                                     NUMBER 13-15-00107-CV

                                       COURT OF APPEALS

                            THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                               CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG


                IN THE INTEREST OF T.D.S., T.L.S., C.B.D., AND M.K.D.,
                                 CHILDREN


                          On appeal from the 24th District Court
                               of Jackson County, Texas.


                                 MEMORANDUM OPINION

   Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Longoria
            Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez

        Appellant, W.D., appeals the termination of her parental rights to her four children,

T.D.S., T.L.S., C.B.D., and M.K.D.1 By four issues, appellant contends that: (1) the

evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the trial court’s finding that she

violated three statutory grounds for termination; and (2) the evidence is legally and


        1  See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b)(2) (providing that in a parental-rights termination case, “the court must,
in its opinion, use an alias to refer to a minor, and if necessary to protect the minor’s identity, to the minor’s
parent or other family member”).
factually insufficient to support a finding that termination was in the best interest of the

children. We affirm.2

                                           I.       BACKGROUND

        On October 11, 2013, the Department of Family and Protective Services (the

“Department”), filed its original petition for protection of a child for conservatorship and for

termination in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship in the 24th District Court of

Jackson County, Texas requesting to terminate appellant’s parental rights to her four

children. In an affidavit attached to the petition, the Department’s caseworker, Sally

Segura stated that the Department received a referral on October 10, 2013, alleging that

T.L.S., who was thirteen, had been sexually abused by her stepfather, W.G.D., and that

T.D.S, T.L.S.’s brother who was fifteen, had recorded the stepfather having sex with

T.L.S.3 According to Segura, the Jackson County Sheriff’s Department viewed the video

and found it to be legitimate. The four children were removed from appellant’s home.

Subsequently, the trial court ordered appellant to comply with a service plan that

contained detailed requirements for appellant to complete in order for her to retain

custody of the children.

        On September 30, 2014, the trial court held a bench trial to determine whether

appellant’s parental rights should be terminated. After hearing the evidence, the trial court

found by clear and convincing evidence that appellant had “knowingly placed or knowingly

allowed the children to remain in conditions or surroundings which endanger the physical


         2 W.G.D., the father of M.K.D. and C.B.D., and M.S., the father of T.L.S. and T.D.S., each signed

an affidavit of voluntary relinquishment of parental rights prior to trial on termination of appellant’s parental
rights. The fathers are not parties to this appeal.
         3 For purposes of this memorandum opinion and ease of reading, we will refer to W.G.D., although

he is the biological father of M.K.D. and C.B.D., as “the stepfather.”


                                                            2
or emotional well-being of each of the children,” and “engaged in conduct or knowingly

placed the child[ren] with persons who engaged in conduct which endangers the physical

or emotional well-being of each of the children.” It also found by clear and convincing

evidence that it was “in the best interest of [the children] that the parental rights existing

between [appellant] and [the children] be terminated.” In its written order of termination,

the trial court additionally stated that appellant

        failed to comply with the provisions of a court order that specifically
        established the actions for the mother to obtain the return of the children
        who [have] been in permanent or temporary managing conservatorship of
        [the Department] for not less than nine months as a result of the children’s
        removal from the parent under Chapter 262 for the abuse or neglect of the
        children pursuant to § 161.001(b)(1)(O), Texas Family Code.

This appeal followed.

                                          II.      THE EVIDENCE

        The trial court held a hearing on the Department’s petition to terminate appellant’s

parental rights to her four children.4 At the trial, the trial court admitted the Department’s

exhibit No. 4, which is a judgment convicting the stepfather for the continuous sexual

abuse of T.L.S., a child under fourteen years of age, showing that the stepfather was

sentenced to thirty years’ incarceration for that offense. The trial court also stated that it

was taking judicial notice of “the service plan that is in the file that was filed apparently

December 12, 2013” and all its orders in the proceeding.

        At the termination trial, Barbara Merek, special crimes officer with the Granada

Police Department, testified that she was involved in two separate investigations in 2011


        4  At the termination trial, counsel for the Department, counsel for appellant, the children’s ad litem
attorney, and counsel for interveners, M.K.D. and C.B.D.’s paternal grandparents (the “Grandparents”),
were allowed to question the witnesses and present evidence solely on the issue of whether appellant’s
parental rights should be terminated. The interveners are the stepfather’s parents and at the time of the
trial had possession of M.K.D. and C.B.D.


                                                          3
and in 2013 of alleged sexual abuse of T.L.S. According to Officer Merek, in January

2011, the police department received a referral from the Department, concerning a report

by T.D.S. to school officials that the stepfather had been sexually abusing T.L.S. by

bathing with T.L.S. “behind [appellant’s back]” and that it had been occurring “for months.”

When Officer Merek interviewed T.L.S., she denied that there had been any sexual

abuse. The case was then closed.

       Regarding T.D.S.’s report about the sexual abuse, in the Department’s exhibit No.

5, which is a psychological evaluation of appellant conducted by Michelle P. Moran, Ph.D.

and admitted into evidence, Dr. Moran documented that appellant told her the following:

       After [T.D.S.] made the outcry of [the alleged] sexual abuse [of T.L.S.]
       [appellant] spoke with [T.L.S.] about it, and [T.L.S.] had told her that her
       stepfather had touched her inappropriately. She reported that she took the
       situation seriously, as she herself had been the victim of sexual abuse in
       childhood. She reported that she asked for a rape kit to be completed,
       although it was not, and there was no medical evaluation that confirmed the
       abuse which [the stepfather] denied.

       According to Dr. Moran, the Department’s referral information indicated that the

stepfather passed a polygraph test and that the investigation “did not validate the

allegation [of sexual abuse] at that time.” Dr. Moran stated in the evaluation that appellant

“construed the situation to be fabrication by her son” due to T.D.S.’s alleged history of

lying. Officer Merek testified that appellant believed that T.D.S. was lying because he did

not like the stepfather. When asked if it is common for children to lie about sexual abuse,

Officer Merek replied that “[i]t’s not common” and that the statistics show that only two to

five percent of sexual abuse allegations are false. When asked by the children’s attorney

ad litem on cross-examination if it is “common when a child has not made an outcry for

[the child] to deny that any abuse is taking place,” Officer Merek replied, “Yes” because



                                                 4
the child is not ready to talk about it, and the child has “a lot of fears about different things

and retaliation is one of them.”

       Officer Merek could not “say that [appellant] was protective of [T.D.S.] at any point”

and stated,

       I can’t recall [appellant] ever being protective. [W]hen she told us I do
       remember her discrediting [T.D.S.] by saying that he doesn’t like [the
       stepfather], [the stepfather] disciplines him. He’s had a problem with [the
       stepfather] and it’s like [s]he was making excuses for why her son would lie
       about [the stepfather]. Not the fact that, you know, she was concerned
       about her daughter being molested. She was more concerned about the
       fact that she got to show that her son is a liar. So I just felt that she’s not—
       not really concerned about her daughter, the allegation about her daughter.

       According to Dr. Moran’s evaluation, appellant “reported that a second referral was

made in 2012, although this investigation also did not confirm the allegations,”5 and then

in October, 2013, after a third outcry, there was “conclusive evidence of sexual abuse”

because T.D.S. recorded the abuse on his phone’s video camera.

       Officer Merek testified that when she investigated the October 2013 allegation,

appellant

       was very rude, out of control at one point. Vindictive. She yelled at her
       children in front of me in a very hateful manner. While we had the children
       in the police department [appellant] was there with—I don’t remember. . . .

                [Appellant and two other adults] were in [another portion of the
       building] and [appellant] kept opening the door while I was trying to talk to
       the children. Several times she opened the door and I said, [appellant], I
       need you to stay out while I’m talking to the kids. And she just kept rudely
       opening the door. At one point she pushed the door open and she yelled
       at me and the two children who were sitting right there. She pointed at
       [T.L.S. and T.D.S.] and she said, you can have those two. I’m taking the
       little ones.




       5   Officer Merek’s testimony shows that she was unaware of the second incident.


                                                        5
       Officer Merek stated that at that point she asked appellant and the other two adults

to exit the building, and she locked the door “because [appellant] was so disruptive and

out of control I really did not feel safe with her being there.” Officer Merek went back to

her office, which had a window that “that looked out to the front where [appellant] and the

other two adults were” and then appellant knocked on the window to get the children’s

attention and T.D.S. closed the blinds. When asked, “What concern is it that the mother

kept barging in and interrupting,” Officer Merek responded,

             Intimidation; trying to recant; guilt; fear; all those things. When you
       have a parent who is not believing and then it’s not on the side of the child
       and being protective or even loving whatsoever.

              I mean, I—it would—just broke my heart that I had to lock her out
       because of the children, what they heard from their own mother saying I
       don’t want them. You can have them. I just want those two little ones.

       When asked, “Have you had any other incidents involving [appellant] while you

were investigating the case,” Officer Merek said:

              Yeah, but, I mean, I—I can’t remember details, just that she’s rude.
       She never believed the children. It was all about [the stepfather]. And I
       just—I just constantly thought it’s so sad for these two children that their
       mother has taken the [stepfather’s] side even after we had the video and
       we told her we have the evidence. We have proof. We have seen it. We
       know it’s him. He has raped your daughter. It’s all there.

               And she didn’t want to believe it. She wanted to see the video which
       we told her we can’t show her the video which she did later see the video
       but it was not in my presence.

In her evaluation of appellant, Dr. Moran documented that appellant told her that the

stepfather’s sexual abuse of T.L.S. had destroyed the family, that appellant was very

concerned for her children’s well-being, and that appellant had a melt-down when she

realized the allegations were true.




                                                6
        Officer Merek did not know whether appellant had visited the stepfather in jail.

However, his calls were monitored and recorded in jail, and according to Officer Merek,

appellant had spoken with the stepfather approximately thirty times or “probably more.”

However, Officer Merek was not sure whether those conversations occurred after

appellant saw the video.6 According to Officer Merek, the phone calls were

        [a]bout how she’s going to defend him. She’s going to stick by his side. We
        have no evidence. Don’t worry. You know, we’ll get through this. Those
        kids lied. Everything that she said was bad about the kids and it was all in
        support of [the stepfather]. And [the stepfather], his response was never,
        yeah, I’m innocent. He never said he was innocent. She kept saying I know
        you’re innocent, baby. I know you’re innocent. I know you didn’t do this,
        baby. He never once said no, I did. No, I didn’t do it or he never did say no
        I didn’t.

                ....

        He never denied it. Never denied it to her. But she just kept insisting to him
        over the phone conversations that I know you didn’t do this. These kids are
        liars. They have no evidence. They can’t prove anything. Don’t talk to the
        cops. Just very much in love and defending him.

        Regarding contact with the stepfather, Dr. Moran’s report stated that although

appellant was supportive of the prosecution of the stepfather, “[s]he has . . . maintained

communication with him, initially stating the need to confront him about why he had

victimized her daughter.”         However, according to Dr. Moran, appellant “accepted

feedback about the need to cease initiating or returning letters, phone calls, or any other

communication with him for her own emotional wellbeing.”

        Officer Merek testified that “it should have been obvious” to appellant that T.L.S.

was being sexually abused, but acknowledged that “[n]ot everybody has common sense.”



        6 Appellant stated that she saw the video two weeks after the stepfather was arrested on October

21, 2013 and denied that any of these phone calls occurred after she saw the video.


                                                       7
Officer Merek agreed that a mother should be “very” concerned if an adult male was

bathing her eight or nine-year-old daughter and that if her husband or boyfriend had been

investigated twice for sexual assault of her child, Officer Merek would be concerned “that

there might be something behind that.” Officer Merek stated that she would “definitely”

closely supervise the child in such a situation and keep the two apart “just in case.” Officer

Merek testified that in her opinion, appellant did not do everything she could have legally

done to protect T.L.S.

       Barbara Torgusen, a therapist, testified that she does pro bono work at The Harbor

Children’s Alliance Victims Center in Port Lavaca, Texas and that she had been meeting

with T.L.S. and T.D.S. since October 23, 2013 approximately once per week for an hour.

Torgusen stated that she became involved after receiving a referral that T.D.S. had

recorded T.L.S. being sexually assaulted and that her role was to “[h]elp them adjust to

their new normal.” Torgusen testified that when T.L.S. started her therapy, “Her hair hung

over her face[,] . . . she cried[,] and she was guilt-ridden. . . .” According to Torgusen,

T.L.S. felt “completely betrayed and devastated by not only what had happened with [the

stepfather] but [also with appellant’s] pacification that this was somehow [T.L.S.’s] fault.”

Regarding T.D.S., Torgusen explained that he was well dressed and calm, but that when

they discussed the stepfather’s sexual assault of T.L.S., “he was just livid” and

       had such rage that this had happened to his sister, that he was put in a
       position to have to videotape his sister. That his mom didn’t take them
       seriously, that he was not protected. That he had to do this when it had
       been brought to his mom’s attention already [and that] this is the third time.
       So there was a lot of betrayal and fear that he was going to have to go back
       and live with them and a lot of rage.

       Torgusen testified that T.L.S. had improved until recently “when apparently

[appellant had] made some entry into their lives again.” When asked, “What in [sic]

                                                 8
specifically have the kids told you that you feel is important for your working with them,”

Torgusen responded

               I think one of the most significant things that we have been dealing
       with is the betrayal of—of [appellant] towards the children. That she loves
       the younger two children and that they were kind of left on their own to care
       for the younger children.

               They felt like she was a good mom in public in that she came to the
       games, she did, you know, whatever was necessary at school but it was as
       if as soon as they shut the door to going back home that mom disappeared.
       So we’re looking at the betrayal and the anger of what happened. And the
       no protection. And the fact that they’re being blamed.

              And there is this horrible fear I know that [T.L.S.] had when she talked
       about often that her mom was going to come snatch her from school to the
       point where she asked me to call the school and make sure that they knew
       that she wasn’t allowed on the grounds. . . . [T.L.S.] was really scared of
       her mother.

According to Torgusen, T.L.S. and T.D.S. “never want to go back to their mother. That’s

a fear that they have.”

       Torgusen testified that T.L.S. and T.D.S. told her that they cared for the younger

two boys. Specifically, they told her that they made sure that the younger boys were

“changed” and “if they were outside they had to make sure that [the younger boys] were

cared for . . . otherwise they could go down to the park or wherever on their own” and

“[t]hat [T.L.S. and T.D.S.] did the cooking for them.” In addition, T.L.S. “referred to herself

as a mini mom, you know. That she felt like she had to do the laundry and the cooking

and taking care, basic care of these two small ones.” Torgusen stated that the children

told her that appellant was home but on the computer, often drinking, fighting with the

stepfather, or “having people over.” And according to the children, appellant “would stay

in the garage and drink and have parties and stuff like that.” The children informed

Torgusen that there was physical domestic violence in the home, and T.D.S. said “that

                                                  9
he really thought that they would kill each other.” According to Torgusen, “It was just a

volatile situation and [the children] didn’t know what—what was going to come out of it

day-to-day.”

       Torgusen read a letter from T.L.S. to appellant into the record. The letter states:

               Mom, I don’t know why you believe stupid instead of your own
       daughter and we have no idea how he passed the polygraph test. I want
       you to know how bad I’m hurting, mom. I did almost everything you asked
       and I’m so sorry I disobeyed you. I’m so sorry I let you down. Mama, as a
       daughter I have failed you. I am truly sorry. I am so sorry. I am so, so
       sorry. And I can’t believe what you said to me that night when we left, mom.
       You broke my heart. Every night I cry about what you said. I even have
       nightmares. I understand why you hate me so much. I failed you. I failed
       you. I love you so much. I love, love, love, love you. But it is still so hard
       to forgive you after what you said to me and [T.D.S] that night. Mom, if you
       really loved us you would have believed your kids. And, mom, stupid hits
       you all the time. Mama, you could have died from some of the— you all’s
       fights. Scared the boys too.

               And if you loved us you would give us our stuff. Mama, I mean all of
       it. Or our lock boxes. Everything. Everything. Everything. Please, mama.
       I’m begging you. And if you would our stuff [sic] out of the storage building
       too, please. Mama, and again I am so, so, so, so sorry I failed you.

              But please give us our stuff too. Us please. You will always be in
       my heart. We think you’re only [doing] this to get the boys back, but I love
       you. I will send you more letters.

Torgusen testified that T.L.S. said, “the last thing [appellant] said to her was that this is

all your fault. You are ruining our family. This is all your fault.” When asked the

significance of T.L.S. saying that she failed her mother, Torgusen replied

       At one point [T.L.S.] felt like she was the surrogate mom to [the two younger
       boys]. She also felt like she began to step in as a surrogate for [appellant],
       that with—with [the stepfather] that somehow instead of sleeping with
       [appellant] he was now sleeping with [T.L.S.] instead. If she had not told
       [T.D.S.] and he had not videotaped it this would not be happening. She
       feels completely guilty and responsible for the destruction of this family.




                                                10
       Torgusen was asked, “Did [T.L.S.] and [T.D.S] ever tell you that they tried to tell

their mother what was going on at other times?” Torgusen said,

       Yes. [T.L.S] said that I think it’s three years ago now that she—she told her
       mom [(appellant)] what was going on, that this had started happening when
       she was 8 years old and that she told her mom and her mom didn’t believe
       her. She felt like she came out to her mom about what happened after there
       had been an argument in the house. And so [T.L.S.] seemed to believe that
       her mom didn’t believe her because of the timing that this came out to begin
       with. But she had talked with [T.D.S.] about this and this is how it came out
       that [T.L.S.] and [T.D.S.] had talked to their mom and said this is what’s
       going on. She didn’t believe them. And so I understand that there was an
       allegation made to CPS at the time but nothing came of it. [Appellant] has
       mentioned that she didn’t know that she could take her daughter for a SANE
       exam and didn’t take her to the doctor because she didn’t know that she
       could. That is her belief and that at least that’s what she has expressed.

Torgusen stated that T.D.S. and T.L.S. have expressed that appellant should be in jail

with the stepfather because she is “almost equally culpable” and that “they were not

protected, that this is something that they’re going to have to live with forever and it

destroyed their family.”

       Torgusen also met with appellant twice for “about an hour” each time. According

to Torgusen, appellant attended the first session but because she had missed two

scheduled appointments without notifying her office, Torgusen sent appellant a

termination letter. Appellant attended the second session after receiving the termination

letter. However, according to Torgusen, after the second session, appellant decided to

terminate the counseling because appellant was moving out of the area and planned on

seeing another therapist. Torgusen stated that appellant never expressed any anger

toward the stepfather during the therapy sessions and instead expressed anger at the

children. Torgusen said that appellant felt that her older children “had conspired to ruin

her life and take her boys away from her. She felt victimized because she could not have



                                               11
known that [T.L.S.] was telling the truth because she always told lies and [the stepfather]

passed the polygraph.”

        Torgusen testified that appellant showed no remorse about the situation and no

concern for T.L.S.; and, it appeared to Torgusen that appellant blamed the children “for

letting this happen” and for “ruining” her life. Torgusen stated that “the overwhelming

majority of [parents she works with ask] how did this happen [to my child], what could I

have done to prevent it.” On cross-examination by appellant’s trial counsel, Torgusen

explained that although in her experience a parent whose child is removed by the

Department may express anger at the Department, “it’s not typical for [a parent] to say

this is [the child’s] fault. . . . If you hadn’t done whatever then this wouldn’t be happening”

and that “typically a parent [would be] more inclined to side with the child to make sure

that the child is safe.” Torgusen stated that the first time she spoke with appellant in

January 2014, appellant “said that her plan was eventually for when [the stepfather] got

out of jail in the future for her and the boys and [the stepfather] and probably [T.L.S. and

T.D.S.] to all be reunited, you know, with forgiveness and love.”7

        When asked if based on her experience with appellant she would recommend that

the children be returned to appellant, Torgusen replied, “Absolutely not.” When asked

what would happen to the children if they were returned to appellant, Torgusen said,

“[T]hat’s the worst possible outcome. I think just in the last few weeks I have seen

setbacks from both [T.L.S. and T.D.S] when [a couple of months prior to the termination

trial, appellant] [showed] up at The Harbor” and approached the children. Torgusen


        7 However, Dr. Moran documented in the psychological evaluation performed on January 10, 2014
that appellant “expected no reconciliation with [the stepfather] . . . . [and appellant] agreed to avoid any
future contact with him, and has the long-term goal of completing a divorce.”


                                                        12
explained that appellant claimed she was meeting with someone from the Department;

however, the Department was not located at the Harbor.             According to Torgusen,

appellant violated a court order by showing up at the Harbor and approaching the children

and also by approaching the children on another occasion. Torgusen explained that the

children did not appreciate appellant’s actions. She said that the children told her that

they had to “pull away” from appellant when she hugged them and that T.D.S. told

Torgusen that he “didn’t want anything to do with” appellant. On cross-examination,

Torgusen clarified that T.L.S. said “she was trying to get away” from appellant. Torgusen

testified that these unannounced visits from appellant

              re-raised a lot of fear and anger and frustration that they’re not safe.
       They’re very concerned that no matter what happens she will always pop
       up kind of like a jack in the box. . . . And that’s very disconcerting when you
       are trying to establish security and safety in the mind of a child who has
       been so traumatized. . . .

       Regarding the harm of allowing appellant to be in the children’s lives, Torgusen

stated, “I believe it would be completely devastating” and that the therapy sessions would

“have to go back to the beginning and start over with dealing with the betrayal, the anger,

the—the feelings of not being able to trust the person that’s supposed to take care of you

and protect you and look after you. . . ” and who has not done so. Torgusen believed that

any visitation with appellant would be “very harmful to the children.”            On cross-

examination, Torgusen testified that when she asked T.L.S. if she would like to see

appellant, T.L.S. “[a]t first said maybe someday in the future in a hundred years.”

Regarding whether it would be important for T.L.S. to be informed that appellant now

believes her and does not blame her for the sexual assault, Torgusen explained it would

be “helpful” if that were true. However, Torgusen stated that she had asked the children



                                                13
what if appellant apologized “and they were both very adamant that it wouldn’t be true, it

would just be more in their words BS. Would just be piled on to make her look good.”

      During cross-examination, appellant’s trial counsel read from appellant’s

psychological evaluation and asked the following questions:

             Now you do see in the psychological evaluation on Page 13 that Dr.
      Moran recommended that—that the children—I’m starting in the middle of
      number six, the middle of that paragraph. That they, being the children,
      should be advised that their mother has a different view of the situation
      currently and they should be allowed time to process the shift in her beliefs
      and the impact it might have on their relationships in the future. . . . Did you
      find that, Mrs. Torgusen?

             ....

             Do you disagree with that statement?

Torgusen responded, “I do” and explained why as follows:

             The reason that I disagree is when Dr. Moran interviewed [appellant]
      she was interviewing her to see what her—what her psycho social
      evaluation was. She has not talked with the children. She does not have a
      sense of what the impact has been on their life, you know. The lack of
      sleep, the nightmares, the betrayal, the not being able to get through school,
      interrupting their friends, having to move to another town. I don’t believe
      when she did the psycho social assessment that that was her methods. I
      think she thought at some point that it was not as bad as it was portrayed
      by maybe [appellant].

      The children’s attorney ad litem asked Torgusen about a questionnaire that

appellant completed as part of her therapy with Torgusen. The questionnaire, which the

trial court admitted into evidence, shows that when asked what she found significant in

the last year, appellant listed the stepfather’s arrest first and her hysterectomy second.

These are the only two items appellant found significant, and appellant did not list

anything regarding her children on the questionnaire that she found significant.         In

response to “What are your goals for therapy,” appellant wrote, “To get my kids back.”



                                                14
Torgusen agreed with the children’s attorney ad litem that it is “fair to say that [appellant]

is more concerned with herself than with her children” and that appellant puts her own

needs before her children.

       Based on Dr. Moran’s evaluation of appellant, Torgusen believed that appellant

“[is] egocentric, which means that she sees things from her point of view and is not able

at this time to see [it] from other people’s perspective.”       Torgusen agreed with the

children’s attorney ad litem when she asked, “So in other words, if her children—her

daughter is sexually assaulted and her son is forced to film it so that they can get help,

she sees how that [a]ffects her but not how it [a]ffects them?” Regarding whether

appellant should be allowed access to the children, Torgusen responded that Dr. Moran’s

evaluation provided that “If there were to be contact between them this should be in a

therapeutic family therapy context with a therapist well acquainted with the children” and

agreed that the contact should not occur “in the waiting room at The Harbor” or anywhere

else. Torgusen stated that she did not believe that appellant had made any progress

toward helping her children.

       Torgusen acknowledged that her assessment of appellant’s behavior was solely

based on the two therapy sessions with appellant and acknowledged that Dr. Moran

stated, “In contrast to her earlier denial [appellant] now fully accepts that her husband had

sexually assaulted her daughter and also takes responsibility for her role in failing to be

cognizant of this sooner.” On re-questioning, the children’s attorney ad litem asked if

Torgusen would be surprised that appellant continued visiting the stepfather in jail after

completing Dr. Moran’s evaluation on January 10, 2014, and Torgusen replied, “No, I

wouldn’t. She said at our first meeting that she had.” The ad litem asked, “Well, that’s



                                                 15
not agreeing to avoid any future contact [as stated to Dr. Moran]; is it?” Torgusen said,

“No, ma’am.”

       Jill O’Neill, a licensed professional counselor for C.B.D. and M.K.D., testified that

she had been their counselor since January of 2014. Initially, O’Neill met with the children

once a week individually for about forty-five minutes, but at the time of the termination

trial, she saw them together “about every two weeks” for an hour. O’Neill stated that she

observed signs that C.B.D. and M.K.D. had been neglected and elaborated that “they

don’t appear to have been products of a very nurturing environment. . . . I have observed

visits with them [and appellant] and they appear to be very detached from her. They

don’t . . . look to her for support and that’s been a concern of mine.” Regarding behaviors

indicating abuse, O’Neill said, “They have behavior, fluctuating behavior. They have

some episodes of withdrawal to where they—they’re anxious to ask for help to

communicate that they are—they have a lot of difficulty expressing their emotions.”

       O’Neill explained that she has observed signs of abuse and elaborated as follows:

C.B.D. “will be very infantile . . . with the mom. . . . There was one—he is—he’s very

controlling over [M.K.D.] that he wants to direct him and tell him when to do something

right and sometimes in children that are neglect[ed], they have been the caretaker for the

other child. And I see that a lot within these two boys.” O’Neill testified that C.B.D.’s and

M.K.D.’s self-esteem was “very low,” and she had not observed much progress with

M.K.D. O’Neill stated that C.B.D. had “come a long way” and his self-esteem had

improved significantly, but he was “not anywhere” close to where she would have liked

him to be. According to O’Neill, low self-esteem is caused by “lack of attachment, lack of

safety, instability, [and] stress.” O’Neill testified that when she asked the boys what the



                                                16
roles of the members of the family were, the boys responded that appellant was on the

computer and that the boys mentioned “[s]ignificant amounts of fighting” between

appellant and the stepfather. O’Neill opined that fighting between parents is “a major

stressor for a child” and “[i]t doesn’t make for a safe environment.” On direct examination,

the Department’s attorney informed O’Neill that T.L.S. was afraid that the stepfather

would kill appellant and asked if that would be traumatic to the children. O’Neill replied

that it would cause long term trauma. O’Neill stated that the boys told her that there had

been repeated verbal abuse in the home, cussing, “just the constant, constant conflict

between the parents,” and that the verbal abuse could potentially be “more harmful than

actual abuse.”

       O’Neill observed three visits that appellant had with C.B.D. and M.K.D., which she

described as “angry.” O’Neill explained, appellant “would become very angry. She would

leave the room several times. Very, very difficult in the communication skills that she

would use to problem solve with various people at the agency.” O’Neill stated that

appellant had yelled at, cursed, and verbally abused “people in the agency” in front of the

boys. O’Neill testified that appellant’s behavior is “stressful for them. . . . [T]hese are

people that are acting as caregivers for them at this time and . . . she’s very confrontive

[sic] with them.” O’Neill observed that there was a lack of bonding between appellant and

the boys. O’Neill stated that on one occasion C.B.D

       was telling [appellant] that [his guardian] disciplined him when [M.K.D.]
       drove out into the street on his bicycle. And [appellant] . . . became very
       angry, left the room and before she left the room [C.B.D.] tried to stop her
       and she ignored him. And when—after she had become argumentative with
       the workers involved she came back and [C.B.D.] said, mom, I tried to tell
       you I get in trouble when I tell [M.K.D.] to drive in the street. And so that—
       that reaction, that immediate reaction in anger was—was completed by him
       kind of reestablishing what he was trying to say to her.

                                                17
        O’Neill testified that both boys have stated that they miss appellant, but that C.B.D.

told her that if appellant did not bring him toys, he would not go to the visits. When asked

to rate the severity of the abuse in this case, O’Neill replied, “Very severe.” O’Neill stated

that in her professional opinion, she did not believe that the psychological needs of C.B.D.

and M.K.D. had been met. O’Neill explained, “I have history of working with people, with

children that are severely abused and neglected and placed in psychiatric facilities and

they want to go home. They want to see their mom. They—and what that explains to me

is that despite the abuse and despite the neglect they were given their basic needs were

met. Their basic emotional and physical, physiological needs were met, and I don’t see

that in this case.”

        O’Neill testified that appellant had “sabotaged every support system that has been

put in place for these kids.”         O’Neill explained that the children’s grandmother had

concerns that the boys had a lot of stressors and behavioral problems, so O’Neill

recommended for the grandmother to arrange that the boys get a psychological exam,

which the grandmother did. However, appellant cancelled the appointment.8 O’Neill

described the boys’ behavioral issues as follows: “They are impulsive at times. When—

when I initially began seeing them they were difficult to re-direct. They are physically

aggressive towards each other and towards other children at school. And they have a lot

of difficulty maintaining on-task behaviors at home and at school.” O’Neill did not agree




        8  Appellant denied cancelling the appointment and claimed that she merely rescheduled it because
it conflicted with her visitation date. Appellant acknowledged that she had no authority to cancel or
reschedule the children’s medical appointments at that time.


                                                       18
with appellant’s cancellation of the psychological exam because O’Neill believed it “would

have [been] a jumping off point to start rebuilding these boys’ lives and she cancelled it.”

       On cross-examination, by the interveners’ trial counsel, O’Neill emphasized that

appellant interfered “[w]ith [the children’s relationship with their] grandparents, with the

school, with—with the psychologist by cancelling the appointment.” O’Neill stated that

appellant also called her requesting that O’Neill not prescribe any medication for the boys

and that appellant said, “I don’t want my boys on any medication.” O’Neill had not

prescribed any medication for the boys at the time. However, O’Neill indicated that the

boys were on medication and that in her opinion it had helped them.               On cross-

examination by appellant’s trial counsel, O’Neill acknowledged that it is not necessarily

abusive when a parent does not want his or her children on medication. However, O’Neill

said, “But trying to—not trying to find what the source of the behaviors was I would

consider that abuse, especially in a situation like this.” O’Neill testified that the behavior

that C.B.D. and M.K.D. have shown are “common in kids that . . . are neglected” and that

is “clear” to her that they were neglected.

       O’Neill testified that C.B.D. and M.K.D. have told her that they want to stay in the

custody of the Grandparents. O’Neill stated that it would be harmful to C.B.D. and M.K.D.

if they were returned to appellant. O’Neill said,

       They would—my concern is that [appellant] has not actively [sought] out
       supports in the community that would have strengthened her parenting, that
       would—I’m not aware of any intense counseling that she has received for
       what this family has been through. And I think when there is abuse and
       neglect you have to really recognize and acknowledge that and figure out
       ways to recover from that, and I don’t know that that's taken place.

       O’Neill believed that it would be harmful to the children’s well-being if they were

returned to appellant and the neglect continued because “they would continue to not have

                                                 19
the supports that they needed and in their basic emotional needs would not be met.”

When asked whether it would be harmful to the children if the trial court allowed appellant

to visit them, O’Neill responded, “I believe so.” The judge asked O’Neill whether violence

is a learned behavior and what types of behaviors did she see in children who grow up in

a home with domestic violence. O’Neill responded that violence is a learned behavior

and that children in homes where there is domestic violence will “act out on other kids.

They’ll act out on other family members, other people that are crucial in their development.

They will . . . redirect their anger to those types of people.” The judge stated, “You had

mentioned . . . that the children were physically aggressive toward other children at

school” and asked if that would be an example of the type of behavior children who

witnessed domestic violence exhibit. O’Neill replied, “Yes. It is. And in this case I believe

it’s also directly related with lack of speech and communication for M.K.D. at an early

age.” The judge said and asked the following: “You said they’re impulsive, physically

aggressive to others, can’t maintain on-task behaviors and are attention seeking. Are

there any of those behaviors that are inconsistent with children who are raised in a home

where they observe domestic violence?”         O’Neill replied, “No.    None of those are

inconsistent.”

       On direct examination by the Department, appellant testified that at the time of the

trial she was in the process of moving out of her apartment because she could no longer

afford the rent and that she was house sitting for an “adopted aunt” for one week. When

asked if she had another place to live, appellant replied that was “in the works” and agreed

that once the week ended potentially she would not have a home. Appellant stated that

she is “in between jobs at the moment” but that she had submitted her applications for



                                                20
several jobs and been interviewed. Appellant had been unemployed since August 19,

2014.

        When asked when she last visited the stepfather in jail, appellant replied that she

had visited him “about a week or two ago” and that she had an argument with M.K.D. and

C.B.D.’s grandmother while there. Appellant later explained that her

        visits with [the stepfather] were questions of why would you do this, do you
        realize the damage that you have caused to not just the kids but to his
        parents and to everybody involved and it was to get answers. And the last
        visit that I had with him was whenever I found out that he was sentenced to
        thirty years and him—it was almost as if he was boastful in, oh, I finally did
        the honorable thing.

        Appellant testified that she did not want to reconcile with the stepfather and that

her children were “extremely” important to her. Appellant stated that she did not want her

parental rights terminated because her children were “her life.”

        Appellant acknowledged that the trial court ordered her to follow a service plan as

set out by the Department; however, appellant claimed that she had completed everything

required by the service plan “unless there was something [she] was missing or [she had]

overlooked.” The Department’s trial counsel stated, “Supposed to have a home,” and

“Supposed to have a job?” Appellant responded, “Well, I had a home for six months, sir”

and “I had a job and I was going to school and I was still making visitations and I was still

making appointments. . . .” When asked if she had met all the goals listed in the service

plan, appellant responded:

               Sir, my understanding the very beginning was that this was not going
        to be a long, drawn out process. I went out as I had stated at the last time
        we were at trial, I took our income tax. I went and paid six months on an
        apartment to find me some time because I was expecting to have my
        children back and we were going to go from there as a family. And I was
        told that I was required to maintain a three bedroom home, which I did.



                                                 21
       Appellant admitted that she had called T.D.S. a liar but denied that she had called

T.L.S. a liar. Appellant acknowledged that she had told Officer Merek that she only

wanted the two younger children and that Officer Merek could keep T.L.S. and T.D.S.

Despite her earlier denial, appellant agreed that she had also called T.L.S. a liar and that

what had happened was all T.L.S.’s fault because appellant believed that T.L.S. was

“protecting” T.D.S. According to appellant, after the stepfather passed the polygraph test,

T.L.S. consistently told her that the stepfather had not sexually abused her and that

appellant explained to T.L.S. that if it happened appellant “would believe [T.L.S.] in a

heartbeat.” When asked why she called T.L.S. a liar even after the police had a video of

the sexual abuse, appellant said she did so because she “was still in shock that [the family

was] going through this again after doing everything in [her] power the first go around to

get the truth one way or another without the shadow of a doubt. . . .” When asked if she

attempted to protect T.L.S. after T.D.S. made the first outcry, appellant replied,

               Yes, sir. Any time I left the house she went with me. [The stepfather]
       wouldn’t even walk down the hallway if she was in the bathroom, if she was
       in her room. And where—the way our house was set up is you walk through
       the front door. That was the play room. Off to the right is the kitchen. Off
       to the right of that is the hallway where it was her bedroom, the bathroom,
       and it was our room and then the boys’ room.

              ....

              I did this for about six months and I was calling CPS because we
       were supposed to have family counseling. We were supposed to have
       individual counseling. And I’m calling everybody saying, hey, where is this
       counseling[?] What do I do[?] I called the school and they’re like they
       haven’t set anything up yet. I said no, and I’ve been trying to get ahold of
       them.

       Regarding the second allegation of sexual abuse, appellant testified that she did

not take any steps to protect T.L.S. from the stepfather. Appellant acknowledged that



                                                22
she allowed the stepfather to take T.L.S. on an overnight hunting trip alone but stated that

she gave T.L.S. permission to go because Segura, the Department’s caseworker, told

her “[d]on’t worry about it,” “[l]et them go,” and that she was closing the case. Appellant

testified that she also allowed the stepfather to take T.L.S. “[i]n June” to a “father/daughter

day” at work. Appellant acknowledged that she left T.L.S. in the home with the stepfather

but that the other children were also home. Appellant claimed that T.L.S. and T.D.S.

never told her that the stepfather was sexually abusing T.L.S.

       When asked if the children lied about appellant being on the computer and that

T.L.S. and T.D.S. took care of M.K.D. and C.B.D., appellant responded, “I think it was a

little bit of an overexaggeration” because the children were mad at her.            Appellant

explained that when she was on the computer either M.K.D. or C.B.D. would sit on her

lap and watch cartoons or movies. Appellant denied that T.L.S. and T.D.S. took care of

the two younger boys. Appellant acknowledged that she and the stepfather would yell

and cuss at each other in front of the children mainly due to the stepfather’s affairs. When

asked if the stepfather ever hit her, appellant said, “[Yes, h]e was on two years[’]

probation” and explained, “[h]e actually shoved me in front of the cops and got put on

probation for two years.” Appellant said that the stepfather hit her in front of the children

and she also hit him in front of the children.

       On questioning by her trial counsel, appellant stated that she takes responsibility

for what happened to T.L.S. Appellant stated that she recognized that she had domestic

violence problems in her marriage and that she attends domestic violence classes. On

cross-examination by the intervener’s trial counsel, appellant stated that she failed T.L.S.

because T.L.S. did not know she could talk to appellant. When asked if she thought it



                                                 23
was appropriate to allow the children to witness the domestic violence, appellant

responded that she and the stepfather were finding a marriage counselor when the third

sexual abuse outcry occurred. On cross-examination by the children’s attorney ad litem,

appellant testified that prior to the stepfather passing the polygraph test, T.L.S. told her

that the stepfather “stuck his thing in her bottom,” and that she did not know what to do

about it.9 Appellant later explained that when the stepfather passed the polygraph it

meant “[t]hat [her] prayers [were] answered that the truth was known. . . .” and “that the

abuse wasn’t happening. . . .” After he passed the polygraph, appellant believed the

stepfather when he denied sexually abusing T.L.S. and did not believe T.D.S. or T.L.S.

Appellant testified that she “truly believed and thought that this was [T.L.S.’s and T.D.S.’s]

way of going and living with their dad” and that T.L.S. was “protecting” and “going along

with” T.D.S.

        Appellant testified that she recognized that there must be a serious problem for the

children to have allegedly lied about the sexual abuse but claimed she had no idea how

to address the problem. Appellant did not seek counseling for her children at that time

and claimed that she believed that the Department was setting up counseling for the

family. According to appellant, when the Department failed to set up the counseling, she

called “the school.”10

        The following exchange then occurred between the ad litem and appellant:



         9 During direct examination by the Department, appellant stated that T.L.S. and T.D.S. “never”

talked to her about the sexual abuse. Specifically, appellant said, “[T.L.S.] never came to me on her own
or anything like that. It was—this was never exposed until CPS was already involved or the DA was involved
or I’m getting a phone call or . . . .”
         10 It is clear that appellant stated that she called someone at the school once the Department failed

to set up counseling; however, we are unable to understand the rest of her answer.


                                                         24
Q.   If [T.L.S.] is lying to you and you tell [the stepfather] to get out
     of the house and you later find out she’s lying to you
     then . . . you have to apologize to [the stepfather], he has to
     move back in. But if she’s telling you the truth this child is
     being molested continuously. Which was the safer course
     here?

A.   That’s why they put a safety plan in effect. His mom was
     staying with us.

Q.   [Appellant], I’m talking about what you did. Not what they did.
     You’re the mother.

A.   I didn’t know what to do because I have four—three other kids
     there too.

Q.   None of them are being molested by your husband.

A.   But I am looking at the family as a whole.

Q.   Well, you should be looking at your daughter who is being
     molested; right?

A.   I’m looking at it as a whole. I didn’t know which way to go.

Q.   Okay. [Appellant], did [T.L.S.] ever tell you another time
     that—

A.   No.

Q.   She never told you another time and you didn’t slap her?

A.   No.

Q.   You are sure about that?

A.   Yes.

Q.   All right. But given the circumstances then do you really
     wonder why she didn’t come and talk to you anymore?

A.   She wasn’t talking to me that much in the first place and that’s
     why I was trying to spend that one-on-one time with her very
     often.




                                 25
Q.   Well, you’re saying that you are sorry that she didn’t feel like
     she was able to talk to you. Aren’t you sorry you didn’t do a
     better job of protecting your children?

A.   I’m sorry that I trusted the wrong person.

Q.   [Appellant], you are the parent. Who is responsible here?

A.   That’s what I’m saying.

Q.   Who is responsible?

A.   That’s what I’m saying. I—

Q.   No. Answer my question.

A.   I am.

Q.   And did you fail in your responsibility?

A.   I—that’s what I said earlier.

Q.   What?

A.   That I failed my daughter in protecting her.

Q.   You said that you were sorry she couldn’t come to you and
     talk to you.

A.   Because if I had known—

Q.   You did know. . . .

A.   No. If I had known, truly knew without the shadow of a doubt
     I would have done something.

Q.   Why do you have to know beyond a shadow of a doubt? Why
     can’t you just trust your daughter?

A.   Because this was my family. There wasn’t just one. There
     was four involved. There is actually six of us involved if you
     really want to think about it.

Q.   You didn’t protect [T.L.S.], and that destroyed your whole
     family; isn’t that true?



                                26
              A.     Yeah, it is.

       Carol Wilson, the CASA volunteer supervisor for the children, testified that her

responsibility in the case was to ensure that the children were in a safe environment and

to support them through the trial. She was also responsible for making a recommendation

to the trial court concerning the best interest of the children. When asked to provide her

recommendation, Wilson stated, “These children have suffered a lot, irreparably at the

hands of neglect[ful] and abusive parents. It’s in CASA's best interest of the children that

the parental rights for all three of these parents be terminated so that they can be adopted

and they can begin the healing process.” Regarding why she believed that it was in the

children’s best interest that appellant’s parental rights be terminated, Wilson testified:

              Well, [she has] failed to protect her children. She’s acknowledged
       that on more than one occasion. She got a service plan. She hasn’t
       completed or hasn’t followed through completely or satisfactorily in that
       service plan. She doesn’t have a stable home. She doesn’t have a stable
       job. And I’m not completely—CASA, I being the representative don’t feel
       that she completely accepts responsibility so that she can begin to heal and
       help the children heal.

       On cross-examination, Wilson stated that after observing appellant’s interaction

with M.K.D. and C.B.D. at the visitations, she did not believe that appellant exhibited good

parenting skills and that she did not appropriately “apply the behaviors that you learn of

anger management, of redirecting and role modeling.” Wilson explained that appellant

had exhibited angry outbursts and that appellant’s focus was directed more on the case

worker assistant “than it was focused on her children.”

       Appellant presented testimony from Crystal Eubanks and Erika Mozdzierz.

Eubanks, a licensed professional counselor with the crisis center for Matagorda and

Wharton County, testified that she has been treating appellant since April 9, 2014



                                                 27
because appellant’s husband had sexually assaulted T.L.S.           Eubanks stated that

appellant told her that she believed T.L.S. “[f]rom the very beginning of [the] therapy

sessions all the way up to date.” Eubanks believed that with continued counseling,

appellant would be capable of protecting her children. Eubanks acknowledged that she

had not observed appellant with her children and believed that in order “to have a better

opinion” concerning whether appellant could protect the children, Eubanks would need to

observe appellant’s interaction with the children first.   Eubanks did not believe that

appellant had mastered all of her problems. When asked whether she recognized that

appellant may have some problems taking care of the children, she replied, “Right now

she is currently unemployed. She doesn’t have a place for them to go right now. So

there would definitely need to be some things in place before she could be capable of

doing that.” Eubanks testified that she did not know whether appellant would likely put

her children in a dangerous situation in the future. However, Eubanks believed that

appellant intends to protect the children and that appellant has the capacity to improve

her parenting skills in that regard.

       During cross-examination by the Department, Eubanks testified that appellant has

taken responsibility for what happened to T.L.S. and told Eubanks that “she should have

been more aware basically, that she feels guilty . . . [because] she should have known.”

Appellant did not tell Eubanks that she called her children liars or that she had initially

blamed T.L.S. Appellant did not tell Eubanks that there had been domestic violence in

her relationship with the stepfather, and Eubanks agreed that would be something that

needed to be addressed prior to the children being returned to appellant. Appellant did

not inform Eubanks that the children had been neglected, and Eubanks agreed that was



                                               28
an issue that needed to be addressed also prior to forming an opinion regarding whether

the children should be returned or whether appellant’s parental rights should be

terminated. Eubanks acknowledged that she could not render an opinion regarding

termination of appellant’s parental rights because she was not privy to all of the

information concerning the children such as appellant’s interaction with the children or the

children’s therapist’s opinion that it would be harmful for the children to even have visits

with the children.

       On cross-examination by the children’s attorney, Eubanks agreed that “there’s a

lot of things [appellant] needs to change before [she could] even get to the point of seeing

how the relationship with [appellant’s] children [could] be repaired.” Eubanks stated that

she was “not comfortable putting a time frame” on when appellant would be in “good

shape to start dealing with her kids.” When asked by the Department if Eubanks would

be concerned if she learned that appellant had continued to visit the stepfather in jail as

recently as three weeks prior to the termination trial, Eubanks said, “Yes.”

       Mozdzierz, a case worker with the Department, testified that she had been

assigned to appellant’s case in October 2013. Regarding placement of M.K.D. and

C.B.D. with the Grandparents, Mozdzierz stated that she believes that the grandmother

“wants to better her parenting and receive support for herself so that she can provide for

[them]” and that on her own initiative, the grandmother sought counseling to deal with the

fact that her son, the stepfather, had sexually abused T.L.S. Mozdzierz testified that

although at first, the grandmother did not believe that the stepfather had sexually

assaulted T.L.S., through counseling, “she now can verbalize that she believes the abuse

occurred.”   In comparison to the grandmother’s attitude, Mozdzierz explained that



                                                29
appellant’s “attitude [during the course of this case] has been that this isn’t her fault and

that things that have happened is the fault of the Department or other people.”

        Mozdzierz testified that M.K.D. and C.B.D. have bonded with the Grandparents,

who are the interveners in this case. According to Mozdzierz, M.K.D. and C.B.D. love the

Grandparents and it would be harmful to them if they were removed from the

Grandparents’ home. In addition, Mozdzierz stated that O’Neill had testified that M.K.D.

and C.B.D. wanted to stay with the Grandparents and that they did not want to go back

to appellant. Mozdzierz testified that “all four children would like to remain in their [current]

placements.”11 Mozdzierz stated that she is satisfied with placement of the children with

the Grandparents with continued counseling and the Grandparents have attempted to

better themselves in order to take care of M.K.D. and C.B.D. According to Mozdzierz, if

the Department were granted permanent managing conservatorship of M.K.D. and

C.B.M., the Department would continue to monitor their placement with the Grandparents

to ensure placement was in the best interest of the children prior to any adoption by the

Grandparents.

        Mozdzierz stated that the Department had concerns about the current placement

of M.K.D. and C.B.D. with the Grandparents because it had received information that the

grandmother had spanked the two boys, which is against the Department’s discipline

policy; however, the Department informed the grandmother of the policy, and the

grandmother is “receiving counseling to help her better manage the boys’ behavior and



        11Specifically, Mozdzierz testified that although T.D.S. has stated that he loves appellant, he “does
not want to see [her] or he has not reported to me that he wants to see [her].” Mozdzierz stated that T.D.S.
told her about the domestic violence he had witnessed in the home and that T.L.S. told her that she
witnessed appellant being choked and “[s]he said one time she was hit with a bat and that [the stepfather]
pushed her against a wall and all four children were present at that time.”


                                                         30
that will be ongoing.”12 When asked if she was concerned that M.K.D. and C.B.D. had

been placed in the home of the people that raised the stepfather, Mozdzierz replied, “No”

and explained that the stepfather “is an adult and I don’t think that how [the grandmother

or grandfather] raised him is related to his choices in abusing his step daughter.” Upon

cross-examination by the ad litem, Mozdzierz agreed that the Grandparents are “both

willing to accept responsibility for their actions when they have done something wrong”

and that the grandmother has expressed remorse for not believing T.L.S. and T.D.S.

        Mozdzierz testified that appellant had not sufficiently completed or complied with

her service plan. Mozdzierz believed that appellant had not satisfactorily completed any

of the goals in the service plan. Specifically, according to Mozdzierz, appellant had not

“demonstrate[d] an acceptance of the responsibility of being a parent” based on her

observation of appellant’s trial testimony. Mozdzierz elaborated that she believed that

appellant “had difficulty accepting that she was responsible for the abuse that occurred

to [T.L.S.].” Mozdzierz took issue with appellant’s answer to what she had done wrong

as being that she had “trusted the wrong person.” Mozdzierz did not believe that answer

showed that appellant had satisfactorily accepted responsibility. In addition, Mozdzierz

did not believe that appellant had satisfactorily completed the goal of learning and using

“parenting practices that meet the emotional and developmental needs of her children”

based on O’Neill’s testimony that appellant had “sabotaged all of the boys’ support




        12Mozdzierz testified that at her visitation with M.K.D. and C.B.D. appellant “checks the children
from head to toe for any mark” and then points those marks out to Mozdzierz. However, Mozdzierz believed
that many of the marks were “normal for the children their age.” Mozdzierz stated that sometimes when
appellant claims that there are marks on the children, Mozdzierz does not see any marks. Mozdzierz
explained that any marks that she has seen have not concerned her.


                                                       31
systems” and “she’s exhibited angry behavior, has yelled in front of the boys and has

been very hostile in front of the boys.”

       Regarding whether appellant met the goal of “demonstrat[ing] an ability to provide

basic necessities such as food, clothing, shelter, medical care and supervision of her

children,” Mozdzierz agreed that testimony had established that appellant did not have a

job or an apartment.      The Department’s trial counsel asked whether appellant has

achieved the goal of “demonstrat[ing] the ability to provide her children with adequate

care and nurturing demonstrating an ability to bond with her children,” and Mozdzierz

responded that “O’Neill stated that she has not observed [appellant] to be attached or

bonded to her children.”      Mozdzierz testified that, as required by the service plan,

appellant had not “demonstrate[d] an ability to be protective of her children so her children

will not be at risk of abuse or neglect in the future.” The children’s attorney ad litem asked,

if appellant had made “even minimal progress on her counseling at this point” given that

her therapists testified that “there may be things [she] is unaware of,” Mozdzierz

responded, “No.” Mozdzierz believed that appellant “thinks about herself before her

children.”

       When asked why she believed that appellant’s parental rights should be

terminated, Mozdzierz replied

             Well, at this time [appellant] is unable to provide for the immediate
       physical needs of her children, including having a house for them and she’s
       unemployed. She has no ability to support them. [Appellant] has not
       completed her service plan. She has not demonstrated that she’s able to
       meet the emotional needs of her children, and this has been indicated
       through several instances throughout the case.

              The first would be in November of 2013 the Department asked
       [appellant] to bring us the children’s clothing and belongings and she
       refused and then wanted to bargain with us and said that she would bring

                                                 32
         their clothing and belongings if a trumpet that [T.D.S.] had at the time was
         returned to her.      And December of 2013 [appellant] posted on her
         Facebook that [T.L.S.] was molested.

This concerned Mozdzierz because T.L.S. told her that “she feels like people know that

she’s been sexually abused just by looking at her and that makes her feel very insecure.”

Mozdzierz stated that she believed that appellant posted the sexual abuse on her

Facebook page “out of anger and had complete disregard for her daughter’s feelings, and

this was on a public social media website.”13 Mozdzierz believed it would be “very

detrimental” to the children if they were placed back in a home with appellant because

she did not believe appellant “views her children, at least the older two very favorabl[y]

and I would be very concerned for their safety” because “her instinct was not to protect

them” and to “call them liars.”

         In addition, Mozdzierz explained some of the concerns as follows:

                [T.L.S.] has reported that there’s a student at school who watches
         her and reports back to her mother who happens to be friends with
         [appellant]. The Department does believe that that was happening because
         [appellant] has called [T.L.S.’s] placement and has said things like [T.L.S.]
         has a boyfriend. You know she has a boyfriend. And somebody is giving
         her that information and that disrupts [T.L.S.’s] school environment as well.

                 Every month when I visit [T.L.S.] and [T.D.S.] I asked them if they
         want to see their mother and they have told me no. And I have relayed that
         information to [appellant]. Knowing that her children don’t want to see her,
         she has called their placement sometimes fifteen to twenty times in a row.
         She’s left a message and [T.L.S.] told me that just hearing her mom’s voice
         gave her chills. And I don’t think [appellant] understands how her behavior
         [a]ffects her children.




         13  Appellant admitted that she posted that T.L.S. had been molested on her Facebook page. When
asked why, she replied that she did it because the interveners were “telling everybody” that it was T.L.S.’s
fault that the stepfather was in jail, so she clarified that the stepfather was in jail for “molesting” her daughter.


                                                             33
       Mozdzierz testified that “[appellant] has failed to address the issues of sexual

abuse and domestic violence sufficiently which poses a risk to the children’s emotional

well-being, if they—they’re at risk to being exposed to future abuse and neglect. And

then again to follow-up both” and that “Barbra Torgusen and Jill O’Neill stated that it would

be detrimental to all four children’s healing process if there was a continued parent/child

relationship with [appellant].”

       Regarding why she believed that appellant’s remorse was not genuine but that the

grandmother’s remorse was genuine, Mozdzierz stated that appellant had “never told

[her] that she’s sorry about what happened to [T.L.S.] or her other children” and that when

she talked to the grandmother “on more than one occasion she has became [sic] teary

and cried and said that she was wrong in making those statements to [T.L.S. and T.D.S.].”

                    III.    APPLICABLE LAW AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

       Involuntary termination of parental rights involves fundamental constitutional rights

and divests the parent and child of all legal rights, privileges, duties, and powers normally

existing between them, except for the child’s right to inherit from the parent. Holick v.

Smith, 685 S.W.2d 18, 20 (Tex. 1985); see In re D.S.P., 210 S.W.3d 776, 778 (Tex.

App.—Corpus Christi 2006, no pet.).          Therefore, termination of the parent-child

relationship must be supported by clear and convincing evidence. In re J.L., 163 S.W.3d

79, 84 (Tex. 2005); In re D.S.P., 210 S.W.3d at 778. This intermediate standard falls

between the preponderance of the evidence standard of civil proceedings and the

reasonable doubt standard of criminal proceedings. In re G.M., 596 S.W.2d 846, 847

(Tex. 1980); In re C.S., 208 S.W.3d 77, 83 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006, pet. denied);




                                                34
Porter v. Tex. Dep’t of Protective & Regulatory Servs., 105 S.W.3d 52, 57 (Tex. App.—

Corpus Christi 2003, no pet.).

       Before terminating the parent-child relationship, the trial court must find that the

parent committed one of the acts prohibited by section 161.001(b)(1)(A–T) of the Texas

Family Code and that termination is in the child’s best interest. TEX. FAM. CODE ANN.

§ 161.001(b)(1)(A–T) (West, Westlaw through Ch. 46 2015 R.S.); id. § 161.001(b)(2)

(West, Westlaw through Ch. 46 2015 R.S.); In re J.L., 163 S.W.3d at 84. A parent violates

section 161.001(b)(1) if the parent does, among other things, the following:                (1)

“knowingly place[s] or knowingly allow[s] the children to remain in conditions or

surroundings which endanger the physical or emotional well-being of the children,” TEX.

FAM. CODE ANN. § 161.001(b)(1)(D); (2) “engage[s] in conduct or knowingly place[s] the

children with persons who engaged in conduct which endangers the physical or emotional

well-being of the children,” id. § 161.001(b)(1)(E); or (3) fails to “comply with the provisions

of a court order that specifically established the actions necessary for the mother to obtain

the return of the children who have been in the permanent or temporary managing

conservatorship of the [Department] for not less than nine months as a result of the

children’s removal from the parents under Chapter 262 for the abuse or neglect of the

children,” id. § 161.001(b)(1)(O).

       In reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting parental termination,

we must “look at all the evidence in the light most favorable to the finding to determine

whether a reasonable trier of fact could have formed a firm belief or conviction that its

finding was true.” In re J.L., 163 S.W.3d at 85 (quoting In re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d 256, 266

(Tex. 2002)); In re D.S.P., 210 S.W.3d at 778. We must assume that the trier of fact



                                                  35
resolved disputed facts in favor of its finding if it was reasonable to do so. In re J.L., 163

S.W.3d at 85. We must also disregard all evidence that a reasonable fact-finder could

have disbelieved or found to be incredible. City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802, 827

(Tex. 2005); In re D.S.P., 210 S.W.3d at 778. “If [an appellate court] determines that no

reasonable fact-finders could form a firm belief or conviction that the matter that must be

proven is true, then that court must conclude that the evidence is legally insufficient.” In

re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at 266.

       In a factual sufficiency review, “[w]e must determine whether, on the entire record,

a fact-finder could reasonably form a firm conviction or belief that the parent violated a

provision of section 161.001(b)(1) and that the termination of the parent’s parental rights

would be in the best interest of the child.” In re M.C.T., 250 S.W.3d 161, 168 (Tex. App.—

Fort Worth 2008, no pet.) (citing In re C.H., 89 S.W.3d 17, 28 (Tex. 2002)). Under this

standard, we consider whether the “disputed evidence is such that a reasonable

fact[-]finder could not have resolved the disputed evidence in favor of its finding.” In re

J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at 266. The evidence is factually insufficient “[i]f, in light of the entire

record, the disputed evidence that a reasonable fact[-]finder could not have credited in

favor of the finding is so significant that a fact[-]finder could not reasonably have formed

a firm belief or conviction. . . .” Id.

                                          IV.   DISCUSSION

       By her first three issues, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and

factually insufficient to prove by clear and convincing evidence that she violated section

161.001(b)(1) of the family code by: (1) knowingly placing or knowingly allowing the

children to remain in conditions or surroundings which endangered their physical or



                                                 36
emotional well-being; (2) engaging in conduct or knowingly placing the children with

persons who engaged in conduct which endangered the physical or emotional well-being

of the children; and (3) failing to comply with the provisions of a court order that specifically

established the actions necessary for her to obtain the return of the children who were in

the permanent or temporary managing conservatorship of the Department for not less

than nine months as a result of the children’s removal from her under chapter 262 for

abuse or neglect of the children. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 161.001(b)(1)(D), (E), (O).

By her fourth issue, appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence

supporting the trial court’s finding that termination is in the children’s best interest.

A.     Violation of Sections 161.001(b)(1)(D), (E), and (O)

       Appellant first argues that she did not act knowingly because she was unaware of

any endangerment to her children or “even knew that there was a risk for sexual abuse

and disregarded that risk.” Appellant claims that the fact that she had no reason to believe

that the abuse was actually occurring excused her from protecting T.L.S. until she viewed

the video and saw the abuse for herself. Appellant also claims that she could not have

acted knowingly because she was unaware of the harmful consequences of allowing the

children to witness domestic violence.

       Sections 161.001(b)(1)(D) and (E) both require a finding of endangerment. In

Interest of E.M., __ S.W.3d __, No. 10-14-00313-CV, 2015 WL 3485317, at *6 (Tex.

App.—El Paso May 28, 2015, no pet.). To endanger means to expose to loss or injury,

to jeopardize. Id. (citing In re M.C., 917 S.W.2d 268, 269 (Tex. 1996); Tex. Dep’t Human

Servs. v. Boyd, 727 S.W.2d 531, 533 (Tex. 1987)). The specific danger to a child’s




                                                  37
physical or emotional well-being may be inferred from parental misconduct and does not

need to be established as an independent proposition. Id.

       Under subsection (D), “we look to see if the environment itself poses a danger to

the child’s physical or emotional well-being.” In re A.B., 125 S.W.3d 769, 775 (Tex.

App.—Texarkana 2003, pet. denied). Under subsection (E), the evidence must show a

“course of conduct” and our analysis “focuses on conduct of either the parent or the

persons with whom the parent has placed the children.” In re A.B., 125 S.W.3d 769, 776–

77 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2003, pet. denied). “It is beyond question that sexual abuse

is conduct that endangers a child’s physical or emotional well-being” and “[p]arental

knowledge that an actual offense has occurred is not necessary; it is sufficient that the

parent was aware of the potential for danger and disregarded that risk.” Id. Thus, the

evidence does not have to show that appellant actually knew that the stepfather was

sexually abusing T.L.S., as she argues, but it must show that appellant was aware of the

potential for danger of the sexual abuse and disregarded that risk. See id. “Evidence of

sexual abuse of another child, coupled with a present or future danger to the child in

question, is also relevant to determine whether a parent has engaged in an endangering

course of conduct, even if the abuse occurred prior to the birth of the subject child.” In re

R.W., 129 S.W.3d 732, 739 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2004, pet denied).

       It is undisputed that the stepfather was convicted for the continuous sexual abuse

of T.L.S. and that T.D.S. recorded an incident of the sexual abuse on his phone.14 The

indictment, which the trial court admitted into evidence, alleged that the stepfather had

sexually abused T.L.S. from 2007 until 2013 by intentionally or knowingly causing his


       14   Appellant testified that the stepfather pleaded guilty and was sentenced to thirty years.


                                                          38
sexual organ to penetrate her anus and sexual organ, by penetrating her sexual organ

with his finger, and by touching her breasts.15 The record also reflects that the judge

interviewed T.L.S. off the record in his chambers.

       Appellant admitted at trial that after the first outcry, T.L.S. told her that the

stepfather had “stuck his thing in her bottom” and that appellant did not believe T.L.S.

According to appellant, after this first allegation, she kept the stepfather and T.L.S. apart

for “six months” by making sure that when she left the house, she took T.L.S. with her.

Thus, although T.L.S. had told her that the stepfather penetrated her anus with his sexual

organ, and prior to him allegedly “passing” a polygraph test, appellant continued to live in

the home with the stepfather and allowed her children to remain in the home with him.

According to appellant, after the stepfather passed the polygraph test and the case was

closed, she believed that the children had lied about the sexual abuse and took no further

steps concerning the allegations even though appellant acknowledged that there must

have been a serious problem for the children to have allegedly lied about sexual abuse.

Officer Merek testified that the first police investigation was closed after T.L.S. denied that

there had been any sexual abuse.

       Regarding the second allegation, Dr. Moran documented that T.L.S. “made an

outcry of molestation that occurred in their home when [appellant] was absent” and that

T.L.S. “reportedly told” appellant about the sexual abuse, but appellant did not believe

her. The case was closed because the allegations could not be confirmed. Appellant

testified that after the second allegation, she did not attempt to keep the stepfather and

T.L.S. apart and claimed the Department’s caseworker told her that it was fine to allow


       15   T.L.S. was born in 2000.


                                                 39
the stepfather to be alone with T.L.S., and she allowed the stepfather to take T.L.S. on

an overnight trip.

         After the third instance that the children made an outcry of sexual abuse, appellant

again called T.L.S. and T.D.S. liars and blamed T.L.S. for the situation despite that the

police told appellant that a video existed that proved the stepfather had sexually abused

T.L.S.16 Officer Merek testified that after the stepfather was in jail, in recordings of

appellant’s phone calls to him, she insisted that he was innocent and called the children

liars.   In addition, Officer Merek stated that appellant’s erratic behavior when she

questioned T.D.S. and T.L.S. after the third outcry concerned her because it appeared as

if appellant was attempting to intimidate the children or “trying to recant; guilt; fear.”17

According to Torgusen, T.L.S. told her that both she and T.D.S. had informed appellant

that the stepfather was sexually abusing her and that the abuse had begun when T.L.S.

was eight; however appellant did not believe it. Torgusen testified that T.L.S. and T.D.S.

believed that appellant should also be in jail because she is “almost equally culpable” and

that “they were not protected.”

         Dr. Moran indicated that appellant had been informed of the “need to cease

initiating or returning letters, phone calls, or any other communication” with the stepfather

and had “accepted” the “feedback.” However, appellant continued to visit the stepfather

in prison even after viewing the video of him sexually abusing T.L.S. and admitted that



         16   Torgusen believed T.D.S. was “forced to film [the sexual abuse] so that they [could] get help.”
         17Although Officer Merek’s statement is not a complete sentence, the trial court could have properly
understood that Officer Merek meant that her concern with appellant’s behavior was that appellant was
attempting to intimidate the children or cause fear or guilt in the children so that they would recant their
allegations from the context of the question, which was, “What concern is it that the mother kept barging in
and interrupting?”


                                                           40
she had visited him about one week or two weeks prior to the termination trial. According

to Torgusen, during her treatment of appellant, appellant never expressed any anger

toward the stepfather and instead expressed anger with the children because she felt that

T.L.S. and T.D.S. had conspired to ruin her life.

        Based on the record evidence that T.L.S. and T.D.S. held appellant just as

culpable as the stepfather for the sexual abuse and stated that she should also be in jail,

in combination with appellant’s above-mentioned behavior and testimony from Torgusen

that appellant’s reaction of blaming the children and not harboring any anger against the

stepfather was unusual, the trial court could have reasonably inferred that T.L.S. felt she

had to recant and deny the allegations in order to appease appellant and to allegedly

avoid destroying the family or ruining appellant’s life.18 See In re L.C., 145 S.W.3d 790,

797–98 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2004, no pet.) (“Without the protection of their mother,

the children may suffer continued abuse and may feel less inclined to report any abuse.”).

This inference is further supported by evidence that T.L.S. was afraid of appellant and by

T.L.S.’s letter to appellant wherein she stated that she “did almost everything [appellant]

asked and [she was] so sorry [that she] disobeyed” appellant and somehow failed and let

appellant down.        From this, the trial court may have inferred that T.L.S. disobeyed

appellant by not denying the allegations after the third outcry.




         18 We note that the trial court interviewed T.L.S. and T.D.S. in chambers pursuant to section

153.009(b) of the family code, which allows the judge to “interview the child in chambers to determine the
child’s wishes as to possession, access, or any other issue in the suit affecting the parent-child relationship.”
Appellant did not file a motion for a record of the in chambers interview of the children. See TEX. FAM. CODE
ANN. §153.009(f) (“On the motion of a party . . . the court shall cause a record of the interview to be made
when the child is 12 years of age or older. A record of the interview shall be part of the record in the case.”).
See id. § 153.009(b) (West, Westlaw through Ch. 46 2015 R.S.) (emphasis added). Thus, it is possible
that the children told the judge more details that are not included in the record.


                                                           41
       In addition, evidence was presented that the stepfather had hit the other children,

that M.K.D. and C.B.D. were severely neglected, which caused serious psychological

damage to them, and that appellant and the stepfather engaged in domestic violence in

front of all four children. See In re C.E.K., 214 S.W.3d 492, 497 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2006,

no pet.) (“Domestic violence, want of self-control and propensity for violence may be

considered as evidence of endangerment. If a parent abuses or neglects the other parent

or children, that conduct can be used to support a finding of endangerment.”) (internal

citations omitted). Finally, evidence was presented that appellant failed to comply with

the terms of her service plan by, among other things, not securing a place for the children

to live and not acquiring a job. See In re T.N.F., 205 S.W.3d 625, 630–31 (Tex. App.—

Waco 2006, pet. denied) (explaining that the parents must comply with each requirement

of court ordered service plans under section 161.001(b)(1)(O), which does not allow for

consideration of excuses regarding the reasons a parent failed to comply with all

provisions of the court’s order); In re T.T., 228 S.W.3d 312, 319 (Tex. App.—Houston

[14th Dist.] 2007, pet. denied) (noting that courts in Texas have refused to find that

substantial compliance with provisions of court order are adequate to avoid termination

finding under subsection (O)); see also In re D.L.H., No. 04-04-00876-CV, 2005 WL

2989329, at *2 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Nov. 9, 2005, no pet.) (mem. op.) (rejecting the

parents’ arguments that substantial compliance with section 161.001(b)(1)(O) excused

their non-compliance).

       Accordingly, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, we

conclude that there was sufficiently clear and convincing evidence presented allowing a

reasonable fact finder to form a firm belief that appellant knowingly placed or allowed her



                                               42
children to remain in conditions or surroundings that endangered their physical or

emotional well-being, that appellant knowingly placed the children with a person who

engaged in conduct which endangered the physical or emotional well-being of the

children, and that appellant violated section 161.001(b)(1)(O) of the family code. See In

re R.W., 129 S.W.3d at 742 (“[I]t is beyond question that sexual abuse is conduct that

endangers a child’s physical or emotional well-being” and that “evidence of sexual abuse

of one child is sufficient to support a finding of endangerment with respect to other

children.”); In re A.B., 125 S.W.3d at 775; see also In re Tidwell, 35 S.W.3d 115, 119–20

(Tex. App.—Texarkana 2000, no pet.) (“[I]t is not necessary for [the mother] to have had

certain knowledge that one of the [sexual molestation] offenses actually occurred; it is

sufficient that she was aware of the potential for danger to the children and disregarded

that risk by . . . leaving the children in that environment.”); Rios v. Tex. Dep’t of Fam. &

Protective Servs., No. 03-11-00565-CV, 2012 WL 2989237, at *5 (Tex. App.—Austin July

11, 2012, no pet.) (mem. op.); In re C.G., No. 13-05-063-CV, 2006 WL 220627, at *4 (Tex.

App.—Corpus Christi Jan. 26, 2006, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“We may infer that the

aggravated sexual assault of a child in the home is conduct which will endanger the

physical and emotional well-being of other children in the home who may discover the

abuse or may be abused themselves.”).      Moreover, the disputed evidence on the matter

is not so significant that the trial court could not have formed a firm conviction or belief

that its finding was true. We conclude that the evidence is legally and factually sufficient

to support a conclusion that appellant violated sections 161.00(b)(1)(D), (E), and (O) of

the family code. We overrule appellant’s first, second, and third issues.

C.     Best Interest



                                                43
       By her final issue, appellant contends that the evidence was legally insufficient to

support a finding that termination was in the children’s best interest.

       When considering whether parental termination is in the child’s best interest, the

following non-exhaustive list of factors should be considered: (1) the desires of the child;

(2) the emotional and physical needs of the child now and in the future; (3) the emotional

and physical danger to the child now and in the future; (4) the parenting abilities of the

party seeking custody; (5) the programs available to assist the party seeking custody;

(6) the plans for the child by the parties seeking custody; (7) the stability of the home or

proposed placement; (8) the acts or omissions committed by the parent which may

indicate that the existing parent-child relationship is not proper; and (9) any excuse for

the acts or omissions committed by the parent. Holley v. Adams, 544 S.W.2d 367, 372

(Tex. 1976). The party seeking parental termination is not required to prove all nine

factors.   In re C.H., 89 S.W.3d at 27 (providing that these considerations are not

exhaustive, “or that all such considerations must be proved as a condition precedent to

parental termination”); In re J.R.S., 232 S.W.3d 278, 284 (Tex. App—Fort Worth 2007,

no pet.) (“These factors are not exhaustive; some listed factors may be inapplicable to

some cases; other factors not on the list may also be considered when appropriate.”).

       Although there is a strong presumption that it is in the child’s best interest to allow

the natural parent to retain custody, when confronted with evidence to the contrary, that

presumption disappears. In re A.I.G., 135 S.W.3d 687, 692 (Tex. App.—San Antonio

2003, no pet.). Evidence proving one or more of the statutory grounds for termination

may be probative in determining that termination is in the best interest of the child. In re

A.A.A., 265 S.W.3d 507, 516 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2008, pet. denied). A best-



                                                 44
interest analysis may be based on direct evidence, circumstantial evidence, subjective

factors, and the totality of the evidence as a whole. In the Interest of T.N., 180 S.W.3d

376, 384 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 2005, no pet.) (citing In re C.A.J., 122 S.W.3d 888, 894

(Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2003, no pet.)). “A parent’s unstable lifestyle, lack of income, and

lack of a home may also be considered in a determination of a parent’s ability to provide

for a child’s emotional and physical needs and may also threaten the physical well being

of the child.” Id.

       Here, there was evidence presented that T.L.S. and T.D.S. did not want to be

returned to appellant. T.L.S. stated that she was scared of appellant and did not want to

see her. T.D.S. did not want to see appellant, either. The evidence also showed that

M.K.D. and C.B.D. wanted to stay with the Grandparents and that C.B.D. said he would

not visit appellant if she did not bring him toys.

       Concerning the physical and emotional needs of the children now and in the future,

the evidence established that while in appellant’s care, the children were not protected

from the abuse and neglect occurring in the home. The evidence showed T.L.S. had

been sexually abused by the stepfather since 2007 until 2013 and that T.D.S. felt that his

only recourse to stop the abuse was to record the sexual abuse and show it to authorities.

Torgusen stated that returning the children to appellant would be the “worst possible

outcome” because even an unannounced visit by appellant “re-raised a lot of fear and

anger and frustration that they’re not safe.” Torgusen stated that it would be completely

devastating to T.L.S. and T.D.S. if they were returned to appellant and that any visitation

with appellant would be “very harmful” and that appellant had not made any progress in




                                                     45
helping the children. O’Neill stated that it would be harmful for the children to continue

any visitation with appellant.

        Evidence was presented that T.L.S. and T.D.S. took care of M.K.D. and C.B.D.

when they lived with appellant and that M.K.D. and C.B.D. had been so neglected by

appellant that they had not properly bonded with her. Both M.K.D. and C.B.D. were also

developmentally behind, had low self-esteem, and showed signs of severe neglect and

abuse. Once the children were removed from appellant’s care, the evidence showed that

the children’s emotional conditions had begun to improve through counseling. Therefore,

the trial court could have reasonably inferred that the children’s physical needs, now and

in the future, were better served by the Department rather than by appellant.

        Moreover, there was evidence that appellant failed to complete many of the

requirements of the service plan and did not complete any of the goals, which included,

among other things, accepting her responsibility for what had happened to T.L.S. and

learning and using parenting practices that meet the emotional and developmental needs

of her children. The evidence showed that instead of supporting the children, appellant

“sabotaged” M.K.D. and C.B.D.’s support systems and consistently blamed T.L.S. and

T.D.S. for the stepfather’s acts. Thus, the evidence allowed an inference that appellant

did not provide for the children’s emotional needs while they were in the Department’s

care.

        Regarding the emotional and physical danger to the children now and in the future,

there was evidence that appellant was not protective of the children and showed poor

judgment and parenting skills. See In re C.A.J., 122 S.W.3d 888, 893 (Tex. App.—Fort

Worth 2003, no pet.) (“[A] parent’s inability to provide adequate care for the child, lack of



                                                46
parenting skills, poor judgment, and repeated instances of immoral conduct may also be

considered when looking at best interest”) (citing Garza v. Tex. Dep’t. of Human Servs.,

794 S.W.2d 521, 525 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1990, no writ); Sanchez v. Tex. Dep’t.

of Human Res., 581 S.W.2d 260, 265-66 (Tex. Civ. App.—Corpus Christi 1979, no writ);

Coleman v. Tex. Dep’t. of Pub. Welfare, 562 S.W.2d 554, 557 (Tex. Civ. App.—Tyler

1978, writ ref'd n.r.e.); D.F. v. State, 525 S.W.2d 933, 940 (Tex. Civ. App.—Houston [1st

Dist.] 1975, writ ref'd n.r.e.) (op. on reh’g); Magallon v. State, 523 S.W.2d 477, 479 (Tex.

Civ. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1975, no writ)). The evidence showed that appellant’s

reaction when she was informed of the third outcry and the video evidence of the sexual

abuse was unusual in that she was not “concerned” about T.L.S. And, Officer Merek

testified that it appeared as if appellant was attempting to discredit T.D.S. and was more

concerned about the stepfather. Officer Merek stated that appellant was rude and yelled

at the children in a hateful manner telling them that she only wanted M.K.D. and C.B.D.

returned and that Officer Merek could keep T.L.S. and T.D.S. The evidence showed that

even after the police told appellant that the video proved that the stepfather sexually

abused T.L.S., appellant took the stepfather’s side and did not want to believe that T.L.S.

was telling the truth and insisted on viewing the video herself.

       The evidence also showed that even after watching the video on October 21, 2013,

of the stepfather sexually assaulting T.L.S, in January of 2014, appellant told Torgusen

that her plans were to reunite with the stepfather in love and forgiveness when he was

released from jail and that the children would also live with him. In addition, appellant

visited the stepfather in jail after he pleaded guilty to the continuous sexual assault of

T.L.S. despite evidence that the children’s attorney ad litem and others told her to stop



                                                47
visiting the stepfather. Based on the evidence, the trial court was permitted to infer that

appellant’s future conduct would comport with her prior conduct and that she would not

be protective of the children in the future. See Jordan v. Dossey, 325 S.W.3d 700, 732

(Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2010, pet. denied); see May v. May, 829 S.W.2d 373, 377

(Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 1992, writ denied).

       Moreover, the evidence showed that when the children had contact with appellant,

each child had negative emotional reactions. T.L.S. had improved significantly, but after

appellant violated a court order and had contact with T.L.S., T.L.S. had a setback. T.L.S.

was scared of appellant and had a “horrible fear” that appellant would “snatch” her from

school someday, and made sure that school officials were aware that appellant was not

allowed at her school. T.D.S. and T.L.S. told Torgusen that they “never want to go back

to their mom.” When appellant visited M.K.D. and C.B.D., she was very “angry” and

caused the children stress by cursing and being verbally abusive to others, including their

caregivers, in front of the children.

       Appellant’s parenting ability was severely impeached by the evidence.           The

evidence mentioned above and other evidence showed that appellant lacked proper

parenting skills and apparently did not attempt to make any improvements while in

counseling shown through evidence that she missed appointments with Torgusen and

failed to inform her new counselor, Eubanks, of the entire situation regarding the children

and the stepfather. For example, appellant failed to inform Eubanks that she did not

believe T.L.S. about the abuse, had called T.L.S. a liar, and had blamed T.L.S. Instead,

Eubanks testified that appellant told her that she believed T.L.S. In addition, appellant

had not discussed with Eubanks the domestic violence that the children witnessed and



                                               48
that the children had been neglected. Eubanks stated that she would be concerned if

appellant continued to visit the stepfather, and appellant admitted that she had last visited

him in jail one or two weeks prior to the termination trial.

       The evidence showed that M.K.D. and C.B.D. had been neglected by appellant

and that they appeared to be very detached from her. The boys also told O’Neill that they

had witnessed significant amounts of fighting between appellant and the stepfather, which

is a major stressor for children and does not make for a safe environment. There was

evidence that the abuse of M.K.D. and C.B.D. was “[v]ery severe” and that their

psychological needs had not been met when they lived with appellant.

       Appellant stated that she wanted the children returned to her because she loved

them and wanted them to grow up in the same home. However, appellant had not

acquired suitable housing for the children and did not address her future plans for the

children other than to say that she wants to move out of the county and state.

       The trial court heard ample evidence, which is set out above, of appellant’s acts

and omissions indicating that the parent-child relationship was not proper. Thus, viewing

the evidence in the light most favorable to verdict, we conclude a reasonable trier of fact

could have formed a firm belief or conviction that termination was in the children’s best

interest. See TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 153.002; In re J.L., 163 S.W.3d at 85; In re D.S.P.,

210 S.W.3d at 778. And, the disputed evidence on the matter is not so significant that

the trial court could not have formed a firm conviction or belief that its finding was true.

See In re J.F.C., 96 S.W.3d at 266. We conclude that the evidence was legally and

factually sufficient to support a finding that termination of appellant’s parental rights is in

the best interest of the children. We overrule appellant’s final issue.



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                                  V.     CONCLUSION

      We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                               /s/ Rogelio Valdez
                                               ROGELIO VALDEZ
                                               CHIEF JUSTICE


Delivered and filed the
28th day of August, 2015.




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