Zeke N. (Father) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS, Jordyn A. (Mother) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 2026
DocketS19250, S19259
StatusUnpublished

This text of Zeke N. (Father) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS, Jordyn A. (Mother) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS (Zeke N. (Father) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS, Jordyn A. (Mother) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zeke N. (Father) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS, Jordyn A. (Mother) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS, (Ala. 2026).

Opinion

NOTICE Memorandum decisions of this court do not create legal precedent. A party wishing to cite such a decision in a brief or at oral argument should review Alaska Appellate Rule 214(d).

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

ZEKE N. and JORDYN A., ) ) Supreme Court No. S-19250/S-19259 Appellants, ) (consolidated) ) v. ) ) Superior Court No. 3AN- 19- 00528/529 STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT ) /530 CN OF FAMILY AND COMMUNITY ) SERVICES, OFFICE OF CHILDREN’S ) MEMORANDUM OPINION SERVICES, ) AND JUDGMENT* ) Appellee. ) No. 2131 – January 14, 2026 ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Josie Garton, Judge.

Appearances: Michael L. Horowitz, Law Office of Michael Horowitz, Kingsley, Michigan, for Appellant, Zeke N. Chris Peloso, Peloso Law, Juneau, for Appellant, Jordyn A. Mary Ann Lundquist, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Fairbanks, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee. Paul F. McDermott, Assistant Public Advocate, and James Stinson, Public Advocate, Anchorage, for Guardian ad Litem.

Before: Carney, Chief Justice, and Borghesan, Henderson, Pate, and Oravec, Justices.

* Entered under Alaska Appellate Rule 214. INTRODUCTION Zeke and Jordyn 1 appeal the superior court’s order terminating parental rights to their three Indian children, as defined by the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA).2 The Office of Children’s Services (OCS) assumed emergency custody in 2019 due to the father’s substance use and the mother’s incarceration. Over the next five years, OCS offered case plans and services to reunify the family, but the parents engaged only sporadically. The superior court eventually terminated their rights, finding that OCS had satisfied its duty to provide active efforts to prevent the breakup of the Indian family. Both parents now appeal, claiming that OCS failed to provide the required active efforts to reunify their family. Seeing no error in the superior court’s analysis, we affirm the court’s termination order. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts Zeke and Jordyn are the parents of Miles, Nigel, and Jonah. This is the third Child in Need of Aid (CINA) case involving the family. In 2016, Miles was born with substance withdrawal symptoms requiring hospital treatment. OCS initially took custody after Jordyn attempted to remove Miles from treatment. The case eventually was dismissed. In 2018, Jonah was born with substance withdrawal symptoms, and OCS took custody of all three children when Jordyn removed Jonah from the hospital against medical advice. The court found insufficient evidence to support removal and the children were returned to the parents and the case closed in May 2019. This case arises from the third intervention by OCS, which occurred in August 2019 while Jordyn was incarcerated and Zeke and the children were living in a

1 We refer to all family members in this case pseudonymously. 2 All three children are “Indian children” as defined by the Indian Child Welfare Act, based on Zeke’s affiliation with a tribe and Jordyn’s affiliation with a different tribe. 25 U.S.C. § 1903(4). We refer to “the Tribe” rather than its proper name to protect the family’s privacy.

-2- 2131 tent along a river. Zeke appeared to be sleeping, leaving the very young children (ages 3, 2, and 11 months) alone and unsupervised near the water. Neighbors at the campsite were concerned when they were unable to revive Zeke and so they called the authorities. The state troopers arrived and found that the children were unsupervised, cold, unclean, and hungry with Miles wandering near the river. Troopers were able to revive Zeke, who prioritized recording the interaction instead of attending to his children; he also refused offers of assistance for the children or himself. OCS arrived, took the children into custody, and brought them to the hospital for medical attention. Jonah was later admitted for dehydration. Following the August 2019 removal, the children were initially placed in non-relative foster homes because no relative placements were immediately available. OCS filed an emergency custody petition; the parents opposed it. Due to the COVID- 19 pandemic and related protocols, the adjudication hearing was delayed and eventually took place over seven days from December 2020 through May 2021. In the meantime, as described below, OCS developed and updated case plans for both parents. The same caseworker was assigned throughout the proceedings. Zeke initially did not respond to multiple efforts by OCS to engage him. Eventually, in January 2020, OCS and Zeke prepared a case plan focused on substance abuse, mental health, physical health, employment, and housing. The caseworker made direct referrals, offered joint calls to schedule appointments, delivered application paperwork to his home, provided transportation, and searched for providers with him online. Zeke agreed to services but failed to follow through, causing multiple referrals to be closed. He repeatedly refused help with housing applications and with reinstating his Medicaid, which he allowed to lapse. Zeke’s refusal of assistance was often explicit. For example, regarding Medicaid, when the caseworker offered assistance to reinstate it so services could be paid for, Zeke declined, stating, “I got this, buddy.” Zeke struggled to maintain consistent visitation, missing 11 out of 13 supervised visits at a visitation program by May 2020.

-3- 2131 Jordyn’s case plan focused on addressing substance abuse, mental health, and parenting skills. However, her engagement was complicated by significant periods of incarceration and extreme hostility. Jordyn was incarcerated for approximately 26 of the 46 months the case was active. OCS began case planning in 2019, collaborating with the prison’s social worker, but Jordyn initially refused to sign releases and the subsequent COVID-19 lockdown prohibited external providers from entering the facility. In August 2020, she was transferred to a federal correctional institution, where services were nonexistent and visitation was hamstrung by strict protocols. Throughout these periods, Jordyn’s progress was minimal; she was often verbally combative, opposed OCS’s involvement, and created security concerns by threatening the caseworker. Jordyn was released from federal custody in early 2021. In the summer of 2021, the children were placed with their paternal grandmother. In September, two years after removal, the court issued an amended adjudication order in which it found by a preponderance of the evidence that the children were in need of aid due to the incarceration of a parent, risk of (or actual) physical harm, neglect, and substance abuse.3 During this time period, the parents were permitted in-person supervised visits with the children. Unbeknownst to the caseworker, Jordyn also had unsupervised, unauthorized visitation with the children. In December, the caseworker arrived for an unscheduled home visit and observed Jordyn loading two of the children into a car. Jordyn reversed the car quickly, requiring the caseworker to jump out of the way, and Jordyn quickly left the area with the two children; the children were not returned. The third child was also missing from the foster home, and he was later recovered from Zeke’s home.4

3 AS 47.10.011(2), (6), (9), and (10), respectively. 4 Later, after the child was placed in a new home, multiple tracking devices were found hidden in his belongings.

-4- 2131 The other two children were located months later, in February 2022, after one of the children called the police because he was hungry. Officers found both parents barricaded inside a building with the children.

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Bluebook (online)
Zeke N. (Father) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS, Jordyn A. (Mother) v. State of Alaska, DFCS, OCS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeke-n-father-v-state-of-alaska-dfcs-ocs-jordyn-a-mother-v-state-alaska-2026.