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ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
DIVISION IV
No.CV-13-638
RODNEY PORTA Opinion Delivered January 8, 2014
APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM THE SEBASTIAN
V. COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FORT SMITH
DISTRICT
ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF [NO. JV-2010-428]
HUMAN SERVICES and MINOR
CHILDREN HONORABLE MARK HEWETT,
APPELLEES JUDGE
AFFIRMED; MOTION TO
WITHDRAW GRANTED
WAYMOND M. BROWN, Judge
Appellant appeals the circuit court’s termination of his parental rights as to B.P.,
born March 15, 2004; A.P., born June 26, 2006; and K.P., born October 11, 2007.
Appellant’s counsel has filed a motion to withdraw and a no-merit brief, pursuant to
Linker-Flores v. Arkansas Department of Human Services, 1 and Arkansas Supreme Court Rule
6-9(i), 2 stating that there are no meritorious grounds to support an appeal. The clerk
mailed a certified copy of counsel’s motion and brief to appellant, informing him of his
right to file pro se points for reversal. Appellant filed pro se points with the clerk; appellee
Arkansas Department of Human Services (DHS) did not file a responsive brief. Appellant’s
pro se points are that (1) his counsel below, Shelton Sargent, was ineffective for numerous
1
359 Ark. 131, 194 S.W.3d 739 (2003).
2
(2011).
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reasons; (2) the circuit court failed to acknowledge and give appropriate weight to
certificates he received for completion of various classes including, but not limited to, a
drug treatment program and parenting classes; and (3) that DHS, knowing appellant was
incarcerated during the case, should have made more than the one unsuccessful attempt it
made to locate him. None of appellant’s arguments require reversal; therefore, we affirm
the circuit court’s order terminating appellant’s parental rights and grant counsel’s motion
to withdraw.
A protective services case was initially opened in Pope County on January 9, 2010,
due to educational neglect of the children by their mother, Sherry Ritcheson. The case
was transferred to Crawford County on April 28, 2010. After the transfer, Ms. Ritcheson
was never able to give her caseworker a current address; B.P. missed two weeks of school
while with appellant due to an alleged abscess for which appellant failed to take B.P. to the
doctor; and, once back with Ms. Ritcheson, B.P. did not attend school the week
following his two-week absence with appellant. B.P.’s school filed a family-in-need-of-
services (FINS) petition and after a hearing on June 2, 2010, a 72-hour hold was placed on
all three children. On June 7, 2010, DHS filed a petition for emergency custody and
dependency-neglect of all three children. The petition acknowledged appellant as the
father of all three children, but stated that his current address was unknown. On the same
day, the court entered an order granting emergency custody and finding probable cause to
believe the children were dependent-neglected.
Following a June 14, 2010 hearing, the court entered an order on June 18, 2010,
finding probable cause that the children were dependent-neglected and that the
2
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emergency conditions that necessitated removal of the children continued and so required
the custody of the children to remain with DHS. Following a July 30, 2010 hearing, the
court entered an order on August 5, 2010, adjudicating the children dependent-neglected.
In that order, the court ordered appellant to complete parenting classes, submit to a
psychological evaluation, undergo a drug and alcohol assessment, visit the children
regularly, and resolve all outstanding charges if he wanted to be considered as a placement
option for the children.
Following a hearing on January 4, 2011, the court entered a review order on May
24, 2011, in which it stated that appellant had not complied with the case plan.
Specifically, it stated that he had not visited the children or had contact with DHS during
the review period and had been in the Crawford County jail since December 18, 2010,
on a $100,000.00 bond on pending drug and weapons charges. Appellant was again
ordered to resolve his outstanding criminal charges and was not granted visitation at that
time.
Following a May 31, 2011 hearing, the court entered a permanency planning order
on August 12, 2011. Noting Ms. Ritcheson’s partial compliance, the court left the goal of
the case plan as reunification, but added a concurrent goal of adoption. The court stated
that appellant was still incarcerated. Following an August 23, 2011 hearing, the court
entered a fifteen-month review order on January 20, 2012, in which it kept reunification
and adoption as the concurrent goals of the case. The court stated that DHS had had no
contact with appellant, who was still reported to be incarcerated, and that DHS had not
been able to locate appellant through the prison website. After a January 24, 2012 hearing,
3
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the court entered a review order on February 6, 2012, in which it dropped the concurrent
goal of adoption, keeping the goal of the case as reunification only. No reference to
appellant was made in this order.
Following a June 26, 2012 hearing, the court entered a permanency planning order
on July 11, 2012, giving Ms. Ritcheson three months to obtain the return of the children
and permitting her to begin a trial home placement with A.P. Following an August 21,
2012 hearing, the court entered an order on September 20, 2012, changing the goal of the
case to adoption. 3 Therein, the court stated that appellant had not complied with the case
plan as he had not appeared at any hearings, visited with the children, nor participated in
any services. The court specifically found that appellant (1) failed to obtain and maintain
stable and appropriate housing, stable transportation, and stable employment and income
sufficient to care for the children; (2) failed to submit to random drug testing and
psychological evaluation; (3) failed to complete a drug and alcohol assessment; and (4)
failed to resolve all open criminal charges.
DHS filed a petition to terminate appellant’s and Ritcheson’s parental rights to the
children on October 19, 2012, on grounds that:
1. The children had been adjudicated dependent-neglected and had continued
to be out of the custody of appellant for twelve months and the conditions
that necessitated the children’s removal had not been remedied despite
meaningful effort by DHS to rehabilitate the parents and correct the
conditions; 4
3
Among other issues, Ms. Ritcheson failed to attend one AA/NA meeting per
week, failed to obtain an AA/NA sponsor, tested positive for alcohol at a level of .249g of
alcohol/210L of breath, and her trial placement with her children had ended
unsuccessfully after she supervised them while intoxicated by alcohol.
4
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(i)(a) (Supp. 2011).
4
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2. The children had lived outside the home for a period of twelve months and
appellant had willfully failed to provide significant material support in
accordance with his means or to maintain contact with the children due to
his incarceration during a substantial portion of the case; 5
3. Appellant abandoned the children; 6
4. Ms. Ritcheson had executed consent to termination of her parental rights or
adoption of the juvenile subject to the courts approval; 7
5. Other factors or issues arose subsequent to the filling of the original petition
for dependency-neglect that demonstrate that return of the children to
appellant’s custody is contrary to the children’s health, safety, or welfare, and
that, despite the offer of appropriate family services, the parent has
manifested the incapacity of indifference to remedy the subsequent issues or
factors or rehabilitate the circumstances that prevent return of the children
to his custody where appellant has failed to establish a safe, appropriate,
stable home for the children and failed to establish safe, appropriate
transportation for the children which puts them at risk of harm; 8
6. Appellant is sentenced in a criminal proceeding for a period of time that
would constitute a substantial period of the children’s lives where he has
been sentenced on February 17, 2012, as a habitual offender to 480 months
in the Arkansas Department of Correction for fraud to obtain drug
paraphernalia and to 720 months for manufacturing, delivering and
possessing a controlled substance; 9 and
7. Appellant had subjected the children to aggravated circumstances including
abandonment and little likelihood of successful reunification considering
5
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(ii)(a).
6
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(iv).
7
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(v)(a).
8
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(vii)(a).
9
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(viii).
5
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appellant’s very long jail sentence and his lack of involvement in the
children’s lives. 10
On January 25, 2013, the court appointed Shelton Sargent as appellant’s attorney.
On February 8, 2012, Sargent filed a motion for continuance on the termination of
parental rights (TPR) hearing, which was then scheduled for April 16, 2013, to await the
outcome of appellant’s appeal of his criminal case.
Following an April 16, 2013 hearing, at which appellant appeared, the court
entered an order on May 2, 2013, terminating appellant’s rights to the children. 11 As a
ground for terminating his parental rights, the court cited appellant’s having been
sentenced in a criminal proceeding to a period of time that constitutes a substantial portion
of the children’s lives. The court found that appellant had been convicted of multiple
felonies and was presently incarcerated in the Arkansas Department of Correction
(ADC). 12 The court noted that appellant’s eligible date of parole, while unimportant to
the issue of calculation of his sentence, had been extended to a later date due to appellant
being charged with possession a knife while in the ADC. As its second ground for
terminating appellant’s parental rights, the court cited appellant’s having subjected the
10
Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-341(b)(3)(B)(ix)(a)(3)(B)(i).
11
Ms. Ritcheson’s parental rights were terminated following a separate hearing on
January 18, 2012, after DHS filed its petition to terminate both appellant’s and Ms.
Ritcheson’s parental rights to the children, but prior to appellant’s parental rights being
terminated.
12
Appellant had a 1993 burglary conviction for which he was sentenced to five
years in the ADC with fifteen years suspended, a 2008 theft conviction for which he was
sentenced to two years in the ADC with eight years suspended, and his most recent
conviction for manufacturing methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia for
which he was sentenced to sixty years and forty years, respectively.
6
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children to aggravated circumstances in that there is little likelihood that services to
appellant would result in reunification. It supported this ground by noting appellant’s lack
of progress in rehabilitating himself before he was incarcerated and by there being little
likelihood that additional services would result in successful reunification due to the length
of appellant’s sentences. It noted appellant’s completion of anger management classes and
substance abuse classes in 2008, but stated that “he made no changes to his behavior after
taking those classes as the offenses which resulted in his current incarceration occurred in
December 2010.” This timely appeal followed.
I. Appellant’s Points
Appellant’s first point on appeal is that his attorney was ineffective because Sargent
(1) only consulted appellant for fifteen minutes before the TPR hearing; (2) failed to
object to testimony about his 1993 conviction which occurred when he was a minor; (3)
failed to object to the denial of appellant’s motion for continuance; (4) failed to note the
expiration of and time remaining on sentences from previous convictions; (5) failed to
object to his 100-year sentence being entered into evidence; 13 and (6) failed to ask for a
continuance of the TPR hearing until the decision in his criminal appeal was entered.
Appellant failed to raise these issues below. Arkansas appellate courts will not consider a
13
As noted above, one ground cited by the court for termination of appellant’s
parental rights was appellant’s having been sentenced to a combined 100-year sentence for
manufacturing methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia. Appellant
appealed these convictions. Those convictions were reversed by this court and a new trial
was granted in Porta v. State, 2013 Ark. App. 402, ___ S.W.3d ___.
7
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claim of ineffective assistance of counsel as a point on appeal unless it was first raised in the
trial court. 14
Appellant’s second and third points on appeal are that (1) the circuit court failed to
acknowledge and give appropriate weight to certificates he received for completion of
various classes including completion of a 60-day drug treatment program and certificates
in parenting, job, and life skills; anger management; drug abuse; and re-entry; and (2) that
DHS, knowing appellant was incarcerated during the case, should have made more than
the one unsuccessful attempt it made to locate him. Again, neither of these arguments
were made below; therefore we do not consider them.
II. Counsel’s Brief and Motion
In compliance with Linker-Flores and Rule 6-9(i), counsel ordered the entire record
and found that after a conscientious review of the record there are no issues of arguable
merit for appeal. After carefully examining the record and the brief presented to us, which
included all other adverse rulings, we conclude that the appeal is wholly without merit.
Accordingly, we affirm the termination of appellant’s parental rights and grant counsel’s
motion to withdraw.
Affirmed; motion to withdraw granted.
WYNNE and HIXSON, JJ., agree.
Leah Lanford, Arkansas Public Defender Commission, for appellant.
No response.
14
Calahan v. Ark. Dep’t. of Human Servs., 2013 Ark. App. 508, ___ S.W.3d ___
(citing Weaver v. Ark. Dep’t of Human Servs., 2011 Ark. App. 680).
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9