In the Matter of the Termination of the Parent-Child Relationship of: A.R. & T.R. and B.R., & A.B. v. The Ind. Dept. of Child Services (mem. dec.) ( 2015 )


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  • MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Apr 09 2015, 9:16 am
    Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this
    Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as
    precedent or cited before any court except for the
    purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata,
    collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT A.B.                               ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Michael B. Troemel                                        Gregory F. Zoeller
    Lafayette, Indiana                                        Attorney General of Indiana
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT B.R.                               Robert J. Henke
    Deputy Attorney General
    Harold E. Amstutz
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Lafayette, Indiana
    James D. Boyer
    Deputy Attorney General
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    In the Matter of the Termination                          April 9, 2015
    of the Parent-Child Relationship                          Court of Appeals Case No.
    of:                                                       79A04-1409-JT-414
    Appeal from the Tippecanoe
    A.R. & T.R. (Minor Children)                              Superior Court
    And                                                       The Honorable Faith A. Graham,
    Judge
    B.R. (Father), & A.B. (Mother),
    Case Nos. 79D03-1403-JT-11 and
    Appellant-Respondent,                                     79D03-1403-JT-12
    v.
    The Indiana Department of Child
    Services,
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015         Page 1 of 22
    Appellee-Petitioner
    Vaidik, Chief Judge.
    Case Summary
    [1]   Mother and Father appeal the termination of their parental rights to their minor
    children. On appeal, both Mother and Father raise several issues, which we
    restate as whether the trial court was acting within its discretion when it denied
    Father’s motion to continue based on his incarceration, and whether the trial
    court’s termination of both parents’ parental rights was supported by clear and
    convincing evidence. We affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [2]   A.R., born in 2005, and T.R., born in 2007, are the minor children of A.B.
    (“Mother”) and B.R. (“Father”). In March 2013 the Indiana Department of
    Child Services (“DCS”) received a report that Mother was using drugs with a
    boyfriend and not caring for the children. Investigation revealed that Mother
    had left the children with a non-relative1 approximately three weeks earlier.
    Before they were left with the non-relative, the children had been living with
    1
    The children were sleeping on the floor at the house of the non-relative, who said she did not have the
    financial means to care for the children. This person also has prior DCS history, and her parental rights to
    her children were terminated in 2008. Ex. 1, p. 52.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015                Page 2 of 22
    Mother for two weeks and with a paternal aunt for an approximately four-
    month-long period before that.
    [3]   DCS removed the children from the non-relative’s house. The children were
    taken to the emergency room, where they were both treated for strep and lice;
    one child also had an ear infection and required extensive dental work. At the
    time the children were removed, DCS was unable to locate Mother; Mother
    later testified that she was prohibited from using the telephone by her then-
    boyfriend, by whom she was abducted and taken out of state shortly thereafter.
    [4]   When DCS family case managers went to the county jail to speak with Father,
    who was incarcerated when the children were removed, he revealed that he had
    not been in contact with Mother since Thanksgiving 2012 and believed that the
    children were still residing with his sister, their paternal aunt. Father was
    incarcerated throughout the entire underlying Child in Need of Services
    (“CHINS”) and termination proceedings; indeed, he has been incarcerated for
    most of the children’s lives—“probably 75, 80 percent of the time,” according to
    Mother. Tr. p. 23.
    [5]   On March 28, 2013, after being removed from the non-relative’s home, the
    children were placed in protective custody under a CHINS Detention Hearing
    Order. A CASA was appointed to represent the best interests of the children.
    [6]   On April 22 an evidentiary fact-finding hearing was held. Mother failed to
    appear at the hearing and was defaulted; Father waived his rights pursuant to
    statute and admitted to the allegations contained in the CHINS petition.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 3 of 22
    Following the hearing, the children were adjudicated CHINS, services were
    ordered, and the children remained in foster care due to the unavailability of
    both parents. The CHINS order detailed the reasons for the children’s removal
    and CHINS status, including:
       Father was incarcerated when the children were removed and
    thought they were being cared for by their paternal aunt
       Father’s significant criminal history primarily stemming from
    substance abuse, and his prior DCS involvement
       DCS’s inability to locate Mother, and Mother’s failure to
    appear at hearings
       Mother’s showing over the preceding months that she was
    unable to provide for the safety, well-being, and stability of the
    children
       Mother’s history with DCS, including substantiations for
    neglect in 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, and 2005; Mother’s parental
    rights to three other children were terminated; and she has two
    other children in care of their father
    Ex. 1, p. 52. Additional CHINS hearings were held throughout 2013. Mother
    was incarcerated from August to December 2013 after she turned herself in on
    outstanding warrants. Three days after her release on December 2, Mother
    tested positive for methamphetamine. In this, her third CHINS case,2 Mother
    2
    Mother has been involved in two prior CHINS proceedings. Mother’s first CHINS case involved two
    different, older children (J.R. and K.R.), and came about because of Mother’s drug use, criminal activity,
    incarceration, failure to care for the children for days at a time, and the children’s exposure to domestic
    violence and sexual abuse; that CHINS proceeding resulted in involuntary termination of Mother’s parental
    rights to those children. Mother’s second CHINS case involved yet another older child, A.B., and came
    about because of Mother’s criminal activity and incarceration; Mother’s second CHINS case also resulted in
    involuntary termination of her parental rights to A.B. See Father’s App. p. 22 (order terminating parental
    rights). Neglect was substantiated against Father with regard to a different child in November 2004 as a
    result of his involvement in robbing a Village Pantry, and against both parents in 2005 when A.R. was born
    drug exposed.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015              Page 4 of 22
    stopped attending services around the end of January, beginning of February
    2014.
    [7]   In March 2014 a permanency planning hearing was held; Mother failed to
    appear and was ordered defaulted. Following this hearing, the trial court
    changed the children’s permanency plan from reunification to termination of
    parental rights. DCS filed its termination petitions.
    [8]   On May 22, 2014, Father filed a motion to continue the scheduled May 30
    termination fact-finding hearing (“TFH”) on the ground that Father was
    incarcerated. The trial court denied the motion. On May 30, immediately
    before the TFH, Father asked the court to reconsider his request for
    continuance, which Mother supported. As Mother’s counsel stated, “Mom and
    Dad are very content to see what happens with their criminal dispositions
    before we go to this important of a hearing.” Tr. p. 7. The trial court denied
    Father’s motion, stating as follows:
    [A] petition to terminate parental rights when filed requires the
    Petitioner to request a hearing and the statute provides that the Court
    shall commence the hearing within 90 days. I’ll note that this petition
    was filed on March 17th, 2014 and that today is May 30th, 2014 and
    there’s no way Father will be released prior to the expiration of 90
    days from the date that the petition was filed. So I will certainly
    commence the trial today, but perhaps entertain a renewed motion at
    the conclusion of these proceedings within [] 180 days.
    *****
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    And just for further clarification, even absent that statute I don’t
    believe a continuance at this point is warranted. So we’re going to
    commence the trial going forward.
    Id. at 10-11 (formatting altered).
    [9]    At the time of the termination hearing, Mother, then thirty-two years old, was
    incarcerated, having been arrested in April 2014 and facing charges for dealing
    in and possession of methamphetamine, illegal drug lab, possession of
    marijuana, and two charges of operating a vehicle while suspended. Father,
    who was thirty-four years old at the time of the TFH, also has a history of
    instability and an extensive criminal history, mostly stemming from substance
    abuse. Specifically, Father has had fifteen separate convictions for mostly drug-
    and alcohol-related crimes—plus theft, intimidation, and escape—over a
    fourteen-year period. Numerous petitions to revoke Father’s probation have
    been filed for non-compliance with various probationary sentences; the majority
    of probation violations involved substance-abuse relapses.
    [10]   While incarcerated, Father regularly sent letters to the children and, under a
    court order, participated in two or three telephone calls with the children. But
    at the TFH, family case manager Ashley Weinkauff (“FCM Weinkauff”)
    testified that the children “don’t want to talk to [Father] on the phone.” Id. at
    89. FCM Weinkauff went on to say: “They’re scared; they address him like a
    stranger and said they’ve never really known him.” Id. at 90.
    [11]   At the hearing, Father acknowledged his substance-abuse problem. Father
    testified: “When I went to prison in 2007 is when I realized I needed to change
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 6 of 22
    my life and the way I was doing things.” Id. at 59. That “realization,”
    however, was followed by additional drug convictions in 2012 (Class D felony
    possession of legend drug) and 2013 (Class D felony possession of marijuana
    with prior and Class D felony possession of controlled substance). Father also
    testified as follows:
    I’m [b]ipolar and I’m supposed to take medication for that. I try to
    refrain from that because I have an addictive personality and I don’t
    like to take the medication. I try to substitute with marijuana, that
    doesn’t help, it’s illegal and it’s just made matters worse for me.
    Id. at 61.
    [12]   Father has taken steps to deal with his substance abuse. Specifically, he has
    taken classes, such as “Thinking for a Change” and “Celebrate Recovery,”
    which he took three times while incarcerated. He sought a mentor through NA
    and AA and counseling through a church. He has also read self-help books and
    the Bible. Moreover, he testified that he is very eager to receive more services if
    the court would order them.
    [13]   FCM Weinkauff stated that in her opinion, there is not a reasonable probability
    that the problems that led to removal will be remedied. This opinion, she
    testified, was based on “[t]he criminal history involving drug and substance use
    as well as alcohol use and previous CHINS cases . . . [c]ontinued re-entry into
    the system; continued incarceration over a long duration of time.” Id. at 80. As
    to Father, FCM Weinkauff testified: “The particular thing I see is he’s had
    chances to better himself, chances to get into treatment for drug and alcohol
    and all of his charges are generally involving that.” Id. at 82. At the hearing,
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 7 of 22
    Father testified at length as to his love for his children, and FCM Weinkauff
    agreed that she has “no doubt that he loves his children[,]” but that is not the
    issue: “we feel that history will repeat itself and it’s not a concern with his love
    for the children.” Id. at 83. As to Mother, FCM Weinkauff stated that the
    problem was “[t]he same thing; repeated cycle of incarceration due to drug use,
    as well as repeated cycle involving CHINS cases.” Id. at 84 . Regarding
    whether “continuation of the parent-child relationship would represent a threat
    to the well-being of the children,” FCM Weinkauff testified that she thought it
    would. FCM Weinkauff continued:
    I feel it’s inadvertently a threat due to the consistent drug use, the kids’
    instability of being placed from family to family member to family
    friend and the continued incarceration from time to time. They have
    had spurts where they haven’t gotten in trouble, but then that’s
    detrimental to the [children’s] mental health when a parent leaves for
    incarceration and is placed with someone else.
    Id. at 86.
    [14]   Finally, FCM Weinkauff testified as to how the children were thriving in their
    current foster placement, where they had been living for fifteen months:
    The [children’s] behaviors have improved, they have stability and
    structure. A[.R.] has struggled in school and she’s been evaluated for
    an IEP and she’s been improving due to work with foster home and
    the school in order to adjust her schedule for homework. Just general
    overall well-being for the [children] has increased. . . . They have less
    outbursts; they listen to redirection . . . at school, not just in foster
    home; they interact with peers well, and they get in less fights and
    arguments.
    Id. at 86-87. As to why it is not in the children’s best interests to give the
    parents more time, FCM Weinkauff testified: “The children need stability and
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 8 of 22
    permanency; . . . to know where their home is, . . . to know that they’re not
    going to be placed somewhere else in the near future, they need somewhere that
    they’ll stay at the rest of their life.” Id. at 88.
    [15]   The CASA, Susan Goecker (“CASA Goecker”), also testified at the hearing.
    CASA Goecker testified that she was present during a telephone call between
    Father and the children, and T[.R.] “clung to the foster mom the whole time;
    she was really afraid she said.” Id. at 115. When asked about the bond
    between Father and the children, CASA Goecker testified, “They don’t
    remember him.” Id. at 116. CASA Goecker further testified that “[the children
    are] very secure where they are now” and that they “call the [foster] parents
    mom and dad.” Id. at 118. Finally, CASA Goecker testified that her
    recommendation in this case is termination with adoption, primarily due to the
    parents’ “drug uses and dependencies and unlawful doings.” Id. at 119.
    [16]   In August, the trial court issued an order terminating Mother’s and Father’s
    parental rights. In addition to an extensive list of factual findings, the trial
    court’s order included the following conclusions of law:
    1. There is a reasonable probability that the conditions that resulted in
    the removal of the children from the parents’ care or the reasons for
    the continued placement outside the home will not be remedied.
    Neither parent has demonstrated the ability or willingness to make
    lasting changes from past behaviors. There is no reasonable
    probability that either parent will be able to maintain stability to care
    and provide adequately for the children.
    2. Continuation of the parent-child relationship poses a threat to the
    well-being of the children. The children need stability in life. The
    children need parents with whom the children can form a permanent
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 9 of 22
    and lasting bond to provide for the children’s emotional and
    psychological as well as physical well-being. The children’s well-being
    would be threatened by keeping the child in parent-child relationships
    with either parent whose own choices and actions have made them
    unable to meet the needs of the children.
    3. DCS has a satisfactory plan of adoption for the care and treatment
    of the children following termination of parental rights. The children
    can be adopted and there is reason to believe an appropriate
    permanent home has or can be found for the children as a sibling
    group.
    4. For the foregoing reasons, it is in the best interests of A[.R.] and
    T.[R.] that the parental rights of [] Mother, and [] Father [] be
    terminated. Further efforts to reunify would have continued negative
    effects on the children.
    Father’s App. p. 26.
    [17]   Father and Mother now appeal.
    Discussion and Decision
    I. Denial of Motion for Continuance
    [18]   On appeal, Father contends first that the trial court abused its discretion in
    denying his written motion to continue the TFH. Father appeared in person at
    the termination hearing, where he testified and presented evidence. What he
    was really seeking with his motion for continuance, as he concedes in his brief,
    was an opportunity to “complete his incarceration, engage in services, and
    demonstrate that there had been a change in his conditions.” Father’s Br. p. 7.
    [19]   The decision to grant or deny a motion for a continuance rests within the sound
    discretion of the trial court. Rowlett v. Vanderburgh Cnty. Office of Family &
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 10 of 22
    Children, 
    841 N.E.2d 615
    , 619 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006), trans. denied. We will
    reverse the trial court only for an abuse of that discretion. 
    Id.
     An abuse of
    discretion may be found in the denial of a motion for a continuance when the
    moving party has shown good cause for granting the motion. 
    Id.
     However, no
    abuse of discretion will be found when the moving party has not demonstrated
    that he or she was prejudiced by the denial. 
    Id.
    [20]   In his motion to continue, Father stated, in part, as follows:
    1. [Father] is currently incarcerated with an expected release date of
    October 2014 or sooner.
    2. [] [F]ather has been incarcerated for the duration of this matter.
    3. [] [F]ather has participated as allowed by the DCS/Court – by
    sending weekly letters and cards to the children. In[-]person visits at
    the DOC have not occurred, but through no fault of [] [F]ather.
    4. [] [F]ather has participated in programs while in DOC to better
    himself and better prepare him upon his release.
    5. [] [F]ather’s incarceration has prevented him from being able to
    actively and appropriately participate in most services, most
    importantly, regular visitations with his children. [] [F]ather is willing
    to participate in any services after his release that are recommended by
    the DCS and/or ordered by the Court.
    Father’s App. p. 18.
    [21]   Father asserts that in cases of an incarcerated parent, when the children can
    continue their current placement and there is “little harm” to the children by
    extending the CHINS and giving the parent additional time, that is a “factor the
    court should consider.” Father’s Br. p. 8. Father cites numerous cases in
    support of this proposition. However, only the Rowlett case involves an
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 11 of 22
    incarcerated parent requesting a continuance. See 
    841 N.E.2d 615
    . In that
    case, this Court wrote as follows:
    [W]e conclude that Father showed good cause for granting his motion
    to continue the dispositional hearing—an opportunity for him to
    participate in services offered by the OFC directed at reunifying him
    with his children upon his release from prison. We acknowledge that
    Father requested a continuance because he would still have been
    incarcerated on the date of the scheduled hearing and recognize that
    such incarceration was by his own doing. Nevertheless, Father was set to
    be released only six weeks after the scheduled dispositional hearing. Further,
    Father has demonstrated prejudice by the denial of his motion for
    continuance in that his ability to care for his children was assessed as
    of the date of the hearing he sought to have continued. At that time,
    Father was incarcerated and had not had the opportunity to participate in
    services offered by the OFC or to demonstrate his fitness as a parent. The result
    was that his parental rights were forever and unalterably terminated.
    This result is particularly harsh where Father, while incarcerated,
    participated in numerous services and programs, although offered by
    the correctional facility and not the OFC, which would be helpful to
    him in reaching his goal of reunification with his children.
    Rowlett, 
    841 N.E.2d at 619
     (emphasis added).
    [22]   The case before us, however, is factually distinguishable from Rowlett. Whereas
    in Rowlett, the father was set to be released in six weeks, here Father still had
    153 days—5 more months—of incarceration, followed two years of probation.
    See Tr. p. 64. But the most important difference is that in the case before us,
    Father had had the opportunity to demonstrate his fitness as a parent—indeed,
    he had had numerous opportunities over the course of many years, the majority
    of the children’s lives. And yet, consistently and repeatedly, and despite the
    classes, counseling, and myriad opportunities to improve himself and become a
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015    Page 12 of 22
    better parent, Father chose instead to continue his pattern of substance abuse
    and criminal activity.
    [23]   In light of all that Father has already done to hurt himself and his children,
    there would be no good reason for the trial court to give him further
    opportunities and more time to do so. At the time of the hearing, the children
    were already seven and eight-and-a-half years old, and Father still had five
    more months to serve, followed by two years of probation. Additionally, he did
    not have an apparent life plan—or, most importantly, a plan for meeting his
    parental responsibilities—once he is released; indeed, his primary plan is to
    “[s]tart counseling, individual counseling, therapy, substance abuse, whatever is
    available[,]” though he admits that “if the Court can’t make an order for that
    [he] can’t afford it.” Id. at 150. Moreover, the children are not bonded to
    Father—he has been incarcerated most of their lives and they do not want to
    speak to him on the phone. Given these facts, we are unwilling to keep the
    children on a shelf until their parents are capable of caring for them properly.
    See In re Campbell, 
    543 N.E.2d 273
    , 275 (Ind. Ct. App. 1989). We find that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying Father’s motion to continue
    because he has not shown that he was prejudiced by the denial. See Rowlett, 
    841 N.E.2d at 619
    .
    II. Termination of Parental Rights
    [24]   “The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution protects the
    traditional right of parents to establish a home and raise their children.” In re
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 13 of 22
    K.T.K., 
    989 N.E.2d 1225
    , 1230 (Ind. 2013) (citations omitted). The parent-
    child relationship is one of our culture’s most valued relationships. 
    Id.
     (citation
    omitted). “And a parent’s interest in the upbringing of their child is ‘perhaps
    the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests recognized by the courts.’” 
    Id.
    (quoting Troxel v. Granville, 
    530 U.S. 57
    , 65 (2000)). But parental rights are not
    absolute—“children have an interest in terminating parental rights that prevent
    adoption and inhibit establishing secure, stable, long-term, continuous
    relationships.” 
    Id.
     (citations omitted). Thus, a parent’s interests must be
    subordinated to a child’s interests when considering a termination petition. 
    Id.
    (citation omitted). A parent’s rights may be terminated if the parent is unable
    or unwilling to meet their parental responsibilities by failing to provide for the
    child’s immediate and long-term needs. 
    Id.
     (citations omitted).
    [25]   When reviewing the termination of parental rights, we will not reweigh the
    evidence or judge the credibility of the witnesses. Id. at 1229 (citation omitted).
    Instead, we consider only the evidence and any reasonable inferences therefrom
    that support the judgment. Id. (citation omitted). “Where a trial court has
    entered findings of fact and conclusions of law, we will not set aside the trial
    court’s findings or judgment unless clearly erroneous.” Id. (citing Ind. Trial
    Rule 52(A)). In evaluating whether the court’s decision to terminate the parent-
    child relationship is clearly erroneous, “we review the trial court’s judgment to
    determine whether the evidence clearly and convincingly supports the findings
    and the findings clearly and convincingly support the judgment.” Id. at 1229-30
    (citation omitted).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 14 of 22
    [26]   Indiana Code section 31-35-2-4(b)(2)(B) provides that a petition to terminate
    parental rights for a child in need of services must allege:
    (B) that one (1) of the following is true:
    (i) There is a reasonable probability that the conditions that
    resulted in the child’s removal or the reasons for placement
    outside the home of the parents will not be remedied.
    (ii) There is a reasonable probability that the continuation of the
    parent-child relationship poses a threat to the well-being of the
    child.
    (iii) The child has, on two (2) separate occasions, been
    adjudicated a child in need of services;
    (C) that termination is in the best interests of the child; and
    (D) that there is a satisfactory plan for the care and treatment of the
    child.
    [27]   
    Ind. Code § 31-35-2-4
    (b)( 2). “DCS must prove the alleged circumstances by
    clear and convincing evidence.” K.T.K., 989 N.E.2d at 1231 (citation omitted).
    We note that Indiana Code section 31-35-2-4(b)(2)(B) is written in the
    disjunctive. Therefore, DCS was required to establish, by clear and convincing
    evidence, only one of the three requirements of subsection (B). Because we find
    it to be dispositive, we discuss only whether there was a reasonable probability
    that the conditions resulting in the children’s removal or reasons for their
    placement outside of the parents’ home would be remedied. See I.C. § 31-35-2-
    4(b)(2)(B)(i).
    A. Probability that conditions will not be remedied
    [28]   On appeal, Father argues that the evidence does not support the trial court’s
    findings and conclusions. Father’s Br. p. 12. Father does not appear to
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    challenge any specific findings. Instead, he asserts that the “DCS evidence and
    the court[’]s findings of fact showed that [] [F]ather’s rights were being
    terminated due to his past criminal history,” but argues that he was soon to be
    released from incarceration and had plans to make “life[-]altering changes – to
    change his priorities, to follow a different path, and to stay out of trouble upon
    his release from incarceration.” Father’s Br. p. 14. He points out that while
    incarcerated he sent letters to the children and participated in the phone calls
    that were arranged. Finally, he alleges that “[t]he CASA was never supportive
    of reunification with [] [F]ather.” Id. at 15. Mother also does not challenge any
    specific findings of fact.
    [29]   In determining whether the conditions that resulted in a child’s removal or
    placement outside the home will not be remedied, we engage in a two-step
    analysis. In re E.M., 
    4 N.E.3d 636
    , 643 (Ind. 2014) (citation omitted). We first
    identify the conditions that led to removal or placement outside the home and
    then determine whether there is a reasonable probability that those conditions
    will not be remedied. 
    Id.
     (quotation omitted). The second step requires trial
    courts to judge a parent’s fitness at the time of the termination proceeding,
    taking into consideration evidence of changed conditions, and balancing any
    recent improvements against “habitual patterns of conduct to determine
    whether there is a substantial probability of future neglect or deprivation.” 
    Id.
    (citations omitted). In so doing, trial courts have discretion to “weigh a parent’s
    prior history more heavily than efforts made only shortly before termination,”
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    and courts may find “that parents’ past behavior is the best predictor of their
    future behavior.” 
    Id.
    [30]   At the hearing, FCM Weinkauff testified that in her opinion, there is not a
    reasonable probability that the problems that led to removal will be remedied.
    This opinion, she testified, was based on “[t]he criminal history involving drug
    and substance use as well as alcohol use and previous CHINS cases . . .
    [c]ontinued re-entry into the system; continued incarceration over a long
    duration of time.” Tr. p. 80. Regarding Father, FCM Weinkauff testified:
    “The particular thing I see is he’s had chances to better himself, chances to get
    into treatment for drug and alcohol and all of his charges are generally
    involving that.” Id. at 82. As to Mother, FCM Weinkauff stated that the
    problem was “[t]he same thing; repeated cycle of incarceration due to drug use,
    as well as repeated cycle involving CHINS cases.” Id. at 85. CASA Goecker
    also testified as to the repetitive history of the parents being involved in crime
    and substance abuse.
    [31]   Following the hearing, the trial court set forth numerous findings of fact
    regarding the conditions that resulted in the children’s removal or placement
    outside the home, the lack of a reasonable probability that those conditions
    would be remedied, and the parents’ fitness at the time of the termination
    hearing. Among these findings are the following:
    24. The parents have demonstrated a repetitive pattern of committing
    offenses and using illegal drugs both before and after the children’s
    births. Father has been incarcerated for approximately seventy-five
    [percent] (75%) of the children’s lives. Prior attempts at treatment and
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 17 of 22
    repeated incarcerations have had no impact on the parents’ historical
    failure to establish or maintain sobriety or stability for the children.
    Mother effectively abandoned the children throughout the majority of
    the third CHINS case. Although Father made efforts to continue contact
    with the children and/or provide limited support during periods of
    incarceration, such efforts do not outweigh the significant instability caused by
    years of repeated absences.
    25. The parents also neglected the children’s medical needs. At the
    time of removal, both children were taken to the emergency room.
    A[.R.] was treated for strep, an ear infection, and lice. T[.R.] was
    treated for strep and lice. A[.R.] required dental work including eight
    (8) crowns and four (4) fillings. T[.R.] required dental work consisting
    of two (2) crowns. T[.R.] also suffered from asthma and eczema in
    addition to needing treatment for a club foot.
    26. As a result of ongoing substance use and criminal activity, the
    parents have exposed the children to unsafe people and unsafe
    environments. As a result of repeated incarcerations, the parents have
    failed to provide any stability or consistency for the children. Such
    exposure and lack of stability pose a risk to both the physical and
    emotional well-being of the children.
    *****
    28. Although Mother and Father love the children, neither has the
    ability to meet the children’s needs. The long-standing history of
    instability displayed by these parents continues today. All imaginable services
    have been offered and nothing is singularly different in today’s circumstances
    since the time of removal. To continue the parent-child relationships
    would be detrimental to the children. The children need permanency
    now.
    Father’s App. p. 25 (emphasis added).
    [32]   On appeal, Mother and Father are merely asking this Court to reweigh the
    evidence as to whether the conditions that resulted in the children’s removal are
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015      Page 18 of 22
    likely to be remedied.3 However, as discussed above, this Court cannot reweigh
    the evidence. See K.T.K., 989 N.E.2d at 1229. And despite Father’s claims that
    he is set to turn everything around and become a model parent, the trial court
    already found that these claims didn’t carry much weight in light of “the
    significant instability caused by years of repeated absences.” See Father’s App.
    p. 25. We find that there is clear and convincing evidence to show a reasonable
    probability that the conditions that resulted in the child’s removal or the reasons
    for placement outside the home of the parents will not be remedied.
    B. Termination is in the best interests of the child
    [33]   Father next contends that the trial court erred when it concluded that
    termination is in the best interests of the children. Father begins by setting forth
    a not-terribly developed policy argument opposing “the breakup of the
    biological family.” Father’s Br. p. 17 (citing R.M. v. Tippecanoe Cnty. Dept. of
    Pub. Welfare, 
    582 N.E.2d 417
     (Ind. Ct. App. 1991)). He then discusses how the
    children have had significant contact with his family, rehashes how even
    though incarcerated he maintained contact via letters and telephone calls with
    the children, and then provides his educational and work background. He
    concludes by writing, “The children’s best interests would be served by giving
    3
    Incredibly, Mother argues as to the question of the conditions being remedied that “As far as the court
    knew at the time of the TPR trial, the father’s potential as a parent was both unknown and untapped.”
    Mother’s Br. p. 9.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015              Page 19 of 22
    the father one short opportunity to prove, whether or not, he can be a good
    parent.” Father’s Br. p. 18. We disagree.
    [34]   At the hearing, CASA Goecker testified that her recommendation in this case is
    termination with adoption, primarily due to the parents’ “drug uses and
    dependencies and unlawful doings.” Id. at 119. There is certainly ample
    evidence to support this recommendation, including both Mother’s and
    Father’s extensive histories of instability, criminal activity, substance abuse, and
    neglect of the children. The evidence also shows that the children are not
    bonded to Father, which is not surprising since he has been absent for most of
    their lives. At the same time, the evidence shows that the children “look at
    foster mom and dad as their parents; they address them as mom and dad. They
    also are clearly attached to them . . . [and] to their foster siblings in the home . .
    . .” Id. at 90. Moreover, “the [children’s] behaviors have improved, they have
    stability and structure . . . [t]hey have less outbursts; they listen to redirection; . .
    . and they get in less fights and arguments.” Id. at 86-87. The trial court did
    not err in concluding that it is in the children’s best interests that Mother’s and
    Father’s parental rights be terminated.4 On appeal, Father is merely asking us
    to reweigh the evidence; this we will not do.
    4
    Mother also sets forth a brief, confusing, and unpersuasive argument on the “best interests” requirement,
    which concludes as follows:
    Until the state proves unfitness, the best interest test is not even to be considered. A TPR case
    should not be a vehicle for social engineering. It should not be a vehicle to “fix” a child’s life
    because there is a better option. Mother submits that the trial court erred in even reaching the
    issue of “best interest” herein.
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    C. Satisfactory plan
    [35]   Finally, Father contends that DCS failed to prove it had a satisfactory plan for
    the children upon termination of parental rights because “a prospective non
    relative adoption in this case [] cannot be considered a satisfactory plan.”
    Father’s Br. p. 19. Father fails to provide any cogent argument or cite to any
    legal authority in support of this contention. We therefore consider this
    argument to be waived for purposes of appellate review. See Ind. Appellate
    Rule 46(A)(8)(a); see also Shelby v. State, 
    986 N.E.2d 345
    , 361 (Ind. Ct. App.
    2013). Mother raises no argument on this issue.
    [36]   Waiver notwithstanding, we conclude that there is a satisfactory plan in place.
    For a plan to be “satisfactory,” for purposes of the statute, it “need not be
    detailed, so long as it offers a general sense of the direction in which the child
    will be going after the parent-child relationship is terminated.” In re Termination
    of Parent-Child Relationship of D.D., 
    804 N.E.2d 258
    , 268 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004),
    trans. denied. Here, the trial court wrote in its order as follows:
    DCS has a satisfactory plan of adoption for the care and treatment of
    the children following termination of parental rights. The children can
    be adopted and there is reason to believe an appropriate permanent
    home has or can be found for the children as a sibling group.
    Father’s App. p. 26. This conclusion was supported by testimony of FCM
    Weinkauff and CASA Goecker and is not clearly erroneous.
    Mother’s Br. p. 10.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Memorandum Decision 79A04-1409-JT-414| April 9, 2015   Page 21 of 22
    [37]   For the reasons set forth above, we find that termination of both parents’
    parental rights was supported by clear and convincing evidence and the trial
    court did not err in rendering judgment to this effect.
    [38]   Affirmed.
    Baker, J., and Riley, J., concur.
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