DCPP VS. C.I. AND T.K.IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP OF C.T.K., C.S.K.,J.C.K., J.M.K., I.J.K. AND I.C.K.(FG-20-0007-15, UNION COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)(RECORD IMPOUNDED)(CONSOLIDATED)
RECORD IMPOUNDED
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R.1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-4972-15T1
A-4973-15T1
NEW JERSEY DIVISION OF CHILD
PROTECTION AND PERMANENCY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
C.I. and T.K.,
Defendants-Appellants.
__________________________________
IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP
OF C.T.K., C.S.K., J.C.K, J.M.K.,
I.J.K. and I.C.K., minors.
__________________________________
Submitted September 11, 2017 - Decided September 29, 2017
Before Judges Accurso and O'Connor.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Chancery Division, Family Part, Union
County, Docket No. FG-20-0007-15.
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney
for appellant C.I. (Dorian Smith, Designated
Counsel, on the brief).
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney
for appellant T.K. (Steven E. Miklosey,
Designated Counsel, on the brief).
Christopher S. Porrino, Attorney General,
attorney for respondent (Andrea M.
Silkowitz, Assistant Attorney General, of
counsel; Ellen L. Buckwalter, Deputy
Attorney General, on the brief).
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, Law
Guardian, attorney for minors (Joseph H.
Ruiz, Designated Counsel, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
In this consolidated matter, defendants C.I. and T.K.
appeal from a final judgment terminating their parental rights
to their six children, C.T.K., C.S.K., J.C.K., J.M.K., I.J.K.
and I.C.K., now ages fourteen to four. They contend the
Division of Child Protection and Permanency failed to prove the
four prongs of the best interests standard of N.J.S.A. 30:4C-
15.1a(1)-(4) by clear and convincing evidence.1 The Law Guardian
for the children joins with the Division in urging we affirm the
judgment. Having considered defendants' arguments in light of
the record and controlling law, we affirm the termination of
their parental rights.
1
C.I., although claiming the Division failed to prove all four
prongs, has not offered an argument on the first prong.
Accordingly, we deem the issue abandoned. See Telebright Corp.
v. Director, 424 N.J. Super. 384, 393 (App. Div. 2012); see also
Pressler & Verniero, Current N.J. Court Rules, comment 5 on R.
2:6-2 (2017) ("It is, of course, clear that an issue not briefed
is deemed waived.").
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The facts are fully set forth in the trial court's very
detailed 111-page opinion, and we do not repeat them here. We
need only note the family first came to the Division's attention
in June 2010 when it substantiated C.I. for neglect based on the
older children's failure to regularly attend school. The
Division substantiated both C.I. and T.K. for inadequate
supervision in April 2011 when it found the children dirty and
not properly clothed.
A few months later, the five oldest children were removed
from their parents' care after the Division received another
referral that C.I. and T.K.'s home was again in deplorable
condition, and the children had been left overnight with C.I.'s
eighteen-year-old brother, whom C.I. had already conceded was an
inappropriate supervisor. T.K. reported he and C.I. had
separated, and he was sleeping in his car. He claimed that upon
returning the children from an outing late in the evening after
he had left home, C.I. was nowhere to be found and C.I.'s
brother and "about 10 guys [were] in the house lying around and
outside on the porch drinking and shit all up and through the
house." The Division worker found the children unkempt and
dirty and a bag of drugs left on the floor. Two of the children
were found to have dried feces on their buttocks. The children
were behind on their immunizations and needed dental care.
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For the next two years, the Division attempted to assist
defendants in overcoming the conditions that led it to remove
their children. The Division referred them to substance abuse
treatment after positive drug screens, and individual and
couples counseling and anger management classes in response to
episodes of domestic violence. It provided defendants parenting
skills classes, and arranged for therapeutic supervised
visitation, psychological evaluations and therapy. The Division
worked toward reunification with the couple when they were
together and worked separately with each when they were apart.
It repeatedly attempted to have defendants acknowledge C.I.'s
diagnosed mental health problems and the risks they posed for
the couple's children.
Some progress was made. Defendants attended therapy,
reconciled, and completed parenting-skills classes. There were
several negative random drug screens. In August 2013, C.I. gave
birth to the couple's sixth child, I.C.K. Defendants agreed to
comply with all court ordered services, find permanent housing
and accept homemaker services, and the baby was released to
their care. The Division assisted them with utilities in a new
four-bedroom apartment and provided them furniture. It referred
defendants to Family Preservation Services for weekly in-home
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monitoring in anticipation of their reunification with their
five older children.
The family was reunited in January 2014 when the Division
returned the five older children to their parents. T.K. was
employed as a long-haul trucker and was on the road for twelve
of every fourteen days, however, and C.I. quickly became
overwhelmed with caring for the children in his absence. The
eldest child, C.T.K., refused to go to school and was very
disruptive. The Division arranged for him to be screened, and a
psychiatrist recommended a day-treatment program where the boy
could receive educational services as well as counseling to aid
him in his adjustment to living with his parents and siblings.
Another child was on the autism spectrum and had special needs.
The Division advocated for the family with the county welfare
department for assistance with housing, medical coverage and
food stamps.
In late February, barely six weeks after reunification, the
Division learned the family had been evicted from their
apartment, a fact defendants had concealed from their attorneys,
the Division and the court, and that the entire family was
living in C.I.'s mother's one-bedroom apartment. A mentor for
the second-eldest child, C.S.K., reported to the Division that
the girl claimed not to have eaten since the prior afternoon,
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and that she and her older brother, then ten, had been left at
home alone to care for their younger siblings for the past three
nights. The Division substantiated both parents for neglect due
to inadequate supervision and removed all six children from
their care.
C.T.K. and J.C.K. returned to the resource home in which
they had lived previously and were joined by their baby brother,
I.C.K. C.S.K. also returned to her prior resource home and
J.M.K. and I.J.K. were placed together in a new resource home.
The children were residing in those same homes at the time of
trial with resource parents committed to adopting them. The
Division's expert opined that disrupting the secure attachments
the children had forged with their resource parents would cause
the children enduring harm.
The Division continued to provide services to defendants
following their failed reunification, but they were largely non-
compliant, refusing to participate in therapy and accept other
services. Their attendance at visitation was sporadic and the
visits were often chaotic. Defendants blamed the children for
the chaos and the older children for the reports to the Division
that resulted in the breakup of the family. In February 2015,
the court ordered that C.I. and T.K. be limited to seeing only
three children at a time in order to prevent defendants from
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being overwhelmed by having to interact with all of their
children at one time.
That same month, C.S.K. reported she had been sexually
abused by C.I.'s brother four years earlier. C.I. was
uncontrollably angry over the revelation. Neither defendant
believed her, and the Division could not establish the
allegations. Nevertheless, the Dorothy B. Hersch Regional Child
Protection Center recommended the child receive counseling by a
professional in the area of child sexual abuse and be screened
for sexually-transmitted diseases.
Based on his detailed rendition of the facts adduced at
trial and his assessments of the credibility of the witnesses
who testified, the judge found the Division established all four
prongs of the best interests standard by clear and convincing
evidence. He found defendants harmed their children by failing
to provide them a safe and stable home, failing to address their
identified parenting deficiencies, minimizing their problems and
blaming the children for the removals instead of accepting
responsibility for their continued failure to adequately care
for them. He found the persistence of defendants' parenting
deficiencies after a failed attempt at reunification, their
unwillingness to reengage in services and their minimization of
their own problems while casting blame on their children and the
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Division demonstrated their unwillingness to recognize or
eliminate the harm they had inflicted.
Cataloging the many services the Division provided both
defendants, the judge concluded the Division had easily met its
obligation to provide them the services they needed to correct
the conditions that led to the children's placement. The judge
also found the Division had explored, without success,
alternatives to termination, assessing, and ruling out, all
friends and relatives put forth by C.I. and T.K.
Finally, the judge concluded, based on the expert
testimony, that termination of defendants' parental rights would
not do more harm than good. He relied on the results of the
positive bonding evaluations between the children and their
resource parents and the expert's testimony that the children
were not safe in their parents' care. The judge concluded the
children deserved the stability and permanency their parents had
been unwilling or unable to provide and that termination of
their rights would further that end.
Our review of a trial court's decision to terminate
parental rights is limited. N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs.
v. F.M., 211 N.J. 420, 448-49 (2012). We generally "defer to
the factual findings of the trial court because it has the
opportunity to make first-hand credibility judgments about the
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witnesses who appear on the stand; it has a 'feel of the case'
that can never be realized by a review of the cold record."
N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. E.P., 196 N.J. 88, 104
(2008) (quoting N.J. Div. of Youth & Family Servs. v. M.M., 189
N.J. 261, 293 (2007)).
Our review convinces us the trial judge's findings are
amply supported by the trial testimony. Defendants never
managed to be able to provide these children with a safe and
stable home at any point after they were removed from their care
in 2011. As the judge several times noted, the five older
children had spent fifty-seven of the sixty months preceding his
decision in the care of resource families, and I.C.K. had lived
with his resource parents for all but six months of his life.
Defendants failed to visit consistently while their
children were being cared for by others, and could not even
manage supervised visitation with all of their children at one
time. "A parent's withdrawal of that solicitude, nurture, and
care for an extended period of time is in itself a harm that
endangers the health and development of the child." In re
Guardianship of D.M.H., 161 N.J. 365, 379 (1999). We reject
defendants' assertion that the Division sabotaged reunification
by returning all five older children to them at one time.
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We are satisfied the record supports the judge's findings
that defendants harmed the children by their neglect and
inability to properly care for them, that they refused and
failed to complete the services offered, that their plans for
reunification were wholly unrealistic and that termination of
their parental rights will not do more harm than good.
Affirmed.
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