Summary
Judgment affirmed. Sognier, C. J. and Andrews, J., concur.
Summary
Judgment affirmed. Sognier, C. J. and Andrews, J., concur.
Text
R. Dean Weiss, for appellant.
The Georgia Department of Human Resources, by and through the Glynn County Department of Family & Children's Services (DFACS), filed a petition to terminate the parental rights of the natural mother (appellant) of J. R., born on May 18, 1989, and A. R., born on June 5, 1990. An attorney was named and appointed guardian ad litem of the minor children pursuant to OCGA
1. Appellant contends the evidence was insufficient to support a termination of her parental rights.
" ' " '(T)he appropriate standard of appellate review in a case where a parent's rights to his child have been severed is "whether after reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the appellee, any rational trier of fact could have found by clear and convincing evidence that the natural parent's rights to custody have been lost." ' (Cits.)" In the Interest of A. O. A.,
In the case sub judice, the evidence reveals that J. R. and A. R. were conceived after their mother exchanged sex for drugs with the same unidentified man; that J. R. contracted syphilis in utero; that A. R. received no prenatal care; that appellant consumed cocaine two days before A. R.'s birth; that appellant is a drug addict; that appellant is a convicted felon and that appellant often prostituted her body. The evidence further reveals that J. R. and A. R. have been in DFACS custody since infancy due to the presence of cocaine in their bodies; that appellant has four other minor children under DFACS supervision and that appellant has failed to comply with court-ordered DFACS guidelines aimed at reuniting appellant with her children, i.e., appellant has not provided DFACS with a home address, she has avoided contact with a DFACS caseworker, she has failed to attend regularly scheduled drug rehabilitation treatments, she has failed to consistently pay child support of $1 per week, she has failed to establish a suitable home for her children, she has rarely visited J. R. and she has never visited A. R. This clear and convincing evidence authorizes a finding that appellant's intentional misconduct has caused abuse and neglect to her children and that the abuse and neglect is likely to continue. Nonetheless, appellant argues that evidence of her recent transformation through the assistance of a religious organization "leaves no doubt as to how far she has come in a short time, and how eager she is to continue to create a productive environment for rearing her children."
The trial court must determine whether a parent's conduct warrants hope of rehabilitation, not an appellate court. In the Interest of A. T.,
2. Appellant contends the juvenile court erred in failing to dismiss the petition for termination of parental rights because the petition misstated A. R.'s date of birth. The enumeration raises no harmful error.
Lane, Tucker & Crowe, Robert L. Crowe, James A. Chamberlin, Jr., Michael J. Bowers, Attorney General, Margot M. Cairnes, Staff Attorney, for appellee.
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