Court Opinion

ID: 9378319
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-09 22:03:13.276847+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:20.243615
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except
            in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

                                        2023 IL App (3d) 210375-U

                                  Order filed March 9, 2023
      ____________________________________________________________________________

                                                  IN THE

                                   APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                                            THIRD DISTRICT

                                                   2023

      In re M.L. and J.D.,                   )     Appeal from the Circuit Court
                                             )     of the 10th Judicial Circuit,
             Minors,                         )     Tazewell County, Illinois.
                                             )
      (The People of the State of Illinois,  )
                                             )     Appeal Nos. 3-21-0375, 3-21-0376
             Petitioner-Appellee,            )     Circuit Nos. 20-JA-260, 20-JA-261
                                             )
             v.                              )
                                             )
      Amber N.L.,                            )     The Honorable
                                             )     Mark E. Gilles,
             Respondent-Appellant).          )     Judge, Presiding.
      ____________________________________________________________________________

            JUSTICE McDADE delivered the judgment of the court.
            Justices Albrecht and Hettel concurred in the judgment.
      ____________________________________________________________________________

                                                ORDER

¶1          Held: The circuit court’s finding that the State proved by a preponderance of the
                  evidence that respondent’s minor children were neglected was not against the
                  manifest weight of the evidence.

¶2          The State filed amended shelter care petitions alleging that respondent Amber N.L.’s two

     minor children were neglected due to an injurious environment. At the adjudicatory hearing,
     respondent stipulated to the allegations in the petitions and waived any presentation of their

     factual basis. The trial court subsequently found that the minors were neglected as alleged in the

     petitions and made both children wards of the court. Respondent appeals from that

     determination. We affirm.

¶3                                          I. BACKGROUND

¶4           On August 5, 2020, an investigator from the Illinois Department of Children and Family

     Services (DCFS) visited respondent’s house after DCFS received a hotline call reporting that the

     residence was filthy. Initially, respondent refused to allow the investigator to enter the house or

     to see respondent’s two minor children, 15-year-old J.D., who was autistic, and 3-year-old M.L.

     After the investigator indicated the police would be called, respondent permitted the investigator

     to enter.

¶5           Once inside, the investigator noted that the residence was not unduly dirty but concluded

     that further investigation was necessary as part of a safety assessment after the investigator

     became concerned about respondent’s behavior. The investigator believed her “bizarre” behavior

     could have been due to underlying mental health issues or the use of illicit drugs. The safety

     assessment was not completed, however, due to respondent’s lack of cooperation. Although she

     signed a release permitting her psychiatrist to discuss her mental health with DCFS, she declined

     to answer any of the investigator’s questions about the matter. She also refused to undergo a drug

     screening at that time, asserting that she did not have any substance abuse issues. She also

     informed the investigator that she intended to move to Florida with the children on August 27,

     2020.

¶6           Concerned by respondent’s apparent mental health problems and her refusal to cooperate

     in efforts to assess possible risks to the children, the investigator continued to probe and learned

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     of other ongoing issues, including pending forgery charges filed against respondent. The

     investigator formulated and implemented a safety plan for the minors, which was to be

     monitored every five days and which was to include drug drops for the respondent. A DCFS

     caseworker visited respondent’s home five times in August 2020, but each time respondent

     refused to comply with the requested drug drops.

¶7          Respondent was scheduled to attend a court hearing on the pending forgery charges on

     August 27, 2020. However, around August 28, 2020, the children’s maternal grandmother told

     DCFS that respondent had rented a hotel room in Peoria where she intended to take the children,

     in violation of the ongoing safety plan. The grandmother also reported that respondent had

     invited two men over on the two previous nights and each time had demanded that J.D. leave his

     room so the men could smoke marijuana there. She also claimed that respondent personally

     smoked marijuana in the living room with the children present. The investigator was also given

     over 100 unused lottery tickets that had been in respondent’s possession. The tickets were

     allegedly stolen from the Pekin gas station where respondent had previously worked. When the

     investigator spoke to the gas station’s owner, he stated that items worth over $5000 had gone

     missing. After leaving the gas station, the investigator turned the lottery tickets over to police.

¶8          During the investigator’s visit with the children’s pediatrician, the physician stated that

     respondent had difficulty relaying the children’s history, could not identify J.D.’s medications,

     and had previously given J.D. the wrong dosages of medication. The physician also noted that

     M.L. suffered from developmental delays that respondent could have prevented if the girl had

     attended needed early childhood follow-up visits.

¶9          During the investigator’s return visit, the children’s maternal grandmother related a

     conversation between respondent and her psychiatrist that she had overhead over a

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       speakerphone. In that conversation, respondent reported having dreams and thoughts of killing

       her mother, children, and other family members. The grandmother added that she was also aware

       of respondent’s disturbing thoughts because she had personally spoken to respondent’s

       psychiatrist. After the grandmother expressed fear for her own safety and for that of the children,

       the investigator informed respondent that she had to leave the home. Although she had initially

       refused to sign the safety plan, respondent then agreed to sign it, telling the investigator she had

       no place else to go. She also asked the investigator to take her to Unity Point Methodist Hospital,

       where she intended to voluntarily admit herself to the psychiatric ward. While enroute to the

       hospital, respondent called her psychiatrist and reported having thoughts about harming her

       siblings. Once she arrived at the hospital, respondent was admitted to the psychiatric ward.

¶ 10          Fifteen-year-old J.D. told the investigator that he wanted to live with his grandmother

       because respondent screamed at him and his three-year-old sister. Respondent had also told the

       girl that she was a “demon” and a “bitch.” J.D. added that that his mother smoked “stinky stuff”

       and hit him in the back. He told the investigator that “I don’t wanna stay with her, please, ***,

       my mom is so trouble [sic], she needs to stay gone forever.” When the investigator spoke to staff

       at Unity Point Methodist Hospital the next day, they reported that respondent had been admitted

       to the psychiatric ward after expressing thoughts of wanting to harm her siblings, nieces, and

       nephews.

¶ 11          Court records revealed that respondent had also been the subject of two prior cases filed

       in 2014 and 2017 pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (Juvenile Act) (705 ILCS 405/1-1

       et seq. (West 2020)). DCFS records showed that she had a long history of indicated reports,

       including a 2014 indicated report for “Substantial Risk of Sexual Abuse, Sex Offender has

       Access” and a 2017 indicated report for “Substantial Risk of Physical Injury/Environment

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       Injurious to Health and Welfare by Neglect.” She was also indicated by DCFS for medical

       neglect of M.L. in 2019.

¶ 12          Based on that evidence, DCFS filed two shelter care petitions in Tazewell County on

       September 15, 2020, seeking adjudication of wardship for J.D. and M.L. based on neglect due to

       an injurious environment. In her November 2020, answers to those petitions, respondent denied

       all of the allegations. When the State modified the allegations and filed amended petitions,

       respondent’s new answers stipulated to most of the allegations. An adjudicatory hearing on those

       petitions was held several months later, in July 2021.

¶ 13          At that hearing, respondent’s counsel informed the court that she was not present because

       she was once again hospitalized in the psychiatric ward at Unity Point Methodist Hospital.

       Counsel explained that he had previously contacted respondent at the hospital about the pending

       shelter care petitions and obtained her agreement to stipulate to the allegations, subject to a few

       modifications. To obtain respondent’s stipulation, the State agreed to strike statements made by

       the grandmother that respondent had contested and to file amended petitions. Both parties

       waived the presentation of any supporting factual basis for the amended petitions at the hearing.

¶ 14          Near the end of the adjudicatory hearing, testimony was given stating that respondent had

       readmitted herself to the psychiatric ward for suicidal ideations purportedly caused by losing

       contact with her son, J.D. She had not seen J.D. in over a year, largely due to his refusal to visit,

       and she had not seen M.L. for a few months, due, at least in part, to respondent’s repeated

       hospitalizations. The trial judge subsequently entered adjudicatory orders granting the State’s

       amended shelter petitions and finding the minors neglected in that they resided in an injurious

       environment. A dispositional hearing was set for August 2021.

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¶ 15          Prior to the start of that hearing, the trial court received the dispositional hearing report

       containing the following information. Respondent indicated she had moved to a new home in

       Peoria, but she was unable to provide a new address, leaving her current housing status unclear.

       She also stated that she was employed, but she could not provide any paystubs. She had,

       however, successfully completed parenting classes and had attended 12 of 20 scheduled

       counseling sessions, missing her most recent sessions due to her hospitalization. Respondent’s

       counselor reported that she was cooperative and engaged during their sessions. Despite being

       subject to one random drug drop per month under the safety plan, she had not appeared for 8 out

       of 12 tests. Of the four drops she performed, she tested positive for THC twice and positive for

       barbiturates once. Despite having weekly scheduled visits with her children, respondent had

       attended just eight visits with M.L., cancelled six visits because she was hospitalized or ill, and

       missed five others without providing any reason. Although J.D. had initially declined to see

       respondent, he had engaged in two visits with her since July 2021.

¶ 16          During the dispositional hearing, respondent’s counsel elicited testimony from her

       caseworker about his difficulty in providing respondent with bus passes because she had not

       updated her address, but he stated that problem had been resolved. The State made a

       recommendation that the minors be found to be neglected and be made wards of the court, with

       DCFS named as their guardian with the right of placement. It also asserted that respondent

       should be found unfit for the reasons stated in the amended petitions and requested that she be

       provided with appropriate services.

¶ 17          Counsel for respondent argued at the dispositional hearing that she had successfully

       completed parenting classes, was undergoing counseling, had provided drug drops when she was

       able, had tried to visit her children regularly, and was frustrated about not being able to receive

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       bus passes. Her counsel maintained that “we’re on the brink of fitness at this point.” The minors’

       guardian ad litem (GAL) noted that J.D. was autistic and described his willingness to restart

       visits with respondent as a positive change. Despite this progress, however, the GAL agreed with

       the State that respondent was an unfit parent.

¶ 18          After the hearing, the trial judge entered dispositional orders granting the State’s requests

       for wardship and appointing DCFS as the children’s guardian. It also found that respondent was

       an unfit parent. She filed timely notices of appeal, and the minors’ cases were consolidated.

¶ 19                                             II. ANALYSIS

¶ 20          As stated by respondent in her brief, the sole issue in this appeal is whether the trial court

       erred in finding that the minors, J.D., and M.L., were neglected due to an injurious environment.

       Although an “injurious environment” “cannot be ‘defined with particularity,’ *** it includes the

       breach of a parent’s duty to ensure a safe and nurturing shelter for his or her children.” In re Z.L.,

       2021 IL 126931, ¶ 89 (quoting In re Arthur H., 212 Ill. 2d 441, 463 (2004)). When reviewing

       that question, the court must consider each case on its own facts, and a reviewing court “will not

       disturb the trial court’s finding of abuse or neglect unless it is against the manifest weight of the

       evidence.” Id. ¶ 61. A finding is against the manifest weight of the evidence only if the opposite

       conclusion is clearly evident or if it is unreasonable or arbitrary, or not rooted in the evidence. In

       re D.F., 201 Ill. 2d 476, 498 (2002). Accordingly, we may reverse the trial court’s neglect

       findings only if the State did not prove the neglect allegations in the shelter petitions by a

       preponderance of the evidence. In re Z.L., 2021 IL 126931, ¶ 61. To satisfy that burden, the State

       must show that the allegations were more probably true than not. Id.

¶ 21          On appeal, respondent first contends that the DCFS investigator’s initial visit to

       respondent’s home was violative of the fourth amendment of the United States Constitution. She

                                                         7
       asserts that because the visit was premised on an anonymous hotline call reporting a filthy

       dwelling, once the premises were determined not to be filthy, the investigation turned into an

       unreasonable search that was not supported by probable cause. See U.S. Const., amend. IV.

¶ 22          While it is true that the investigator determined that respondent’s home was not filthy

       after she finally gained entry, her continuing investigation was warranted by the investigator’s

       developing safety concerns due to respondent’s behavior, which the investigator described as

       “bizarre.” As one of DCFS’s field personnel, the investigator was a mandatory reporter of child

       abuse or neglect that puts minors at risk. 89 Ill. Adm. Code 300.30(B)(1)(bb) (2020). The

       investigator’s personal observation of disturbing behavior by respondent, including her refusal to

       discuss her mental health issues or complete a drug screen, and her assertion that she was taking

       the children to live in Florida in a few weeks, was sufficient to support the continuation of the

       investigation into possible neglect or abuse of the two minors under her care.

¶ 23          Respondent also claims that the investigator’s statement that she would call the police if

       she were not allowed to enter the home was unconstitutional because consent may not be coerced

       by either implicit or explicit means. See Schneckloth v. Bustamonte, 412 U.S. 218, 228 (1973).

       The regulations applicable to DCFS investigations related to risks to minors’ health and safety

       guide our review of this claim. When conducting an initial DCFS assessment, an investigator is

       mandated to fulfill numerous duties, including a duty to evaluate the minors’ health and safety

       before deciding whether they can safely remain in the residence. 89 Ill. Adm. Code 315.100(a).

       The same regulation requires investigators to identify the risk of harm the minors face. Id.

¶ 24          Here, the impetus for the investigator’s initial visit was a hotline report that the minors

       were living in filthy conditions. Respondent’s claim that the investigation was illegal because the

       investigator did not find the home to be filthy misses the point. When respondent barred the

                                                        8
       investigator from entering her home, she effectively precluded an assessment of the home’s

       condition or the safety risk it presented to the minors living there. Accordingly, respondent

       interfered with the investigator’s ability to fulfill the mandatory duties imposed on DCFS after

       receipt of a call relating to the safety of minors. Without the ability to investigate properly, the

       potential risk to the minors’ health and safety could be perpetuated indefinitely.

¶ 25          DCFS is charged with “protect[ing] the health, safety, and best interests of the child in all

       situations in which the child is vulnerable to child abuse or neglect.” 325 ILCS 5/2 (West 2020).

       Section 2(a) of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act mandates that DCFS “shall, upon

       receiving reports made under this Act, protect the health, safety, and best interests of the child in

       all situations in which the child is vulnerable to child abuse or neglect, offer protective services

       in order to prevent any further harm to the child and to other children in the same environment or

       family, stabilize the home environment, and preserve family life whenever possible.” 325 ILCS

       5/2(a) (West 2020). Those duties are broad and not limited to protecting vulnerable children

       from the specific danger that originally prompted the investigation.

¶ 26          Although it is true that the investigator ultimately concluded the home was not filthy, that

       conclusion could only be reached after the investigator was able to gain access to the home.

       Respondent’s argument in this court, however, is premised on the alleged impropriety of the

       investigator’s conduct before she was even allowed to enter the home. At that point, respondent’s

       refusal to cooperate with the investigation barred DCFS from fulfilling its mandatory duty to

       determine whether the minors residing there were at risk.

¶ 27          Respondent adds that the investigator’s reference to calling the police unless she was

       allowed into the home was so coercive as to obviate respondent’s eventual grant of consent. We

       disagree. The investigator’s bare statement, standing alone, was not inherently coercive under the

                                                         9
       facts of this case. Respondent’s conduct obstructed the investigator’s performance of her

       mandated duties to ensure the safety and well-being of the minors living under respondent’s care.

       Even if the police had been called to respondent’s home, their subsequent actions are purely

       speculative. If they came to the residence at all, they might simply have mediated the conflict

       between respondent and the investigator. Without more, the mere statement of a future intent to

       call the police is just that, a statement of intent. How respondent chose to respond to that

       statement was entirely up to her. Although in this case respondent chose to avoid any potential

       police involvement by allowing the investigator into her resident, she could just as easily have

       maintained her initial refusal. The investigator’s stated intent did not, by itself, unconstitutionally

       coerce respondent into taking any particular action.

¶ 28          Once the investigator was inside the home, she was able to evaluate its condition,

       concluding that the home was not dirty enough to affect the minors’ safety or health. Satisfied

       that the original basis for the investigation was incorrect, but troubled by her observations of

       respondent’s behavior, the investigator decided to continue the visit. The investigator described

       respondent’s behavior as “bizarre” and explained that it was suggestive of a mental illness or the

       use of an illicit drug that could impair respondent’s decision-making ability. When the

       investigator attempted to address those concerns with respondent, she refused to discuss her

       mental health status or to take the requested drug test. Those refusals again implicated the

       investigator’s statutory duties. Moreover, respondent’s revelation that she intended to move to

       Florida with the children a few weeks later raised additional concerns with the investigator.

¶ 29          The applicable regulations mandate that DCFS’s initial investigation must include “in-

       person contact with all alleged child victims or in-person examination of the environment for

       inadequate shelter and environmental neglect reports” such as this one. 89 Ill. Adm. Code

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       300.100(b)(1). If a caregiver presents an imminent danger to a minor’s safety or health, perhaps

       due to the effects of a serious mental illness or illegal drug usage, the investigator is authorized

       to take any impacted children into protective custody. 89 Ill. Adm. Code 300.100(a). If

       respondent followed through on her intent to remove the children to Florida, DCFS would lose

       the ability to protect the minors from risks to their health and safety, making a prompt

       investigation into those risks critical. Under those circumstances, the investigator’s continued

       presence at respondent’s home was justified based on the investigator’s personal observations as

       well as her duties under the applicable regulations.

¶ 30           Respondent next contends that both evidence of the forgery charges pending against her

       and evidence appearing to link her to the theft of at least 100 lottery tickets from her former

       employer violated her presumption of innocence and were unduly prejudicial. Those arguments

       are inapt.

¶ 31           The presumption of innocence is a principle applicable in the context of criminal

       proceedings. Riesen v. Riesen, 148 Ill. App. 460, 464 (1909). Indeed, the only two cases

       respondent cited for the proposition that she is entitled to the presumption of innocence until

       proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt are both criminal matters, People v. Weinstein, 35 Ill.

       2d 467, 469-70 (1966), and People v. Magnafichi, 9 Ill. 2d 169, 173 (1956). Her argument

       ignores the fact that a shelter case proceeding is civil, not criminal, in nature, and that the

       applicable burden of proof is the preponderance of the evidence, not proof beyond a reasonable

       doubt. See In re Z.L., 2021 IL 126931, ¶ 61 (stating the preponderance of the evidence standard

       in similar civil proceedings). The principle of the presumption of innocence is irrelevant here.

¶ 32           Respondent also does not dispute that she was facing criminal forgery charges when

       DCFS began its investigation. If respondent were convicted, it would adversely impact the

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       children by leaving them without either a parent or any adult supervision in the home. The risk to

       the children was even greater due to the evidence implicating respondent in the theft of the

       lottery tickets from her employer. Any charges arising out of that evidence would undoubtedly

       increase the risk faced by the children because a conviction could result in respondent being

       away from home even longer. DCFS cannot reasonably be expected to ignore those factors when

       making and implementing a safety plan. Uncertainty about respondent’s condition and the

       potential risk to the children were heightened by respondent’s assertion that she was moving to

       Florida on the day of her next scheduled court date on the forgery charges, suggesting that she

       could face even more charges if she attempted to evade prosecution.

¶ 33          Viewed in context, the evidence related to respondent’s pending and potential criminal

       cases was relevant and not unduly prejudicial in the trial court’s assessment of whether the

       minors were at-risk or neglected due to an injurious environment. The best interests of children

       always lie in anticipating and preventing harm to them rather than in attempting to repair any

       harm after it has occurred. See 325 ILCS 5/2(a) (West 2020) (stating DCFS “shall, upon

       receiving reports made under this Act, *** offer protective services in order to prevent any

       further harm to the child and to other children in the same environment or family, stabilize the

       home environment, and preserve family life whenever possible”).

¶ 34          Next, respondent refutes the argument that the children were neglected by pointing to the

       investigator’s implementation of a safety plan during her initial visit. Contrary to respondent’s

       claim that she cooperated with the safety plan, the evidence shows that she committed repeated

       violations by failing to perform most of the required drug drops and submitting tests that resulted

       in positive results three out of the other four drops.

                                                         12
¶ 35          While respondent maintains that she should not have been asked to leave her home, the

       evidence shows that she was suffering from mental health issues and experiencing and voicing

       homicidal thoughts about harming her siblings, nieces, and nephews. Those circumstances

       provided a reasonable basis for removing the children from her care. Evidence of a caregiver’s

       anger and aggression toward other people may be admitted to assess allegations of an injurious

       environment, even if those outbursts occurred outside the presence of the children. In re A.W.,

       Jr., 231 Ill. 2d 241, 256 (2008).

¶ 36          The evidence also refutes respondent’s claim that she admitted herself to the psychiatric

       ward only because she had nowhere else to go. As the investigator was taking her to the hospital,

       respondent contacted her psychiatrist and personally informed him that she was having thoughts

       about hurting adult family members. Once she was voluntarily admitted, respondent was kept at

       the hospital for care. Because respondent stipulated to the factual basis in the shelter petition, she

       cannot now argue that those statements were false.

¶ 37          Although a parent’s struggles with mental health issues, standing alone, do not establish

       neglect due to an injurious environment, the State offered substantially more evidence in support

       of that finding. During the investigator’s first meeting with respondent, her behavior was found

       to be sufficiently unusual as to raise significant concerns. Her fifteen-year-old son J.D.

       subsequently told officials that she screamed at both children, told three-year-old M.L. that she

       was a “demon” and a “bitch,” and hit J.D., leading him to tell authorities that respondent needed

       “to stay gone forever.” In addition, the children’s pediatrician relayed that respondent was a

       “difficult” historian, was unaware of J.D.’s medications, and had given him incorrect doses of

       medication in the past. He also indicated that M.L.’s developmental delays could have been

       averted if she had attended appropriate early childhood follow-up visits.

                                                        13
¶ 38          Respondent attempts to minimize the impact of that evidence by arguing that J.D.’s

       autism and the lack of specific detail in the statements of both J.D. and the children’s pediatrician

       undermined the probative value of their statements. We remain unpersuaded, however, because

       those assertions overlook respondent’s decision to adopt the State’s evidence by stipulating to it

       rather than attempting to test or refute it. Accordingly, our review of the trial court’s ruling will

       consider those statements.

¶ 39          Additional evidence adduced by the State reveals that respondent had a lengthy history

       with DCFS, including Juvenile Act cases filed against her in both 2014 and 2017. She was also

       the subject of three indicated reports implicating the neglect of her children: a 2014 indicated

       report for “Substantial Risk of Sexual Abuse, Sex Offender has Access,” a 2017 indicated report

       for “Substantial Risk of Physical Injury/Environment Injurious to Health and Welfare by

       Neglect,” and a 2019 indicated report for medical neglect of M.L. Those reports are admissible

       in an adjudicatory hearing pursuant to section 2-18(4)(b) of the Juvenile Act. 705 ILCS 405/2-

       18(4)(b) (West 2020). Although indicated reports are not prima facie evidence of abuse or

       neglect, they establish that an investigation was conducted that resulted in a determination that

       credible evidence supported the allegations of abuse or neglect. Slater v. The Department of

       Children & Family Services, 2011 IL App (1st) 102914, ¶ 23 (citing 325 ILCS 5/3 (West 2004)).

       Accordingly, we also incorporate that evidence into our review.

¶ 40          To prove the claims in the shelter care petitions in the trial court, the State had to satisfy

       its burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence that respondent’s children were

       neglected. Proving a fact by a preponderance of the evidence requires a showing that the

       allegations made were more likely to be true than untrue. In re Z.L., 2021 IL 126931, ¶ 61. On

       appeal, we must uphold the trial court’s findings unless they are against the manifest weight of

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       the evidence. Id. For findings to be contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence, the opposite

       conclusion must be clearly evident, or the ruling must be unreasonable or arbitrary or not based

       on the evidence. In re D.F., 201 Ill. 2d at 498. After carefully viewing the evidence in its totality,

       we cannot say that the trial court’s findings that respondent’s children were neglected were

       against the manifest weight of the evidence.

¶ 41                                           III. CONCLUSION

¶ 42          For the reasons stated, we affirm the findings that J.D. and M.L. were neglected based on

       the presence of an injurious environment. Accordingly, the judgment of the circuit court of

       Tazewell County is affirmed.

¶ 43          Affirmed.

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