2021 IL App (2d) 210355-U
No. 2-21-0355
Order filed November 29, 2021
NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23(b) and is not precedent
except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(l).
______________________________________________________________________________
IN THE
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________
In re Y.A. & R.B., ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
) of Winnebago County.
Minors )
) Nos. 18-JA-21
) 18-JA-22
)
(The People of the State of Illinois, ) Honorable
Petitioner-Appellee v. Hawaa A. ) Francis Martinez,
Respondent-Appellant). ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________
JUSTICE HUTCHINSON delivered the judgment of the court.
Presiding Justice Bridges and Justice Zenoff concurred in the judgment.
ORDER
¶1 Held: The trial court’s findings that respondent mother failed to make reasonable progress
and that it was in the minors’ best interests to terminate her parental rights were not
against the manifest weight of the evidence.
¶2 Respondent, Hawaa A., appeals from orders of the trial court, which found her unfit and
terminated her parental rights. We affirm.
¶3 I. BACKGROUND
¶4 Respondent is the mother of the minors at issue in this appeal: her daughter R.B. (born
October 2011) and her son, Y.A. (born November 2017). This appeal concerns only respondent’s
rights over R.B. and Y.A.
2021 IL App (2d) 210355-U
¶5 In December 2017, the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) received a
hotline call reporting that R.B. was knocking on the door to an unknown home at around 6:45 p.m.
The child was dressed in pajamas and wearing her backpack. R.B. stated that her mother had sent
her to her bus stop to “catch” the bus for school. Respondent was located at her home, three blocks
away from the bus stop. Respondent appeared to be heavily intoxicated and said that she thought
it was the morning. Respondent stated that her son, Y.A., had just been born three months’
premature and was in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) at Rockford Memorial Hospital.
Respondent was arrested and charged with child endangerment.
¶6 In January 2018, DCFS received a second call. This time, respondent left Y.A. unattended
at the workplace of his putative father, a mechanic’s shop; Y.A.’s putative father was not present.
Respondent supposedly set down the child’s carrier on the floor, leaving him with other workers,
and left. Y.A. was taken to Swedish American Hospital and the police and DCFS were called.
When respondent appeared at the hospital, she tested positive for alcohol and was “belligerent and
uncooperative” with the authorities. When a caseworker asked respondent to identify some family
or friends so that they could discuss a potential safety plan, respondent threatened to kill herself if
a safety plan were put in place. DCFS then took protective custody of the minors and the State
filed neglect petitions. Two days later, respondent waived her right to a shelter care hearing and
the court granted DCFS temporary guardianship and custody of the minors.
¶7 Following the shelter care hearing, DCFS completed an integrated assessment and issued
respondent a service plan for each minor. The integrated assessment revealed the following.
¶8 Respondent was born in Libya in 1986. Her primary language is Arabic, but she can
converse in English. Respondent had five older brothers, all of whom died violently in Libya.
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When respondent was six, she saw a car hit and kill her five-year-old sister. Respondent’s last year
of formal education was also when she was six years old.
¶9 When respondent was 12, she was forced into an arranged marriage with a 37-year-old
man. Respondent’s husband was physically and sexually abusive. He beat her with a wire and
raped her if she disobeyed him. Because of the violence, respondent was allowed to divorce him
nine months later. When respondent was 17, she married another man and had a daughter, H.A.
Respondent was forced to divorce her husband, even though she loved him, because her father did
not approve of him. When she was 19, she married another man, whom she described as “a good
man.” Respondent’s first child with her new husband died in infancy. Respondent gave birth to a
son, S.A., the following year.
¶ 10 Respondent found out that she was pregnant with R.B. on February 14, 2010. On February
17, 2010, respondent and her husband attempted to flee the escalating political violence in Libya.
They attempted to pick up their son from respondent’s mother’s house but were unable to because
of the militias. Respondent and her husband were forced into a refugee camp in Tunisia and
respondent’s husband was murdered at the camp’s gates.
¶ 11 H.A. and S.A. remain with respondent’s mother in Libya. Respondent has not seen them
since 2010.
¶ 12 Respondent gave birth to R.B. at the camp in Tunisia in October 2011. Also, at the camp,
respondent reunited with a male childhood friend, who became her paramour. He protected
respondent and R.B. in the camp, which could often be a dangerous place. After arriving in the
United States in 2015, respondent married her paramour, and they were resettled in the Midwest.
After they were married, respondent’s husband became possessive and abusive. Respondent and
R.B. moved into a shelter, and respondent sought a divorce after two months of marriage.
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Respondent’s husband then began to “stalk” her, and even threatened to have her family killed in
Libya. Respondent did not report this to the police because, in her experience, the authorities
cannot be trusted. Instead, she set her husband’s van on fire so he could not continue to follow her.
¶ 13 Respondent was initially charged with arson, but the charge was reduced to criminal
damage to property and she was sentenced to probation. In addition, a neglect case (15-JA-399)
was opened for R.B. (This case, too, was before Judge Martinez.) Respondent attended individual
counseling and the case was successfully closed with R.B. returning to respondent’s care in June
2016.
¶ 14 At some point, respondent began renting a two-bedroom home in the Rockford area. In
2017, respondent became pregnant with Y.A. Respondent reported that she drank liquor, almost
daily, while she was pregnant with Y.A. because she was anxious and depressed. Due to a placental
abruption, Y.A. was born eight weeks’ premature, with a low birth weight. As a result of oxygen
deprivation to the brain (perinatal anoxic ischemic brain injury) and a brain bleed (intraventricular
hemorrhage), Y.A. suffers from seizures and muscle spasms. Y.A. also suffers from a heart defect
(pulmonary artery stenosis). Y.A. was discharged from the hospital to his mother’s care on January
4, 2018, and protective custody was taken twelve days later.
¶ 15 The integrated assessment also noted that respondent’s discipline of R.B. was reportedly
excessive and included striking R.B. with objects such as a broom, a wire, and a shoe. R.B.
disclosed that she loved her mother, but was afraid of her. R.B. reported that her mother would
drink vodka and beer excessively and pass out at home as well as behind the wheel of her car.
¶ 16 As a result of the foregoing, respondent’s February 2018 service plan goals included
weekly supervised visitation, remaining drug and alcohol free, participating in a substance abuse
assessment (and following through with its recommendations), participating in individual
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counseling, participating in parent/child psychotherapy and relationship building with R.B.,
participating in parenting education, and compliance with all legal requirements.
¶ 17 In May 2018, the State filed amended neglect petitions and respondent stipulated to the
allegation of failure to provide adequate care. See 705 ILCS 405/2-3(1)(a) (West 2018).
Respondent further stipulated that she was dispositionally unfit, unwilling, or unable to care for
the children. The court adjudicated the children neglected and made them wards of the court. The
court also ordered guardianship and custody to DCFS’s administrator. In addition, the children
would be supervised by Children’s Home and Aid Society of Illinois (CHASI), an agency under
contract with DCFS.
¶ 18 After hearing evidence at the first permanency hearing on November 30, 2018, the trial
court found that respondent had made reasonable efforts, but not reasonable progress. The court
noted reports that respondent often displayed inappropriate behavior during supervised visits with
the children, which caused R.B. to be fearful of visits with her mother. In addition, respondent had
not stayed sober. The court stated that “she’s trying, but she’s got a long way to go.” The court
found that the children’s permanency goal should be to return home within 12 months, or October
2019.
¶ 19 After a second permanency hearing on April 11, 2019, the court noted that respondent had
completed intensive outpatient treatment and had behaved appropriately during supervised visits
with the children. Respondent also reported that she was pregnant and due in November, but was
not in a relationship with that child’s father. R.B. was doing well in school and recently had
expressed that she enjoyed visits with respondent. With respect to Y.A., however, the news was
not positive. Y.A. was also diagnosed with fetal alcohol syndrome. Based upon MRI results and
due to the many strokes and seizures he suffered, the parties recently learned that Y.A. had cerebral
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palsy. He would likely never walk or talk. The parties stipulated that respondent made reasonable
efforts and reasonable progress during this time period, and the goal remained for the children to
return home in October.
¶ 20 In August 2019, DCFS submitted a report to the court noting that respondent had relapsed
and began drinking following Y.A.’s diagnosis and had relapsed at least twice. Visits with the
children at respondent’s home also had not gone well. Respondent was again admitted to intensive
outpatient therapy. Respondent still had not entered a parenting class and had not begun parent-
child therapy with R.B.
¶ 21 At the permanency review on September 10, 2019, the court found that respondent had
made reasonable efforts but not reasonable progress because of her alcohol abuse. The court
continued to believe a permanency goal of 12 months was appropriate, but for a new 12-month
period to begin. The court stated its concerns that R.B. was still anxious and afraid of her mother
and that Y.A. had significant medical needs that respondent might not fully appreciate.
¶ 22 As it will become relevant for unfitness, we note that the State’s termination petition
ultimately alleged that respondent failed to make reasonable progress towards the children’s return
to her care within two specified nine-month periods: (1) September 10, 2019, through June 9, 2020,
and (2) March 11, 2020, through December 10, 2020. See 750 ILCS 50/1(D)(m)(ii) (West 2018).
¶ 23 In October 2019, respondent gave birth to a baby boy, R.A. The baby was born premature,
but was healthy. In February 2020, DCFS filed another service plan and progress report with the
court. The report noted that respondent had been alcohol-free since her last relapse and had
consistently attended AA meetings. However, respondent had not attended Y.A.’s healthcare
appointments—at the time, he saw an orthopedist, a cardiologist, a neurologist, and attended
weekly occupational and physical therapy sessions; her failure to participate in these appointments
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indicated that respondent would require “intensive education” before Y.A. could be returned to
her care. In addition, R.B. remained fearful of her mother and it appeared that respondent refused
to accept responsibility for R.B.’s trauma. Respondent also failed to participate in parent-child
therapy with R.B. and Y.A. As such, respondent received unsatisfactory ratings in several areas of
her service plan.
¶ 24 Another permanency report was filed with the court in February 2020. This report indicated
that respondent had made some progress; however, due to Y.A. being hospitalized, visits with him
were canceled. Respondent was due to transition to unsupervised and overnight visits with R.B. A
permanency hearing was held which revealed that respondent had missed several of Y.A.’s
doctors’ appointments, but she had indicated that she had not known about them. The court noted
that respondent still had not engaged in parent-child therapy with R.B. The court found that
respondent had made reasonable efforts with respect to both children, but had not made reasonable
progress with respect to Y.A. The court also deferred its progress determination as to R.B. pending
additional reports.
¶ 25 On July 9, 2020, the court held another permanency hearing. A report to the court noted
that on June 18, 2020, respondent was involved in a significant car accident. Respondent drove
her car into a building and was arrested for DUI (625 ILCs 5/11-501(a)(2) (West 2018)),
aggravated battery to a peace officer (720 ILCS 5/12-3.05(d)(4) (West 2018)), resisting arrest (720
ILCs 5/31-1(a) (West 2018)), and multiple traffic violations. Respondent’s blood alcohol content
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(BAC) was reported as .319. 1 Respondent denied that she had been drinking that night. She stated
that she was on her way to pick up R.A. from daycare. DCFS then took protective custody of R.A.
¶ 26 On June 22, 2020, a shelter care hearing was held for R.A. After the hearing, respondent
repeatedly called caseworker Megan Leber and repeatedly stated that she was going to kill herself.
Leber called the police, who performed a wellbeing check and determined that respondent was
stable. Two days later, respondent repeatedly called her and R.B.’s counselor and again threatened
to kill herself. This resulted in another wellbeing check.
¶ 27 R.B. reported that she was aware of her mother’s relapse as she had spent more time with
respondent on video visits due to the COVID-19 pandemic. R.B. was doing well in school and had
been placed in the same foster home as Y.A. R.B. was reportedly “struggling” with her mother’s
accident and relapse.
¶ 28 The trial court noted that prior to her arrest, respondent had made at least some strides.
The court found that respondent had made reasonable efforts but not reasonable progress. The
court stated that it was reluctant to change the children’s permanency goals from return home now
that an additional sibling was court involved. The court stated that it did not want to “set siblings
on different tracks at least at this point.” The court cautioned respondent, however, that it would
not hesitate to order a goal change if respondent failed to make progress by the next hearing.
¶ 29 On December 10, 2020, another permanency hearing was held. In a report to the court,
respondent admitted that she and a friend drank a “skull” of vodka before her accident. Respondent
reentered intensive outpatient treatment again in July 2020 and was successfully discharged in
1 At several points in the record, respondent’s BAC was reported as .379 instead of .319.
We will give respondent the benefit of the doubt and use the lower number.
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September 2020. On October 7, 2020, however, respondent tested positive for alcohol; however,
she denied drinking. Two days later, respondent called another counselor at CHASI and threatened
suicide. The police were unable to locate respondent. The following day, caseworker Leber found
respondent who denied drinking and said she was just having a bad day.
¶ 30 Respondent presented herself for a visit with R.B. on November 20, 2020, but according
to R.B. and Leber, respondent appeared intoxicated. Her speech was slurred and she was erratic.
The following week’s visit was conducted over video, and R.B. repeatedly questioned her mother
about her alcohol use the week before. Respondent repeatedly denied drinking and R.B. became
upset causing workers to terminate the visit.
¶ 31 The trial court found that respondent had not made reasonable efforts or reasonable
progress during this period. The court further found that reunification was unlikely and changed
the children’s goal to substitute care pending the termination of parental rights.
¶ 32 In February 2021, the State filed petitions to terminate respondent’s parental rights. As
noted above, the petitions alleged respondent failed to make reasonable progress towards the
children’s return to her care within two nine-month periods: (1) September 10, 2019, through June
9, 2020, and (2) March 11, 2020, through December 10, 2020. See 750 ILCS 50/1(D)(m)(ii) (West
2018). The petitions also alleged that respondent failed to protect R.B. and Y.A. from conditions
in their environment that were injurious to their welfare. See id. § 1(D)(g).
¶ 33 On May 4, 2021, an unfitness hearing was held. Caseworker Leber testified that she had
been the children’s caseworker since the fall of 2018. Leber recounted how the case came into care
because respondent sent R.B. out at night to the school bus and had left Y.A. at a garage. Leber
recounted the information contained in the integrated assessment as well as the grades in
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respondent’s service plans. Specifically, Leber noted that respondent had not completed all of the
goals in her July 2019 and January 2020 service plans, which were overall unsatisfactory.
¶ 34 Leber also testified about respondent’s multiple repeated calls to service personnel,
threatening suicide, and respondent’s accident and arrest. Leber also described an incident where
respondent appeared to be intoxicated and was “screaming and throwing things out of her car at
agency workers.” Leber also noted respondent’s confirmed relapses in April 2019, August 2019,
and June 2020.
¶ 35 Leber explained that respondent had complex needs regarding her mental health and
substance abuse. Furthermore, Leber assessed that respondent was unable or unwilling to
appreciate the impact of her unstable behavior has on R.B. Leber also described Y.A.’s complex
medical needs and stated respondent seemingly was unable or unwilling to appreciate their
severity. According to Leber, Y.A. required constant care and that any gap in his treatment could
quickly become life threatening.
¶ 36 Respondent testified that while she had missed drug and alcohol drops at certain times, she
denied having relapsed following August 2019. She denied ever calling R.B. “ ‘stupid,’ ” but
conceded that had called R.B. “other stuff.” Respondent also stated that she could not make it to
Y.A.’s doctors’ appointments because she was working at a factory job in Beloit, Wisconsin. On
cross-examination, respondent testified that she had worked in Wisconsin for “[a]bout nine
months” in 2019. Respondent stated that she had nothing further to tell the court.
¶ 37 The trial court found that the State failed to prove the injurious-environment allegation, as
the children’s environment had largely been their foster homes for the preceding three years.
However, the court found respondent unfit for failure to make reasonable progress during both
specified nine-month periods for both children. The court noted that respondent’s relapses seemed
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to derail her progress, causing her to engage in unstable and harmful behavior. The court noted
that these were precisely the same conditions that were the basis for the children’s removal, which
respondent failed to correct.
¶ 38 At a best interests hearing, Leber testified that R.B., now nine, was successfully placed in
the same foster home as Y.A., who was now three. (R.A., who is not the subject of this appeal,
was also placed with his siblings.) Leber explained that Y.A. has been with his foster parents for
three years and that his foster parents attend all of his appointments and tend to all of his needs.
Y.A.’s foster parents created a binder and kept track of all of Y.A.’s hospitalizations, doctor’s
visits, diagnoses, medications, and other treatment. R.B. was reportedly doing well in school and
enjoys her extracurricular activities such as bowling, Girl Scouts, and art therapy. The children’s
foster parents have many relatives and the children are well integrated into the family. The
children’s foster parents are committed to adopting the children.
¶ 39 Respondent testified that her last relapse was in October 2020. Respondent said that she
did everything that was asked of her and did not know why she could not have her children back.
¶ 40 The trial court found that it was in R.B.’s and Y.A.’s best interests to terminate
respondent’s parental rights. Respondent appeals.
¶ 41 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 42 On appeal, respondent challenges the trial court’s unfitness and best interests findings. We
affirm.
¶ 43 At any time after the entry of the dispositional order, the State may file a petition requesting
termination of parental rights. 705 ILCS 405/2-13(4) (West 2012); In re Brandon A., 395 Ill. App.
3d 224, 234, 334 (2009). Thereafter, the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (705 ILCS 405/1-1 et seq.
(West 2018)) provides for the termination of parental rights in a two-step process. “First, there
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must be a showing, based on clear and convincing evidence, that the parent is ‘unfit,’ as that term
is defined in section 1(D) of the Adoption Act (750 ILCS 50/1(D) (West 1998)).” In re C.W., 199
Ill. 2d 198, 210 (2002). After finding the parent unfit, the court next considers whether it is in the
best interests of the child to terminate parental rights. Id. We will reverse an unfitness or best
interests finding if and only if the trial court’s determination was against the manifest weight of
the evidence, i.e., if the opposite conclusion was clearly apparent. In re Nevaeh R., 2017 IL App
(2d) 170229, ¶ 17.
¶ 44 Here, as the State notes, respondent was found unfit on four grounds, meaning that she was
found unfit in relation to two separate (albeit, overlapping) nine-month periods as to each child. In
addition, as the State also notes, we may affirm a finding of unfitness based on a parent’s failure
to make reasonable progress in any single nine-month period. In re J.L., 236 Ill. 2d 329, 340
(2010); see also In re Donald A.G., 221 Ill. 2d 234, 244 (2006); In re C.W., 199 Ill. 2d 198, 210
(2002) (any one ground, properly proven, is sufficient to enter a finding of parental unfitness).
¶ 45 Reasonable progress is measured by an objective assessment of a parent’s progress in a
given nine-month period toward reunification with the child, which includes compliance with
service plans and court directives. In re C.N., 196 Ill. 2d 181, 216-17 (2001). A parent will be
found to have made reasonable progress if and only if her actions during that period indicate that
the court will be able to order that the child be returned home in the “near future.” See In re Phoenix
F., 2016 IL App (2d) 150431, ¶ 7. Conversely, a failure to make reasonable progress includes the
parent’s failure to substantially fulfill his or her obligations under the service plan. Id.
¶ 46 We agree with the trial court that respondent failed to make reasonable progress during the
first nine-month period, which ran from September 10, 2019, through June 9, 2020. Respondent’s
February 2020 service plan rated her as unsatisfactory for her participation in parent-child therapy.
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While it was noted that R.B. was fearful of respondent, and so was often reluctant to communicate
in therapy, counselors noted that their larger concern was respondent’s lack of empathy toward
R.B. as well as respondent’s unwillingness to accept responsibility for R.B.’s emotional trauma.
In addition, respondent was rated unsatisfactory for failing to attend many of Y.A.’s doctors’
appointments. One of Y.A.’s therapists reported that when respondent did attend, she was often
combative with Y.A.’s foster parents, which in turn impeded Y.A.’s progress by interfering with
his medical treatment.
¶ 47 We note that, by this point, the children’s case had been pending for 2½ years, and
respondent still had not progressed to unsupervised visitation. The record indicates that by the end
of this period—June 9, 2020—there was no reason to believe that the children could be returned
to respondent’s care and custody in the near future. The State’s evidence clearly and convincingly
showed that respondent was unwilling or unable to form a healthy emotional bond with R.B. and
was unwilling or unable to appreciate the complexity of Y.A.’s daily medical needs. Accordingly,
we agree with the trial court that respondent objectively failed to make reasonable progress with
either child within this nine-month period.
¶ 48 Although we need not discuss unfitness further (see In re C.W., 199 Ill. 2d at 210) we note
that during the second period—March 11, 2020, through December 10, 2020—matters failed to
improve. Respondent’s car accident was on June 18, 2020, and despite her repeated claims that
she was not intoxicated, respondent’s BAC was a .319, or roughly four times the legal limit.
Respondent also struck a police officer and was charged with a felony. (Respondent’s criminal
cases had not yet been resolved by the time of her unfitness hearing.) Like the trial court, we too
are alarmed at respondent’s high BAC and her initial refusal to admit to drinking that night. And,
like the trial court, we too have grave concerns that respondent stated that she was on her way to
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pick up R.A. from daycare in such condition. While we are thankful that respondent was not
seriously injured in the accident, the fact remains that this episode, and respondent’s attempts to
minimize it, preceded DCFS taking protective custody of R.A. and permanency goal changes for
R.B. and Y.A.
¶ 49 In addition, during this second period, respondent repeatedly harassed caseworkers with
multiple phone calls and threatened suicide. Respondent also refused further outpatient substance
abuse treatment during this time. Respondent’s December 2020 service plan rated her
unsatisfactory for remaining sober during the preceding six months, as she missed at least three
drug and alcohol drops, which were rated positive.
¶ 50 It was clear during this time period that respondent continued to use alcohol and failed to
cooperate with caseworkers. Accordingly, we agree with the trial court that respondent failed to
make reasonable progress during this period too, as there was no reason to believe the children
could be returned to respondent’s care in the near future. See In re Phoenix F., 2016 IL App (2d)
150431, ¶ 7.
¶ 51 Having affirmed the trial court’s unfitness findings, we now turn to best interests. Once a
trial court has found a parent unfit, considerations regarding parental rights yield to
the best interest of the child. In re N.B., 2019 IL App (2d) 180797, ¶ 42. The court must consider
a number of statutory factors in the context of the child’s age and developmental needs, including
physical safety and welfare, familial and community ties, and the least disruptive placement. 705
ILCS 405/1-3(4.05)(a-j) (West 2018). The trial court’s decision on best interest is also reviewed
under the manifest-weight standard. In re N.B., 2019 IL App (2d) 180797, ¶ 43.
¶ 52 In its best interests decision, the trial court noted that the “children are in a home that they
identify as their family.” They have a “strong[ ] bond[ ]” with their foster parents and their foster
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parents’ extended family. As important, the children are “[v]ery well taken care of” and their foster
parents are “prepared to meet their needs.”
¶ 53 After careful review of the record, we agree with the court’s assessment. The whole of the
record indicates that the children’s safety and welfare is secure with their foster family as the
children had been in their foster placement for nearly three years. The children’s foster parents
were well attuned to R.B.’s emotional needs and Y.A.’s medical needs. In short, nearly every best
interest factor favored the termination of respondent’s parental rights.
¶ 54 Before concluding, there is one final matter we must address. Respondent’s counsel filed
an opening appellate brief in this court that was a mere 11 pages, double spaced. We are not so
much concerned with the length of counsel’s brief as we are with its content. Counsel’s four-page
statement of facts elides many critical events and details in this case. Counsel’s argument section
fares no better. It is replete with boilerplate and a number of statements that are, at best, only
partially true. For example, counsel refers to respondent’s accident as a “slip up,” and attempts to
minimize her conduct by saying that she lacks “perfect coping mechanisms.” Counsel also stated
that, respondent was “on the cusp of being able to fully parent her children” and suggests that the
COVID-19 pandemic was responsible for an increase in respondent’s alcohol consumption, rather
than respondent herself. In addition to being far too glib, these statements are disingenuous; they
fail to accurately recite the facts of case and are not well taken. Cases involving the termination of
parental rights are some of the most serious and sensitive matters a court can hear. They demand
the utmost professionalism and care from counsel. This panel strongly considered issuing a rule to
show cause and holding counsel in contempt. We remind counsel of his duty of candor to this court
and every other tribunal (see Ill. R. Prof’l Conduct, R. 3.3(a)(1)(eff. Jan. 1, 2010)), and trust that
we shall not have cause to remind him again in the future.
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¶ 55 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 56 In sum, although we are mindful of respondent’s traumatic early life in Libya and a chaotic
relocation to the United States as a refugee, our task here is to review the evidence of her
relationship with and care of her children, as well as to apply that evidence to the various statutory
factors when reviewing the best interests of the children. Undertaking this responsibility seriously,
we affirm the judgment circuit court of Winnebago County finding respondent unfit and
terminating her parental rights.
¶ 57 Affirmed.
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