Rodgers v. Arkansas Department of Human Services

2016 Ark. App. 569, 506 S.W.3d 907, 2016 Ark. App. LEXIS 616, 2016 WL 6994823
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 30, 2016
DocketCV-16-496
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2016 Ark. App. 569 (Rodgers v. Arkansas Department of Human Services) 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
Rodgers v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 2016 Ark. App. 569, 506 S.W.3d 907, 2016 Ark. App. LEXIS 616, 2016 WL 6994823 (Ark. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge

| ^Darlene Rodgers appeals the order of the Mississippi County Circuit Court that terminated her parental rights to her adopted child, C.R. Rodgers challenges the statutory grounds for termination. We affirm.

On 30 October 2014, the Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) filed a petition for emergency custody and dependency-neglect of nine-year-old C.R. The accompanying affidavit explained that on October 28, a call to the child-abuse hotline reported that C.R. refused to get on the school bus to go home because he was scared. The caller said that C.R. had been whipped at the bus stop and had approximately twenty |abruises on his arms, legs, and back that were in the process of healing. The police investigated, and Rodgers was arrested for second-degree domestic battery.

The circuit court granted the petition for emergency custody and on November 5 found probable cause to continue DHS’s custody of C.R. Rodgers was ordered to complete parenting classes, watch “The Clock is Ticking” video, maintain stable housing, obtain and maintain stable employment and/or income, and attend anger-management classes. On November 20, C.R. was adjudicated dependent-neglected due to cuts/welts and bruises on his arms, legs, and back. In addition to the above requirements, Rodgers - was ordered to comply with a no-contact order issued in her criminal case and to submit a 2011 psychological evaluation to her attorney or her DHS caseworker.

The circuit court reviewed the case in February 2015 and found that Rodgers had stable income and housing but still needed to complete parenting classes and watch “The Clock is Ticking” video. Another review order in August 2015 noted that Rodgers had completed parenting and anger-management classes and had watched the required video. That order found that the case plan was moving toward an appropriate permanency plan and that the goal of the case would continue to be reunification with Rodgers.

In October 2015, however, the circuit court held a permanency-planning hearing and changed the goal of the case to termination of parental rights and adoption. In its order, the court found that C.R. had been out of his mother’s home for twelve months, had been diagnosed with posttrau-matic stress disorder, and “continued] to have panic attacks and recurrent nightmares in regards to being placed back with his mother.” On October 29, DHS and C.R.’s attorney ad litem filed a joint petition for termination of |3parental rights alleging that (1) C.R. had been “chronically abused” and “subjected to extreme and repeated cruelty in the form of both mental and physical abuse,” and (2) the conditions that resulted in C.R.’s being removed had not been remedied by Rodgers despite a meaningful effort by DHS to remedy those conditions.

The court held a termination hearing on 26 February 2016. Chelsea Fife, a therapist with Families, Inc., testified that C.R. had been her client since June 2015. Fife explained that C.R. had been diagnosed with posttraumatie stress disorder, that she helped him with coping skills and identifying his feelings, and that his therapy was going well. Fife said that when C.R. is asked about Rodgers, he shakes and cries and “will go from smiling and being a happy child to being completely fearful.” C.R. told Fife that he did not wish to return to Rodgers’s home and that he was “scared to go back.” Fife recommended that C.R. not be returned to Rodgers’s custody. She also noted that C.R. was “very comfortable” with his foster parents.

Greg Watson, the DHS caseworker assigned to the case, testified that he had regular contact with Rodgers throughout the case and that she had completed all services required of her. He said that he last spoke with Rodgers six weeks previously about C.R.’s coming home, and Rodgers stated that C.R. “would have to admit to what he had done before she would let him come back home.” Rodgers explained to Watson that C.R. would get up in the middle of the night and steal food out of the refrigerator and that “[h]e needed to admit to what he had done.” Watson testified that Rodgers had not visited C.R. because of the no-contact order and that Rodgers was scheduled to go to 14court on her criminal charges in April. Finally, Watson said that C.R. was doing well at school and was “usually happy ... like a normal kid” around his foster parents.

Sylvia Ware, a DHS supervisor, testified that she was familiar with this case and had spoken with Rodgers about the progression of the case. Ware stated that Rodgers admitted spanking C.R. with a belt. Rodgers also told Ware that C.R. could come home and that she would “put the belt away,” but “he needs to remember that the belt can always come back out.” Ware was also concerned with Rodgers’s statement to her that C.R. had a “demon possessed spirit.”

Tyler Dunegan, C.R.’s foster dad, testified that C.R. was placed with his family in October 2014 and that he wished to adopt C.R. Tyler stated that C.R. has minor behavioral problems, “typical ten-year-old boy behavior; but nothing out of the ordinary.” Tyler explained that when he first arrived, C.R. had frequent nightmares and did not sleep well, but that has improved. Tyler said that he and his wife Carolyn take C.R. to the Calvary Baptist Church in Osceola and that C.R. “loves the church family.” He also stated that C.R. likes to play sports and is very social. He described C.R. as “happy” and “full of joy.” Tyler also explained that he and his wife now have two other foster children, siblings who are three years old and four months old, and that C.R. and the other children “call each other brother and sisters.”

Carolyn Dunegan, C.R.’s foster mom, testified that in April 2015, she and C.R, were in Wal-Mart and C.R. saw Rodgers, which caused him to have a panic attack. Carolyn stated that she has had no issues with C.R. lying to her or stealing. She explained that he was quiet when he first arrived in their home and has always been “very polite” | sand “very loving.” She said that now “he loves life and loves doing things and being active and everything that we do.” Carolyn said that he loves the other foster children in their home and that he is also close to the Dunegans’ extended family. She confirmed that she and her husband were interested in adopting C.R.

Rodgers testified that C.R. had been removed from her home after an incident at a bus stop in October 2014. Rodgers said that C.R. had attempted to take some candy from a “city worker,” that she had yelled at him, and that she had asked a friend for a belt. At that point, the circuit court interrupted the testimony, reminded counsel of Rodgers’s pending criminal charges, and asked if counsel wanted to let Rodgers continue to describe the incident, to which counsel responded, “No.” Continuing her testimony, Rodgers said that she had taken C.R. to a therapist in April 2014 because he had been lying to her and getting in trouble at school. She said he would get up in the middle of the night and get food out of the refrigerator and then he about it. She also described an instance in which he had stolen a toy from a store. She denied having disciplined him for lying or stealing; she said that she employed “talk therapy with him.” With regard to her “demon” comment to Sylvia Ware, Rodgers said that she “didn’t state it the way you said it.” When asked if she feels that C.R.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
2016 Ark. App. 569, 506 S.W.3d 907, 2016 Ark. App. LEXIS 616, 2016 WL 6994823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodgers-v-arkansas-department-of-human-services-arkctapp-2016.