Leighann Gonzales v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child

2025 Ark. App. 496
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 22, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 496 (Leighann Gonzales v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child) 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.

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Leighann Gonzales v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child, 2025 Ark. App. 496 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 496 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-25-21

LEIGHANN GONZALES Opinion Delivered October 22, 2025

APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE JACKSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT V. [NO. 34JV-23-24]

ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF HONORABLE ADAM G. WEEKS, HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR JUDGE CHILD APPELLEES AFFIRMED

CINDY GRACE THYER, Judge

The Jackson County Circuit Court terminated the parental rights of appellant

Leighann Gonzales to her daughter, Minor Child (MC), in an order entered on October 23,

2024. On appeal, Gonzales argues that the evidence was insufficient to demonstrate that

termination was in MC’s best interest. Specifically, Gonzales contends that the Arkansas

Department of Human Services (DHS) failed to present sufficient evidence regarding MC’s

adoptability. In addition, Gonzales argues that the circuit court erred in finding that MC

was not competent to testify. We affirm.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

This case began when the child abuse hotline received a report on March 6, 2023,

regarding allegations of sexual abuse perpetrated on MC by her parents, Gonzales and David Gillis.1 After an investigator spoke with MC, a family service worker contacted Gillis, who

was unwilling to commit to an immediate safety plan. At the time, Gonzales was incarcerated.

Accordingly, DHS exercised a seventy-two-hour hold on MC on March 6 and filed a petition

for emergency custody and dependency-neglect on March 8. The circuit court entered an ex

parte order for emergency custody the following day.

In an order entered on June 6, 2023, MC was adjudicated dependent-neglected due

to abuse by an unknown offender.2 Gonzales stipulated to this finding. The adjudication

order established the goal of the case as reunification and ordered Gonzales to complete the

standard welfare services.

A review order was entered on August 10, 2023. The court found that MC could not

be safely returned to her parents because the parents had failed to participate in any services

required by the case plan. The court ordered Gonzales to participate in family therapy and

directed her to follow the recommendations of the therapist. A November 29 review order

made identical findings regarding her noncompliance with the case plan. The goal of the

case remained reunification, but the court ordered that a staffing be held to ensure that

Gonzales understood what she needed to correct in order to achieve reunification.

1 Gillis’s parental rights were also terminated in this case, but he is not a party to this appeal. 2 According to the adjudication order, a probable-cause order was entered on March 14, 2023; however, the probable-cause order does not appear in our record.

2 The circuit court held a permanency-planning hearing on April 9, 2024, and entered

its permanency-planning order on April 12. In this order, the court authorized a plan for

adoption with DHS filing a petition for termination of parental rights. Citing the evidence

presented at the hearing, the court found Gonzales’s testimony suspect and not credible.

The court stated that Gonzales had not taken ownership of her failure to engage in the case

plan and continued to blame others for her lack of participation. The court pointed out that

the case plan and services had been discussed with Gonzales at various times throughout the

case, but she did not fully engage in the case plan and services and had not corrected the

conditions that caused removal.

DHS filed a petition for termination of parental rights on April 16, 2024, alleging

multiple grounds for termination. Because Gonzales filed a motion to dismiss alleging that

DHS had not alleged sufficient facts in support of its termination petition, DHS filed an

amended petition specifically alleging the following grounds: twelve months failure to

remedy, Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(i)(a) (Supp. 2023); subsequent other factors,

Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(vii)(a); and aggravated circumstances, Ark. Code Ann.

§ 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(ix)(a)(3)(B)(i) (little likelihood of successful reunification).

Before the termination hearing, DHS filed a motion to excuse MC’s presence at the

hearing. DHS asserted that Gonzales had notified the agency that she wanted MC to be

present for the hearing and intended to elicit her testimony. DHS described MC as “low

functioning” and said she was currently placed in a residential placement for individuals

with intellectual disabilities. DHS asserted that due to her age and functional level, MC did

3 not have the capacity to testify, and it would not be in her best interest to be compelled to

attend the hearing.

The court held a hearing on DHS’s motion on October 15. DHS repeated its

arguments about MC’s low-level functioning and added that it was the agency’s position that

she had neither information relevant to the termination of Gonzales’s parental rights nor

the capacity to testify as to grounds or best interest. The attorney ad litem commented that

when MC had been present in court before, “she wandered around the courtroom hugging

strangers––that’s her level of functioning. Her IQ is 66.” The ad litem added as follows:

I don’t believe that anyone could ask her questions that she could answer that would qualify her as a competent witness. I don’t think she would be able to understand the proceedings. I think just the trip to court would be detrimental to her, and Judge, her behavior is so problematic and her diagnosis is so complex, that if she for some reason disrupted the placement she’s in, I don’t know where else we would find for her to go. This has been a very rocky road for her and I think she has diagnoses, but I do think that she’s still kind of a mystery to our providers. . . . Honestly, I think even if we got her there, I just can’t fathom her being able to answer appropriate questions to show that she understood what was going on.

Gonzales responded that because this was a termination hearing, one of the factors

the court must consider is adoptability: “I think every ground that [the ad litem] just gave for

why the child shouldn’t be present in court is also a ground as to why this child is not

adoptable.” Gonzales urged the court to actually see MC in order to make the determination

whether she had the ability to testify. The court ultimately ordered that MC appear via Zoom

at the termination hearing.

The termination hearing was held the following week. Before taking testimony, the

court allowed Gonzales’s attorney to attempt to establish MC’s competency. After observing

4 her interactions with counsel—as set out more fully below—the court concluded that MC was

not competent to testify.

DHS then called family service worker Michelle Braim. Braim said that MC had been

placed in foster care in 2023 due to allegations of sexual abuse. She recalled that the court

had found Gonzales noncompliant with the case plan at the permanency-planning hearing.

Regarding Gonzales’s noncompliance, Braim testified that she had attended twenty-eight of

forty-nine visits, had not maintained employment, had not completed inpatient substance-

abuse treatment, had refused six required random drug screens, and did not attend staffings.

Braim said Gonzales was in no better position to take custody of MC than she was when the

case started. In fact, Braim said she found out the day before the hearing that Gonzales had

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Related

April Bradley v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Child
2026 Ark. App. 154 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2026)

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