Tamela Cox and Adrian Bennett v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children

2024 Ark. App. 525
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 30, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 525 (Tamela Cox and Adrian Bennett 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
Tamela Cox and Adrian Bennett v. Arkansas Department of Human Services and Minor Children, 2024 Ark. App. 525 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 525 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION IV No. CV-24-184

TAMELA COX AND ADRIAN Opinion Delivered October 30, 2024 BENNETT APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI COUNTY APPELLANTS CIRCUIT COURT, TENTH DIVISION [NO. 60JV-20-728] V. HONORABLE SHANICE JOHNSON, ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF JUDGE HUMAN SERVICES AND MINOR CHILDREN APPELLEES AFFIRMED

STEPHANIE POTTER BARRETT, Judge

Tamela Cox and Adrian Bennett appeal the Pulaski County Circuit Court’s

termination of their parental rights to their daughters, MC2 (DOB 10/25/08), MC3 (DOB

04/05/11), and MC4 (DOB 12/22/13).1 Although Cox and Bennett filed separate briefs

on appeal, they both argue that it was not in their daughters’ best interest for their parental

rights to be terminated. We affirm the terminations.

1 At the time the case was opened, Bennett was listed as the putative father of MC1 (DOB 01/06/07) and MC2, but the circuit court ultimately found that DNA testing established that he is the biological father of MC1 and MC2. Cox’s and Bennett’s parental rights were not terminated as to their daughter MC1. Cox also has an older daughter who was initially taken into DHS custody but turned eighteen during the case and requested to be dismissed from the case, which the court granted in the permanency-planning order filed on April 25, 2022. According to affidavits attached to the petition for ex parte emergency custody filed

on October 29, 2020, the family had an extensive history with the Arkansas Department of

Human Services (DHS). On October 21, 2020, the child-abuse hotline received a report

that thirteen-year-old MC1 had been forced to have sex with a twenty-six-year-old man on

several occasions in the last month, and she had been having sex with other adult males;

Bennett was receiving money for her sexual encounters; and she was engaging in self-harm.

In response to the allegations, Bennett told the family-service worker (FSW) that MC1 ran

away when she did not get her way, he could usually find her, and he made police reports

when MC1 ran away; he admitted knowing that MC1 was having sex with adult men, two

of whom he knew, and that some of the men had threatened MC1, but he denied that he

sex trafficked MC1. Bennett said that he got MC1 a pregnancy test and attempted to admit

her to a mental-health hospital when he learned she was having sex. Cox told the FSW that

MC1 was always running away, and she “supposed” MC1 was having sex because she kept

coming home with STDs, but she denied knowing anything about sex trafficking. Cox

refused to take a drug screen, admitting that she had used THC and cocaine the day before.

MC2, MC3, and MC4 all told the FSW that they felt safe at home, and they denied being

touched in a sexual manner or being asked to perform sexual acts. They agreed MC1 ran

away “a lot.” A second affidavit from another FSW included allegations of educational

neglect and sexual abuse. A third affidavit from an investigator for the Crimes Against

Children Division of the Arkansas State Police (CACD) stated that MC1 frequently ran away

from home; she had an extensive history of sexual abuse with multiple offenders beginning

2 when she was nine; it was suspected that she was currently having sex with adult men; and

she had multiple STDs, including gonorrhea and chlamydia, which had gone untreated

because she was a runaway.

The North Little Rock police located MC1 on October 21 at a house in North Little

Rock, and she agreed to go to the Child Protection Center (CPC). When Cox was notified

MC1 had been located, Cox refused to go to the CPC, stating that she did not have a ride,

and she did not want to deal with MC1. In a videotaped interview, MC1 said that she and

her cousin had been staying at the home of her thirty-three-year-old “uncle,” although she

could not remember how to pronounce his name. She said that Cox blamed her for DHS

being in their lives, and that if she told the truth, her parents got upset. She said that her

parents smoke marijuana, and her mother takes pills. MC1 proceeded to talk about her

“uncle”; she said that while he did not try to have sex with her, he had grabbed her and her

cousin by their throats. MC1 also told the investigator that she and her thirty-six-year-old

boyfriend had engaged in sex more than six times; she had been raped at least four times;

and her parents had received $200 in exchange for her performing sexual acts with men.

Bennett denied trafficking his children, although he admitted he knew the man MC1

claimed had paid $200 to have sex with her. He stated that MC1’s “uncle” was married to

his niece and that MC1 knew her thirty-six-year-old boyfriend because he had dated Cox

while Bennett and Cox were separated.

Forensic interviews were conducted with MC2, MC3, MC4, and Cox’s older

daughter. MC2, who said she did not attend school, said that MC1 ran away often. MC3

3 reported that she had not been hurt or inappropriately touched, although she did get

“whoopings” with a switch; the police were often called to their house; and that MC1 ran

away often. MC4 knew that MC1 was at CPC because MC1 had run away; that MC1

smoked weed; that nothing bad had happened to MC4; and that while she had been spanked

with belts and switches, she had not had a spanking in a long time. Cox’s oldest daughter

denied being hurt at home, but she admitted that Cox and Bennett fought often and that it

was a toxic relationship; she believed they needed counseling.

The children were removed from Cox and Bennett because the circumstances

presented an immediate danger to their health and physical well-being; they had not, could

not, or would not provide the necessary supervision to protect the children from potential

harm; and their substance abuse seriously affected their ability to care for the children. It

was noted that Cox did not want to deal with MC1 and that sexual abuse was suspected,

suggesting that child safety may be an immediate concern.

On October 29, the circuit court entered an ex parte order placing emergency custody

with DHS, finding that it was contrary to the children’s welfare to remain with their parents.

The circuit court specifically found that the children were at risk of substantial harm due to

suspected sexual abuse and drug use.

A probable-cause hearing was held on November 4. Testimony revealed ongoing

concerns regarding drug use by Cox and Bennett and their refusal to submit to drug screens,

concerns of sexual abuse to MC1, and the likelihood of abuse to, or exposure to abuse of,

the other children. On November 10, the circuit court entered an order finding that

4 probable cause still existed for the children to remain in DHS custody. It reserved its findings

on reasonable efforts by DHS until the adjudication hearing but found that services and

placements met the juveniles’ needs. Cox and Bennett were awarded four hours of weekly

supervised online visitation.

An adjudication hearing was held on December 16 and 21, 2020, and an order

adjudicating the children dependent-neglected based on chronic neglect, inadequate

supervision, sexual abuse, educational neglect, medical neglect, and parental unfitness was

entered on December 22. Evidence presented at that hearing included testimony that on

October 23, 2020, after undergoing hair-follicle testing, MC4 tested positive for

methamphetamine and THC; MC3 tested positive for methamphetamine, cocaine, and

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Related

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2024 Ark. App. 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tamela-cox-and-adrian-bennett-v-arkansas-department-of-human-services-and-arkctapp-2024.