Illinois Official Reports
Appellate Court
In re J.B., 2014 IL App (1st) 140773 Appellate Court In re J.B. AND J.H., Minors (The People of the State of Illinois, Caption Petitioner-Appellee, v. Natasha B., Respondent-Appellant). District & No. First District, Fifth Division Docket No. 1-14-0773 Filed October 10, 2014 Held The trial court’s rulings that respondent’s minor children were (Note: This syllabus neglected and abused, that she was unfit and that it was in the constitutes no part of the children’s best interests to terminate her parental rights were upheld opinion of the court but on appeal over her contentions that the finding of unfitness was has been prepared by the against the manifest weight of the evidence and that her due process Reporter of Decisions rights were violated when the facts that she was incarcerated, was for the convenience of refused any services, and was denied visitation with her children were the reader.) used to establish her unfitness, since respondent waived her constitutional challenge by raising it for the first time on appeal, and even if the claim had been considered, it would have been rejected on the ground that the finding of unfitness was not based on the time period when respondent was incarcerated and the orders prohibiting her from having contact with the children were in effect; furthermore, the finding of unfitness was not against the manifest weight of the evidence in view of the severe physical beating she administered to one of the children and the evidence of prior abuse, extreme and repeated cruelty, and the failure to protect the children from conditions in their environment that were injurious to their welfare, especially when only one basis for a finding of unfitness is all that is necessary. Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, Nos. 12-JA-1059, Review 12-JA-1060; the Hon. Bernard J. Sarley, Judge, presiding. Judgment Affirmed. Counsel on Abishi C. Cunningham, Jr., Public Defender, of Chicago (Shevon Appeal Fullman, Assistant Public Defender, of counsel), for appellant. Anita M. Alvarez, State’s Attorney, of Chicago (Alan J. Spellberg, Mary Needham, and Nancy Kisicki, Assistant State’s Attorneys, of counsel), for the People. Robert F. Harris, Public Guardian, of Chicago (Kass A. Plain and Christopher Williams, of counsel), guardian ad litem. Panel PRESIDING JUSTICE PALMER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices McBride and Gordon concurred in the judgment and opinion. OPINION ¶1 Respondent, Natasha B., is the biological mother of minors, J.H., born on November 20, 2003, and J.B., born on November 4, 2009. Respondent appeals the trial court’s November 14, 2013, ruling finding the two minors neglected and abused and adjudicating respondent unfit, and the trial court’s March 17, 2014, order finding that it was in the best interests of the minors to terminate respondent’s parental rights. On appeal, respondent asserts that her due process rights were violated because she was incarcerated, she was refused any services, and she was denied visitation with her children, and these facts were used as evidence to establish unfitness. She also contends that the trial court’s findings of unfitness were against the manifest weight of the evidence.1 For the following reasons, we affirm. ¶2 I. BACKGROUND ¶3 On October 18, 2012, the State filed a petition for adjudication of wardship for the minors and a petition for temporary custody, alleging that they were abused and neglected. In J.H.’s petition, the State alleged that, pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (705 ILCS 405/1-1 et seq. (West 2012)), J.H. was (1) neglected based on an environment injurious to his welfare, (2) abused based on a substantial risk of physical injury, (3) neglected as to necessary care, and (4) physically abused. 705 ILCS 405/2-3(1)(a), (1)(b), (2)(i), (2)(ii) (West 2012). With respect The minors’ putative fathers never appealed and were defaulted by the trial court, and are not 1 parties to this appeal.
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to J.B., the petition alleged that he was neglected based on an environment injurious to his welfare and abused based on a substantial risk of physical injury. 705 ILCS 405/2-3(1)(b), (2)(ii) (West 2012). The petitions alleged that on approximately October 13, 2012, J.H. “presented to Ingalls Memorial Hospital with leg pain and swelling as well as facial contusions” and he was diagnosed with an “oblique femur fracture and fracture to his right hip,” injuries which medical personnel indicated were “inflicted trauma and non-accidental.” The petitions alleged that respondent admitted to causing J.H.’s injuries. ¶4 The trial court placed both minors under the temporary custody of the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS). The trial court also entered a no-contact order against respondent and an order denying visits between respondent and the minors. The record reflects that, as a result of the incident giving rise to DCFS intervention, respondent was incarcerated in the Cook County jail and criminal charges were filed against her. ¶5 The State later moved to amend the petition to seek permanent termination of parental rights at disposition and appointment of a guardian with the right to consent to adoption. The State also moved to add the grounds of torture to J.H.’s petition based on the allegation that respondent forced J.H. to do leg squats as a form of punishment, punched him and threw him to the floor when he could not do any more, stood on his leg and choked him until he almost lost consciousness, and then left him “immobile on the bathroom floor while she went to bed.” The trial court granted both motions. ¶6 The State also submitted a request for admissions of fact pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 216 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011) regarding a written statement that respondent gave to an Assistant State’s Attorney (ASA) while she was at Riverdale police department on October 14, 2012, which concerned the battery of J.H. The requests for admissions were as follows: (1) respondent was present at the Riverdale police department on October 14, 2012; (2) she gave an oral statement regarding the battery of J.H. to an ASA and a detective; (3) she was “duly” advised of her Miranda rights before giving the statement; (4) she stated that she understood the Miranda warnings and wanted to give a statement; (5) the statement she gave was memorialized in writing by the ASA; (6) respondent was given the opportunity to review the written statement and make changes and did so; (7) she reviewed and signed each page of the statement indicating that the statement was true and accurate; (8) respondent’s signature was on each page of the statement and her initials are next to any changes; and (9) the attached statement/exhibit accurately reflected the statement she gave. Respondent objected based on relevance, and the State then moved for the facts to be deemed admitted. The trial court held that the admissions were deemed admitted, but it struck the word “duly” from the third admission. ¶7 Respondent’s written statement was attached to the State’s request for admissions of fact. According to the statement, respondent indicated that she was living with the two minors and Sandra H., Thornton H., and Sheena H. Respondent indicated that J.B. came to her and told her that J.H. almost pulled down the television on him. However, J.H. denied this when she asked him about it. When he continued to deny it, respondent instructed him to do squats as a form of punishment in the hallway. Respondent indicated that J.H. complained that his legs hurt, but respondent informed him that they were “supposed to hurt.” Respondent stated that she got up from her chair and instructed him to stop complaining and do the squats correctly, but he continued complaining. Respondent explained that she then grabbed J.H. by his shirt, brought him to the bathroom, and told him she was going to “whoop” him. She left and told J.B. to give
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her his belt; J.B. refused to do so, at first. Respondent then returned to the bathroom with the belt and started struggling with J.H. Respondent indicated that J.H. asked if his “God-Granny” could “whoop” him instead, but respondent refused. Respondent indicated that she attempted to take off J.H.’s shorts and underpants, but he continued struggling. She held onto his shirt and was finally able to remove his clothing, and then “hit him once on his behind with the belt.” Respondent related that J.H. then “slumped down” like “dead weight,” and she tried to pull him up by his shirt. She became more frustrated and angry, so she pulled his “whole body up by his shirt with both of her hands and threw him to the floor of the bathroom,” where he hit his head on a ledge near the bathtub. Respondent stated that she then “squatted over [J.H.] and she punched about his body many times.” She did not remember if she choked him, but she did punch him on the leg and “sat on his leg.” Respondent indicated that Sheena H. intervened at that point and stopped her. Respondent stated that her vision was blurred, her head hurt, and she was shaking, so she went to her room and lay down. She called to J.H. and told him to get up, but he yelled that he could not. She asked Sheena H. to help, but J.H. continued to cry and yell. Respondent indicated that she returned to the bathroom and saw him curled on the floor without his pants, and his right leg was swollen and “shifted a little bit.” Respondent called 911. Respondent got clean pants and underpants for J.H., but she could not help dress him “because she felt so bad about what she had done to him,” so she asked Sheena H. to dress him. She indicated that J.H. cried in pain while being dressed. When the paramedics and police arrived, respondent told police that J.H. hurt his leg while doing squats. However, respondent admitted to the ASA that this was not true, and she said it “because she didn’t want to face the fact that she was the one who hurt him.”
¶8 A. Adjudication and Unfitness Hearing ¶9 The adjudication and unfitness hearing occurred simultaneously over three days. The State admitted into evidence its request for admissions and the attached exhibit containing respondent’s October 14, 2012, statement, along with J.H.’s medical records from the hospital. ¶ 10 Margo Cralle, an investigator for DCFS, was initially assigned to investigate the case and she spoke with J.B. on October 16, 2012. J.B. told her that he was two years old and his brother J.H. was in the hospital. J.B. “blurted out” that J.H. “gets whooped. She whoops him in the hallway.” Cralle indicated that no marks or bruises were found on J.B.’s body. When she asked whether his mother “whips him,” J.B. responded that he “doesn’t get in trouble.” ¶ 11 Harriett Holmes took over as the primary DCFS investigator. Holmes interviewed J.H. at the Advocate Children’s Hospital in Oak Lawn, Illinois, on October 16, 2012. She observed that his left or right leg was bandaged and elevated in the air, he had a large bump on his forehead, a blackened left eye, a swollen right cheek, and scratches, bruises and contusions “all over his face.” J.H. was “[v]ery, very sad” during the interview and spoke in a monotone voice. He appeared depressed and did not talk much except to answer her questions. His voice became more agitated when she asked about respondent. ¶ 12 Holmes testified that J.H. explained to her that he and J.B. were playing, and J.B. climbed up a bookshelf with a television on it and the television almost fell. J.B. left to tell respondent that J.H. almost knocked the television on him, and respondent came into the room and asked J.H. if this was true. J.H. denied it, and respondent stated that she did not believe him and that he “was going to have to do squats as a form of punishment.” J.H. described to Holmes how he did the squats with his arms held out. Holmes testified that J.H. told respondent that it hurt to
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do squats and he stopped doing them, but respondent “would punch him in the leg and make him continue,” and she “said it’s supposed to hurt, it’s a punishment.” Eventually, J.H. stopped doing the squats and respondent told him that he if did not continue, “he was going to get a whooping.” Respondent told J.H. to go get a belt, and when he returned with one, she took him into the bathroom. Holmes testified that J.H. told her that respondent directed him to take off his pants, and then respondent “proceeded to whoop him, but he kept grabbing the belt.” When he grabbed the belt, respondent punched or hit him with a closed fist on his face, arms, and chest. J.H. told Holmes that, at some point, respondent “picked him up by his collar and threw him down to the ground.” J.H. indicated that respondent grabbed him by his shirt collar and her hands were around his throat, choking him. Further, when he landed on the ground, the side of his face hit the bathtub. Respondent continued to hit and punch him. J.H. told Holmes that he then “begged his mom to let God granny, who was the other person who lived in the home[,] whoop him.” Respondent refused and continued to whip him, while J.H. continued to grab the belt. J.H. informed Holmes that “at that point mom grabbed–started punching him in the arm and the face, just all over, and was standing on top of his leg.” She continued punching him all over with her fist while J.H. tried to get away, but “the more he squirmed, the more she hit him.” J.H. told Holmes that at some point, the daughter of the godmother, “TT,” came into the bathroom and “dragged” respondent off of him. Respondent told J.H. to get up and get dressed, but J.H. could not get up because his leg hurt badly. At that point, 911 was called and the paramedics arrived. ¶ 13 Holmes testified that she asked J.H. whether respondent had ever hit him before, and he responded that she “hits him a lot, all the time. But it had never been like what it was this time.” J.H. also stated that “he hated his mother and that she didn’t care about him.” J.H. then pulled the covers over his head and refused to talk further with Holmes. ¶ 14 Holmes also interviewed respondent on October 16, 2012, at the Riverdale police station jail. Holmes testified that respondent admitted she “had a history of anger management issues and specifically with [J.H.]” She admitted hitting him, “but never anything like what” transpired in the current case. She admitted that the domestic violence had been going on for “years.” Respondent explained to Holmes that when J.H. would anger her, “she would hit him with her fist in the chest or the arms” and tell him “to get away from her” because she “just didn’t want to be bothered with him.” Holmes testified that respondent was “[m]atter of fact” about this. ¶ 15 When Holmes asked respondent specifically about the incident at issue, respondent explained that she and the minors were living in the home of a friend of the family, which included the “God granny,” and “Sandra,” who was also called “TT.” Respondent indicated that she was in a different room watching television when J.B. entered and told her that a television had almost fallen on him because J.H. “made him climb up on the bookcase.” Respondent went into the other room and asked J.H. if this was true, but he denied it. Respondent did not believe J.H. and “she was going to make him do squats as a form of punishment.” Holmes testified that respondent related that J.H. would do some squats, but then stop, and every time he stopped, she punched him on his leg with her fist to make him continue. Respondent stated that when J.H. told her that “it really hurts,” she responded that “it’s a form of punishment, it’s supposed to hurt.” Eventually, when J.H. completely stopped doing squats, she threatened to “get a belt and w[h]oop him.” When he refused to do more squats, she got a
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belt and took him in the bathroom, where she made him remove his pants and “proceeded to whoop him.” ¶ 16 Holmes testified that respondent explained that as she tried to “whoop” him with the belt, J.H. kept grabbing the belt, which angered her even more, and so she began to punch him when he grabbed the belt. When he continued grabbing the belt, respondent explained to Holmes that she “grabbed him by his shirt, lifted him off his feet and through [sic] him on the floor,” causing him to hit the side of his face on the bathtub. Respondent also stated that she tried to lift him up, but “he made himself like dead weight and so she couldn’t,” and she then continued trying to hit him with the belt. However, J.H. continued “squirming and grabbing the belt,” which respondent indicated made her angrier. Respondent “started just hitting him and punching him.” Respondent told Holmes that J.H. “begged her to let God granny whoop him,” but respondent refused because “he got in trouble with her and she was going to whoop him.” Holmes testified that respondent related that as J.H. continued grabbing the belt, respondent “was so angry that she started just punching him on his arms, on his body, just everywhere. And at that point in time she was standing on top of his leg just punching him on [sic] choking him.” Respondent explained to Holmes that she was choking him by the collar of his shirt. ¶ 17 Holmes testified that respondent stated that at that point, the “God granny’s daughter came in the room and dragged her off of [J.H.]” Respondent told J.H. to get up and get dressed, and then she left the bathroom and laid down on a bed for about 10 minutes. Respondent told Holmes that “Sandra *** came to her and told her that [J.H.] was still in the bathroom on the floor.” Respondent instructed her to tell J.H. to get up and get dressed, but she returned after a few minutes and told respondent that J.H. said “he can’t get up, he can’t move his leg.” Respondent told Holmes that she “did not get up and go check on him, because she admitted that she knew she had hurt him and she didn’t want to see him like that.” Respondent indicated that Sandra H. dressed J.H. and called 911. Respondent related to Holmes that when the paramedics arrived, she told them that J.H. had fallen. Holmes testified that respondent stated that J.H. “just makes her so mad and angry. But she was sorry, and she didn’t mean to hurt her child like that.” Holmes testified that respondent became more agitated and irritated the more they talked about J.H. Holmes affirmed that this was an “A sequence case.” ¶ 18 Dr. Guneesh Saluja, an emergency medical doctor at Ingalls Hospital, testified that J.H. came to the emergency room on October 13, 2012. J.H., who was eight years old at the time, had bruises on the left side of his face and forehead, and his right thigh was swollen and tender to the touch, and it was deformed or bent at a place where there was no joint. When Saluja asked how J.H. received the injuries, J.H. reported that he was squatting and fell. Saluja testified that respondent was present during this initial conversation. Saluja asked respondent how the injuries occurred, and she likewise told him that J.H. was squatting and fell. Saluja ordered X-rays of J.H.’s leg and pelvis, and a CT scan of his head. ¶ 19 According to Saluja, the X-ray of J.H.’s right femur bone showed two fractures. One was a proximal femur fracture close to the hip that was completely displaced, meaning that the edges of the fracture were not in contact with each other. Saluja indicated that this was an acute fracture and was “very recent.” He opined that it could not have been caused from J.H. doing squats and falling over, because the femur is “a big bone. It needs [a] high impact to break.” The second fracture was a distal femur fracture, which was closer to the knee, minimally displaced, and showed bony sclerosis. Saluja explained that the edges of the fracture were not sharp anymore and showed calcification, an indication that “[i]t had been there for a few days.”
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Saluja concluded that the distal femur fracture could not have occurred on October 13, 2012, and it also could not have been caused by the minor falling over accidentally, as such a fracture would not have been caused by “a minor trauma.” Saluja concluded that the two fractures occurred at different times. ¶ 20 The X-ray of J.H.’s pelvis revealed a “nondisplaced inferior pubic rami fracture on the right side.” The fracture had no callus formation, which indicated that it could either be a new injury or that “the bone is not healing at all.” Saluja testified that the injury was not consistent with an eight-year-old doing squats and falling, because the bone was “deep seeded [sic] with a lot of tissue around it, so a minor fall should not break that bone.” ¶ 21 Saluja testified that he and a nurse spoke with J.H. after reviewing the X-rays, without respondent present, and J.H. gave a different explanation for his injuries. J.H. told the nurse that “his mother sat on his leg and hit him with a belt, and then picked him up and threw him on the floor.” Saluja opined that this explanation was consistent with J.H.’s injuries, with the exception of the distal femur fracture, which appeared to be a week to 10 days old. Saluja later reviewed respondent’s written statement and opined that her description was consistent with J.H.’s facial bruising, pelvic fracture, and right proximal femur fracture, but not the distal femur fracture. Saluja opined that the distal femur fracture was older. It would have caused pain, but J.H. may have still been able to walk, albeit with a limp, because the fracture was only “mildly displaced.” ¶ 22 Riverdale police detective sergeant Willie Darkried was summoned to Ingalls Hospital on October 13, 2012, and he found J.H. in the emergency room, “screaming,” and stating, “ ‘I’m sorry for whatever I did. Please don’t hurt me anymore.’ ” J.H. appeared to be in intense pain. Darkried noticed multiple large bruises and red marks on J.H.’s face, his right leg was swollen, and his right thigh appeared higher than the other side.[2] ¶ 23 Darkried testified that he interviewed J.H. on October 15, 2012, at Hope Children’s Hospital, with an ASA present. J.H. told Darkried that after he almost knocked a television over, J.B. reported this to respondent, who then took J.H. “into the hallway to make him do squats as punishment.” J.H. stated that he eventually became fatigued and was unable to continue. This upset respondent, who then took him into the bathroom and “threw him on the floor,” where “a part of his body hit a cabinet in the bathroom.” J.H. told Darkried that respondent then “sat on his legs” with her full weight and “punched him in the face with both hands.” She then “placed both hands around his throat, and he remembers almost throwing up.” ¶ 24 Elena Padilla, a caseworker for Illinois Mentor, was assigned to the minors’ cases in January 2013. She testified that respondent was incarcerated in Cook County department of corrections and has a criminal case pending against her. Padilla testified that respondent has never engaged in or completed any reunification services, and if respondent was ever to be reunited with the minors, she would be in need of such services. Padilla testified that a social worker informed her that respondent “would not be able to engage in services at Cook County because they will not be able to provide the services that we were requesting through the service plan.” ¶ 25 Following the presentation of this evidence, the parties gave closing arguments on November 14, 2013. The trial court adjudicated the minors neglected and abused. The court
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held that the evidence established that respondent severely beat J.H., based on respondent’s statements and J.H.’s statements about what happened, and the medical evidence supported that J.H.’s injuries were consistent with the statements regarding the beating, and inconsistent with the exculpatory statements offered by the mother. The trial court found that clear and convincing evidence established that respondent tortured J.H. by inflicting “excruciating pain and the infliction of severe physical pain as a means of punishment or coercion,” and the State had also thereby proven abuse based on substantial risk of injury. With regard to neglect, the trial court held that respondent failed to provide a safe home and instead severely tortured and beat J.H. The court also held there was evidence of prior physical abuse based on the older fracture in J.H.’s leg and J.H.’s statement that respondent hit him a lot and all the time. With respect to J.B., the trial court held that based on the fact that he lived in the same household as J.H., the State had proven that J.B. was at substantial risk of physical injury and subjected to an injurious environment. ¶ 26 With regard to parental fitness, the trial court found by clear and convincing evidence that respondent was unfit as to both minors for failure to show a reasonable degree of interest, concern, or responsibility for the minors’ welfare by virtue of the severe beating she inflicted on J.H. The court also found respondent unfit for failure to protect both minors from conditions injurious to their welfare. As to unfitness based on depravity, the court held that a criminal conviction was not required to prove depravity, and held that respondent’s severe beating of J.H. established that she acted in a depraved manner. The court noted that there was no evidence that J.H. was not limping before the October 13, 2012, incident, and no evidence contradicted Saluja’s testimony regarding the older fracture. The court also held that the act of depravity as to J.H. was sufficient to prove depravity as to J.B., the other minor in the home. The trial court held that respondent was unfit based on extreme or repeatedly cruelty as to J.H. only, citing the same reasons that it held torture was proven. The trial court entered adjudication and unfitness orders reflecting these rulings on the same date.[3]
¶ 27 B. Disposition and Best Interests Hearing ¶ 28 On March 17, 2014, the trial court conducted a consolidated disposition and best interests hearing. ¶ 29 Padilla, the DCFS caseworker for the minors, testified that respondent was currently incarcerated and needed reunification services if she were to ever reunify with the minors, including a parenting capacity assessment, a psychological evaluation, domestic violence for perpetrators services, individual therapy, and family therapy. Padilla testified that the social worker for respondent’s division informed her that respondent “will not be able to engage in any of those services while she was incarcerated at Cook County.” ¶ 30 Padilla indicated that the minors were placed with their maternal grandmother, Cheryl W., in September 2013, which was their second placement after initially being placed in a non-relative foster home. Cheryl W. was assessed and found to be an appropriate caregiver after DCFS investigated whether she had known about the abuse before DCFS intervention. DCFS observed multiple supervised visitations with Cheryl W. and the minors, she denied knowing about the abuse, and the minors and Cheryl W. have a strong attachment. Padilla testified that Cheryl W. indicated that she would put the minors’ interests above those of
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respondent. According to Padilla, J.H.’s eating habits, grades, and behavior have improved while living with Cheryl W. J.B. now uses the bathroom on his own and his behavior problems have diminished. Padilla’s visits to the home showed that it was safe and appropriate, and neither minor reported any abuse or corporal punishment. Cheryl W. was able to meet J.H.’s medical needs. Padilla testified that Cheryl W. seemed committed to providing the minors with a permanent home, there was a bond between them, and J.H. expressed a desire to continue living with Cheryl W. Padilla recommended that Cheryl W. adopt them. Although J.B. was not currently enrolled in preschool, Padilla explained that there had been issues with DCFS approval of the two schools Cheryl W. had chosen. Padilla believed that Cheryl W. would manage to get J.B. enrolled in school with her help. ¶ 31 Ellen Tannenbaum, a therapist for Catholic Charities, testified that she treated the minors in this case during separate weekly sessions. Initially, J.H. cried, had tantrums “for hours on end,” and functioned poorly in school. During his tantrums, J.H. sometimes hit his head against the wall or engaged in other self-injurious behavior. The tantrums improved more when visits with Cheryl W. began, and J.H. expressed a desire to live with her. Tannenbaum involved Cheryl W. in the therapy, and the minors began living with Cheryl W. in September 2013. When J.H. had his first tantrum after moving in with Cheryl W., she acted appropriately by calling Tannenbaum. Tannenbaum testified that Cheryl W. reported that the tantrum started when she asked J.H. to do his homework. Tannenbaum gave Cheryl W. the telephone number for a home-based assessment service, which Cheryl W. contacted. The service came to her home and stabilized the situation. Since that time, J.H. and Cheryl W. have not reported any more severe tantrums. Tannenbaum testified that Cheryl W. has been “fundamental” in reducing his tantrums. J.H. reported no corporal punishment by Cheryl W., and Cheryl W. was committed to using techniques other than physical punishment with both minors. Tannenbaum also testified that J.H. has processed respondent’s abuse, although he “continues to see the incident where his leg was broken as exceptional” and particularly emotionally painful. She testified that she has started to discuss terminating therapy because J.H.’s functioning at school and home has improved “dramatically” and he reported less intrusive thoughts and anger regarding respondent and the abuse. Tannenbaum believed that Cheryl W. was committed to providing a permanent home and she provided appropriate emotional support for him. ¶ 32 With respect to J.B., Tannenbaum testified that he had behavioral problems, such as aggressive behavior and tantrums, in his first foster placement, but then moved in with Cheryl W. Cheryl W. and J.B. reported that he has not had a tantrum since moving in with her. Tannenbaum indicated that Cheryl W. calms J.B. down by placing him in a “time out,” which was an appropriate discipline technique. Tannenbaum reported that J.B. was now “very bonded” to Cheryl W. and reported no physical abuse. Tannenbaum was contemplating terminating therapy. Tannenbaum testified that J.B. was not currently enrolled in school, despite being school age. Cheryl W. indicated that she applied for several schools, but preschools with Headstart programs were already full since it was late in the school year. Tannenbaum did not know whether this was a failing by DCFS or Cheryl W., but she was willing to continue therapy until he was enrolled. ¶ 33 Cheryl W. testified that she sought to have the minors live with her because she loved them and they needed her. Cheryl W. also testified that she wanted to adopt the minors because she loved them and they needed her. She testified that the minors were “very loveable, so all day long kissing and hugging. They’re just very loveable, and I just give it back to them.” She
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participated in therapy sessions and she understood it was her responsibility to protect them and that there was a no-contact order against respondent. Cheryl W. testified that other than the severe tantrum J.H. had shortly after he came to live with her, when she called Tannenbaum and supportive services for assistance, he has not had a tantrum since. She talked with Tannenbaum about proper methods to calm him down and discipline him. She testified that she has a “great relationship” with J.H., he shows her affection, and she encourages him to talk about his feelings. With respect to J.B., Cheryl W. testified that, initially, he used profanity and had tantrums, but now he no longer used profanity. She testified that she enrolled J.B. in school in November 2013, but he had to leave because DCFS was not paying the school. She enrolled him in a different school, but was told by the school that it was not receiving payment from DCFS. She also tried to enroll J.B. in another school, but it was full. She testified that she was willing to have J.B. go to school and she was willing to work with DCFS to get him enrolled. ¶ 34 In ruling, the trial court took judicial notice of all of the evidence presented in the prior adjudication and unfitness proceeding. Citing its previous findings that the minors were abused and neglected and that respondent was unfit, and considering the evidence presented at the disposition and best interests hearing, the trial court held that it was in the minors’ best interest to be adjudged wards of the court. Having previously found respondent unfit, the trial court determined that respondent was unfit and unable, for reasons other than financial circumstances, to care for, protect, train, or discipline the minors. [4] The court held that reasonable efforts to prevent removal had been made and services were unsuccessful. The court held that it was in the minors’ best interests to be removed from the parents’ custody and placed in the custody of the DCFS guardianship administrator. ¶ 35 Regarding the State’s request to terminate parental rights, the trial court noted that it had previously adjudicated the minors to be neglected and abused, and the parents to be unfit, by clear and convincing evidence. Therefore, it concluded that it was in the minors’ best interests to terminate parental rights based on the prior findings and the evidence presented at the disposition and best interests hearing. The court noted that there was a no-contact order against the mother based on the criminal case, the minors were well-cared for by Cheryl W., and their behavior had improved. The court also held that it was in the best interests of the minors to appoint a guardian with the right to consent to adoption. ¶ 36 On March 17, 2014, the trial court entered dispositional orders adjudicating the minors to be wards of the court, finding respondent unfit and unable to care for them, and placing them in the custody of a DCFS guardianship administrator. The court also entered termination orders, finding by clear and convincing evidence that respondent was unfit because she failed to maintain a reasonable degree of interest, concern, and responsibility in the minors; failed to protect the minors from conditions injurious to them; and behaved in a depraved manner toward them, and as to J.H. specifically, committed extreme or repeated cruelty. The orders further indicated that it was in the minors’ best interests to terminate respondent’s parental rights and to appoint a guardian with the right to consent to adoption. The court also entered an order that J.B. be enrolled in school. ¶ 37 Respondent appealed from both the trial court’s November 14, 2013, order and the March 17, 2014, order.