 told her she no longer wanted to

visit with Jodi but had been afraid to say so because she still wanted to see her siblings. The

affidavit also reported that during a DHS home visit on January 31, 2024, Jodi told the family

service worker that, despite Jemnor’s confession, she did not believe MC1 that the sexual abuse

had occurred. The circuit court granted the motion pending the adjudication hearing.

On March 11, the court held an adjudication hearing. At the hearing, MC1 testified that

Jemnor told her that in May 2023, Jodi had seen him on top of her when MC1 was asleep.

Faulkner testified that she found the allegations against Jemnor of sexual abuse, sexual contact,

deviant sexual activity, and sexual intercourse true. She testified that she also made findings of

neglect and failure to protect against Jodi based on statements from MC1, Jodi, and Jemnor.

According to Faulkner, Jodi said that she saw Jemnor standing behind MC1 in the middle of

the night and confronted him, that she had seen Jemnor leaving MC1’s room in the past, and

that she had suspicions about the abuse. Jemnor told Faulkner that Jodi had suspicions and had

confronted him about it.

In her testimony at the hearing, Jodi again denied that she had seen Jemnor act

inappropriately with MC1. She said that she “wanted to believe” MC1 about the allegations of

abuse but that MC1 lies a lot. She said she did not believe it because she had not “seen it with

[her own] eyes.” When asked why Jemnor was in jail, she said, “Because of what they said he

did.” When asked again if she believed that he sexually abused MC1, she replied, “I want to

4 believe, but she lies.” Finally, Jodi admitted that she had told MC1 that it was MC1’s fault that

the children were in foster care.

On April 2, the circuit court entered an adjudication order finding the children

dependent-neglected based on sexual abuse by Jemnor against MC1 and that Jodi knew about

the abuse and did not take reasonable steps to stop it. The court found that MC1 was

“chronically” sexually abused for an extended period of time and that the prolonged sexual abuse

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Related

Kintina Jodi v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children
2024 Ark. App. 619 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2024)

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