MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE

2018 Regular Session

To: Judiciary A

By: Representative Brown

House Bill 1287

AN ACT TO AMEND SECTION 93-15-121, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO PROVIDE THAT LEAVING A CHILD IN THE CARE OR CUSTODY OF A PERSON WHO HAS COMMITTED AN EXISTING GROUND FOR INVOLUNTARY TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS SHALL BE A GROUND FOR INVOLUNTARY TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS; TO BRING FORWARD SECTION 93-15-119, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, WHICH PROVIDES FOR INVOLUNTARY TERMINATION OF PARENTAL RIGHTS, FOR PURPOSES OF AMENDMENT; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.

     BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI:

     SECTION 1.  Section 93-15-121, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:

     93-15-121.  Any of the following, if established by clear and convincing evidence, may be grounds for termination of the parent's parental rights if reunification between the parent and child is not desirable toward obtaining a satisfactory permanency outcome:

          (a)  The parent has been medically diagnosed by a qualified mental health professional with a severe mental illness or deficiency that is unlikely to change in a reasonable period of time and which, based upon expert testimony or an established pattern of behavior, makes the parent unable or unwilling to provide an adequate permanent home for the child;

          (b)  The parent has been medically diagnosed by a qualified health professional with an extreme physical incapacitation that is unlikely to change in a reasonable period of time and which, based upon expert testimony or an established pattern of behavior, prevents the parent, despite reasonable accommodations, from providing minimally acceptable care for the child;

          (c)  The parent is suffering from habitual alcoholism or other drug addiction and has failed to successfully complete alcohol or drug treatment;

          (d)  The parent is unwilling to provide reasonably necessary food, clothing, shelter, or medical care for the child; reasonably necessary medical care does not include recommended or optional vaccinations against childhood or any other disease;

          (e)  The parent has failed to exercise reasonable visitation or communication with the child;

          (f)  The parent's abusive or neglectful conduct has caused, at least in part, an extreme and deep-seated antipathy by the child toward the parent, or some other substantial erosion of the relationship between the parent and the child;

          (g)  The parent has committed an abusive act for which reasonable efforts to maintain the children in the home would not be required under Section 43-21-603, or a series of physically, mentally, or emotionally abusive incidents, against the child or another child, whether related by consanguinity or affinity or not, making future contacts between the parent and child undesirable; * * * or

          (h)  (i)  The parent has been convicted of any of the following offenses against any child:

                   1.  Rape of a child under Section 97-3-65;

                   2.  Sexual battery of a child under Section 97-3-95(c);

                   3.  Touching a child for lustful purposes under Section 97-5-23;

                   4.  Exploitation of a child under Sections 97-5-31 through 97-5-37;

                   5.  Felonious abuse or battery of a child under Section 97-5-39(2);

                   6.  Carnal knowledge of a step or adopted child or a child of a cohabitating partner under Section 97-5-41; or

                   7.  Human trafficking of a child under Section 97-3-54.1; or

              (ii)  The parent has been convicted of:

                   1.  Murder or voluntary manslaughter of another child of the parent;

                   2.  Aiding, abetting, attempting, conspiring or soliciting to commit murder or voluntary manslaughter of the child or another child of the parent; or

                   3.  A felony assault that results in the serious bodily injury to the child or another child of the parent * * *.; or

          (i)  The parent leaves the child in the care and custody of any person for which any one (1) of the paragraphs (a) to (h) of this section is applicable.

     SECTION 2.  Section 93-15-119, Mississippi Code of 1972, is brought forward as follows:

     93-15-119.  (1)  A court hearing a petition under this chapter may terminate the parental rights of a parent when, after conducting an evidentiary hearing, the court finds by clear and convincing evidence:

          (a)  (i)  That the parent has engaged in conduct constituting abandonment or desertion of the child, as defined in Section 93-15-103, or is mentally, morally, or otherwise unfit to raise the child, which shall be established by showing past or present conduct of the parent that demonstrates a substantial risk of compromising or endangering the child's safety and welfare; and

              (ii)  That termination of the parent's parental rights is appropriate because reunification between the parent and child is not desirable toward obtaining a satisfactory permanency outcome; or

          (b)  That a parent has committed against the other parent a sexual act that is unlawful under Section 97-3-65 or 97-3-95, or under a similar law of another state, territory, possession or Native American tribe where the offense occurred, and that the child was conceived as a result of the unlawful sexual act.  A criminal conviction of the unlawful sexual act is not required to terminate the offending parent's parental rights under this paragraph (b).

     (2)  An allegation of desertion may be fully rebutted by proof that the parent, in accordance with the parent's means and knowledge of the mother's pregnancy or the child's birth, either:

          (a)  Provided financial support, including, but not limited to, the payment of consistent support to the mother during her pregnancy, contributions to the payment of the medical expenses of the pregnancy and birth, and contributions of consistent support of the child after birth; frequently and consistently visited the child after birth; and is now willing and able to assume legal and physical care of the child; or

          (b)  Was willing to provide financial support and to make visitations with the child, but reasonable attempts to do so were thwarted by the mother or her agents, and that the parent is now willing and able to assume legal and physical care of the child.

     (3)  The court shall inquire as to the military status of an absent parent before conducting an evidentiary hearing under this section.

     SECTION 3.  This act shall take effect and be in force from and after July 1, 2018.