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You can search the entire site. or go to the recent opinions, or the chronological or subject indices. Anton K. v. State of Alaska, Department of Family & Community Services, Office of Children's Services (8/30/2024) sp-7712

Anton K. v. State of Alaska, Department of Family & Community Services, Office of Children's Services (8/30/2024) sp-7712

         Notice:  This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.   

         Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,  

         303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email  

         corrections@akcourts.gov.  

  

  

                   THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA  



  

ANTON K.,                                                 )          

                                                          )         Supreme Court No. S-18916  

                           Appellant,                     )          

                                                          )         Superior Court Nos. 3PA-19- 

         v.                                               )         00182 CN/00183 CN (Consolidated)  

                                                          )          

STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT                               )         O P I N I O N  

OF FAMILY & COMMUNITY                                     )          

SERVICES, OFFICE OF CHILDREN'S                            )        No. 7712 - August 30, 2024  

SERVICES,                                                 )  

                                                          )  

                           Appellee.                      )  

                                                          ) 



                  Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third  

                  Judicial District, Palmer, Kristen C. Stohler, Judge.  

  

                  Appearances:    Katrina  Larsen,  Ketchikan,  for  Appellant.   

                  Jennifer Teitell, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and  

                  Treg Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee.  

  

                  Before:    Maassen,  Chief  Justice,  and  Carney,  Borghesan,  

                  Henderson, and Pate, Justices.  

                    

                  PATE, Justice.  

  



         INTRODUCTION  



                  The   incarcerated   father   of   two   Indian   children   appeals   an   order  



terminating his parental rights.  He argues that the Office of Children's Services (OCS)  


----------------------- Page 2-----------------------

  



failed  to  make  active  efforts  to  prevent  the  breakup  of  his  family  while  he  was  



incarcerated.  



                  Before the father's lengthy period of incarceration, OCS sought to reunite  



the children with both the father and the mother.  During the father's incarceration, there  



were  significant  gaps  in  OCS's  efforts  to  facilitate  visitation  between  him  and  his  



children, but he was provided with some rehabilitative services.  OCS also continued to  



make timely, affirmative efforts to  reunify  the children with their mother.  Later,  it  



worked with the children's Tribe to place the children with paternal relatives who could  



have facilitated visitation with the father.  When those efforts proved unsuccessful, OCS  



eventually succeeded in placing the children with maternal relatives.  



                  The father has been incarcerated for a substantial period of time and could  



continue  to  be  incarcerated  for  decades.    The  father's  incarceration   and  other  



circumstances in this case impeded OCS's efforts.  But those efforts, considered in their  



entirety,  were active.   We  therefore  affirm the court's order terminating the father's  



parental rights.  



         FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS  



         A.       Background And Removal  



                  Anton  K.  and  Keri  K.  have  two  daughters:    Allie,  born  in  2017,  and  



                              1 

Melissa, born in 2018.   Allie and Melissa are eligible for enrollment in Anton's Tribe  



                                                                                                       2 

and thus are Indian children as defined in the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA).   Anton  



is not the father of Keri's other child, Iris G., who also lived with Anton and Keri in the  



                                                                                                                    

         1        We  use  pseudonyms  to  protect  the  family's  privacy.    Keri  is  not  

participating in this appeal.  

         2        See  25 U.S.C.  §  1903(4) (defining "Indian child" to include any person  

under 18 years of age who is unmarried, "eligible for membership in an Indian tribe,"  

and "the biological child of a member of an Indian tribe").  



                                                       -2-                                                    7712  


----------------------- Page 3-----------------------

  



                 3 

family home.   Anton has a criminal history that includes a conviction in 2013 for incest  



after he impregnated his 13-year-old niece.  



                 OCS removed Allie and Melissa from Anton and Keri's home in October  



2019 in response to reports that Anton and Keri were abusing alcohol, neglecting the  



children, physically abusing them, and exposing them to domestic violence and sexual  



abuse.  



                 OCS petitioned the court for  temporary  custody, alleging that then-six- 



year-old  Iris  had  "reported  two  instances  of  [Anton]  touching  her  genitals ."    The  



petition alleged that Iris also reported witnessing domestic violence between Anton and  



Keri.  It stated that OCS had received two prior reports regarding Anton, each involving  



Anton acting aggressively while intoxicated.  



                 After taking custody, OCS placed Allie and Melissa  in a foster home in  



Anchorage.    The  superior  court  later  entered  provisional  findings  that  there  was  



probable cause to believe that Allie and Melissa were children in need of aid, that they  



faced an imminent risk of harm if they remained in Anton and Keri's home, and that  



                                                                              4 

OCS had made active efforts to avoid removing the children.   



         B.      Events Following Removal  



                 1.       Initial     reunification        efforts     and      Anton's       arrest      and  

                          incarceration  



                 After taking custody of Allie and Melissa, OCS met with Anton and Keri  



in November 2019, developed case plans for them, and organized at least one in-person  



visit with Allie and Melissa at an OCS office.  OCS also gave Anton taxi vouchers to  



help him travel to and from visits and other appointments and began working with the  



                                                                                                                 

         3       Parental rights regarding Iris are not at issue in this appeal.  



         4       See AS 47.10.142(e); CINA Rules  10(c)(2)-(3), 10.1(b)(1).  



                                                      -3-                                                  7712  


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                    5 

children's Tribe.    The Tribe  filed its notice of intervention  in this  case  in November  



2019.  



                Anton's  case  plan,  which  he  signed  in  January  2020,  required  him  to  



complete a domestic violence intervention program and parenting education classes.  It  



also  required  him  to  complete  a  substance  abuse  assessment,  follow  all  resulting  



treatment recommendations, "engage in a sober support group," and complete random  



urinalysis and hair follicle testing.  Finally, it called for him to complete "an extensive  



psychological assessment or re-evaluation by a specialist with a background in child  



sexual abuse offenders" and follow all resulting recommendations.  The plan included  



names and phone numbers for service providers who could help him with most of the  



recommended activities.  



                OCS  also  developed a case plan with  Keri, which  included names and  



phone numbers for service providers who could help her with her case plan goals and  



stated that OCS would send referrals to two of those providers.  



                A little more than a week after Anton signed his case plan, he was charged  



with  multiple acts of  physical  and sexual assault against  Keri.    He  was arrested and  



incarcerated.  Anton was  later indicted on three counts of first-degree sexual assault,  



four counts of second-degree sexual assault, and nine  counts of third-degree assault.  



While this case was pending before us, a jury convicted Anton on all 16 counts against  



him.   Given his prior criminal history, Anton  faces  a sentence of multiple decades  in  



                              6 

prison for these offenses.   



        5       Because Allie and Melissa are eligible for enrollment in Anton's Tribe,  

we refer to that Tribe as "the children's Tribe" in this opinion.  See 25 U.S.C. §  1903(5)  

("  'Indian child's tribe' means (a) the Indian tribe in which an Indian child is a member  

or eligible for membership . . . .").  

        6       See AS  12.55.125(i)(1)(D), (i)(3)(C).  



                                                  -4-                                               7712  


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                 Anton remained incarcerated pending his criminal trial from January 2020  



                                                                                 7 

through the completion of the termination trial in August 2023.   He was incarcerated  



at Goose Creek Correctional Center in Wasilla until July 2021, when the Department  



of Corrections (DOC) transferred him to Wildwood Correctional Complex in Kenai.  



                 2.       Efforts during Anton's incarceration  



                 After Anton's arrest, OCS continued to make efforts to reunify the family.   



Some of those efforts were directed toward reunifying the children with Anton, some  



were directed toward reunification with Keri, and other efforts were made to place the  



children with Anton 's and Keri's relatives.  OCS remained in regular contact with the  



children's Tribe about these efforts.  



                          a.      Efforts toward Anton  



                 Restrictions  related  to  the  COVID-19  pandemic  severely  limited  the  



rehabilitative  services  available  to  Anton  while  he  was  incarcerated.    There  is  no  



evidence that Anton received service during the first 15 months of his incarceration.  



                 In  March  2021, with  encouragement  from  either  DOC  or  OCS,  Anton  



completed   a   behavioral   health   intake   assessment,   including   a   substance   abuse  



assessment, with a telehealth interviewer.  The interviewer's report noted that Anton  



"appear[ed] to have moderate levels of alcohol related problems" and that "[o]btaining  



alcohol treatment is of profound importance to [Anton]."  The report recommended that  



Anton receive intensive outpatient treatment for alcohol addiction.  



                 OCS completed an evaluation of Anton's progress on his case plan in June  



2021.  The evaluation noted that the services identified in Anton's case plan were not  



available due to his incarceration and restrictions related to COVID-19.  But OCS did  



not update Anton's case plan to reflect his incarcerated status or the lack of available  



services.  The evaluation noted that OCS was pursuing termination of Anton's parental  



rights.  



                                                                                                                

         7       Anton remains incarcerated.  



                                                     -5-                                                  7712  


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                 In July 2021, DOC transferred Anton to Wildwood Correctional Complex  



in Kenai.  While at Wildwood, Anton received a disciplinary writeup and sanction that  



reclassified him to a more restrictive custody level.  



                 Services at Wildwood, like those at Goose Creek, were initially limited  



due to the COVID-19 pandemic.  But by the time of the termination trial, Anton had  



participated in classes on "mindfulness, building coping skills, distress tolerance, [and]  



emotional regulation"  while at Wildwood.    He also participated in a six-week anger  



management class.  However, Wildwood did not offer a domestic violence intervention  



program.   And although  Wildwood did offer peer sobriety support groups and some  



mental health services, the record does not indicate that Anton used those services.  



                 Anton had multiple phone conversations with OCS caseworkers after his  



arrest.  A  caseworker reported  that,  while Anton accepted some of her calls and had  



conversations with her, Anton had declined phone calls from her "three or four" times.   



Anton also declined another call from a different caseworker.  



                 In  July  2022,  Anton  asked  the  assigned  caseworker  to  set  up  phone  



services so that he could make outgoing calls to her and to Allie and Melissa's foster  



         8 

parent,   but  both  the  caseworker  and  the  foster  parent  refused.    The  caseworker  



explained  that  she  believed  setting  up  these  accounts  would  have  required  sharing  



personal  identifying  information  with  Anton,  which  neither  the  caseworker  nor  the  



foster parent was willing to do.  



                 In December  2022 a Wildwood  employee emailed an OCS employee at  



Anton's  request  to  ask  for  assistance  arranging  an  in-person  meeting  with  OCS  at  



Wildwood.  OCS proposed a phone call with his caseworker instead.  A few days later  



                                                                                                                

         8       People  in  DOC  custody  generally  cannot  place  outgoing  phone  calls  

unless the recipient of the call has established an account with DOC's phone services  

vendor.        See    generally      Inmate     Phone      System ,     ALASKA       DEP 'T     OF   CORR.,  

https://doc.alaska.gov/inmate-phone-system (last visited July 2, 2024).  



                                                     -6-                                                  7712  


----------------------- Page 7-----------------------

  



OCS  completed  another  evaluation  of  Anton's  progress  on  his  case  plan.    The  



evaluation stated that Anton had "not maintained contact with [OCS] through scheduled  



telephonic caseworker visits."  It did not mention the recent email, the calls Anton had  



accepted  from  OCS,  or  Anton's  request  to  set  up  phone  services  to  enable  him  to  



communicate with his caseworker and the children's foster placement .  



                 Anton did not have any phone calls or in-person visits with his children  



between his arrest in January 2020 and the conclusion of the termination trial in August  



2023.  There appear to have been several reasons for this outcome.  First, OCS and the  



children's guardian ad litem had concerns that visiting with Anton in person in jail was  



not in the children's best interests.  Second, practical complications related to Anton's  



incarceration and the COVID-19 pandemic made it difficult to arrange in-person visits  



or calls with Anton.  Third, the children's foster parent refused to bring the children to  



visit Anton or to set up calls with him because engaging with him "triggered" the foster  



parent's  post-traumatic stress disorder.    Fourth,  Wildwood mistakenly told OCS that  



Anton was not allowed to have visits or calls with children.  



                 After  a  new  OCS  caseworker  assumed  responsibility  for  the  case  in  



September 2021, she attempted to set up visitation with Anton.  The caseworker later  



explained that Anton's transfer to Wildwood had made it difficult to arrange visits with  



his daughters because of its remote location - up to a six-hour round-trip drive from  



the children's foster placement in Anchorage - and Anton's custody classification.  



                 OCS considered setting up telephonic visits in which the children would  



call in from the OCS office in Anchorage.  In November 2022 OCS developed a family  



contact plan for these visits, including identifying topics Anton could not discuss and  



establishing a protocol for addressing any problems that arose.  The plan stated the visits  



would take place once per week and that the Anchorage OCS office would provide  



transportation between the children's foster placement and the OCS office.  However,  



an OCS  caseworker  later  stated that "the Anchorage office declined to facilitate any  



visits," explaining that it did so "due to the lack of staffing" and Wildwood's inability  



                                                     -7-                                                 7712  


----------------------- Page 8-----------------------

  



to guarantee that Anton would be available to call OCS for the visit at a particular date  



and time.  



                 Anton requested the address of the  foster home where Allie and Melissa  



were living so that he could send letters to the children.  His caseworker offered that  



Anton could instead send letters to her and she would pass them along to his daughters,  



but  she  reported  that  Anton  replied,  "[D]on't  bother;  nothing's  going  to  happen  



anyway."    However,  Anton  eventually  did  send  the  children  birthday  cards  and  



Christmas  cards.    In  December  2022  OCS  started  sending  Anton  photos  of  his  



daughters.  



                 Finally,  in  late  January  2023  an  OCS  supervisor  emailed  Anton's  



institutional probation officer to ask if Anton could have in-person or video visits with  



his daughters.  In this email, the supervisor mistakenly stated that Anton had pending  



charges for offenses against children and cited a guideline stating that "inmates who  



have committed a crime against a child may be ineligible for visits from a minor."  The  



                                                                                                               9 

probation  officer  replied  that  an  "[i]n-person  visit  is  not  an  option  for  [Anton]."    



However, the probation  officer also stated that DOC could accommodate a visit via  



video conference.  OCS did not follow up to arrange a video visit.  



                          b.       Efforts toward Keri  



                 After Anton was  incarcerated in January  2020, OCS continued to make  



efforts to reunite the children with Keri.  Keri made some progress on her case plan:   



She  completed  parenting  classes,  attended  a  domestic  violence  support  group,  and  



received mental health treatment.  Keri stipulated in June that active efforts were being  



made to prevent the breakup of the family.  



                                                                                                                  

         9       This  statement  appears  to  have  been  inaccurate,  potentially  because  of  

OCS's mistaken description of Anton's  then-pending charges.    Anton's institutional  

probation officer  later testified at the termination trial that Anton "[did] not have  any  

restrictions when it comes to visitation."  



                                                      -8-                                                   7712  


----------------------- Page 9-----------------------

  



                 OCS placed Allie and Melissa with Keri for a trial home visit in July.  In  



connection with that visit, a caseworker helped  Keri  install a baby gate.  OCS also  



assisted  in  efforts  to  secure  childcare  so  that  Keri  could  continue  to  attend  classes  



recommended in her case plan  during the trial home visit.  It also gave Keri housing  



applications and referrals for housing assistance.  



                 At the time of the trial home visit Keri was pregnant with her third child  



with  Anton.   That baby  was born in August  2020, and was transferred to a neonatal  



intensive care unit soon after his birth.  The hospital later sent the baby home with Keri  



after teaching her how to tend to his medical needs, including how to use his oxygen  



monitor.  The baby became hypoxic that night  after  Keri turned off the alarm on the  



oxygen monitor, and he later died.  Keri later admitted that she had been drinking that  



night.  After this incident, OCS removed Allie and Melissa from Keri's care.  



                 OCS continued to meet with Keri and arrange visitation until May 2021,  



when it filed a petition to terminate her and Anton 's parental rights.  Keri relinquished  



her parental rights in April 2023.  



                          c.      Efforts  to  place  the  children  with  either  Anton's  or  

                                  Keri's relatives  



                 Anton  requested  several  times  that  OCS  place  Allie  and  Melissa  with  



members of his family.  Anton suggested that placing the children with these relatives  



would have allowed him more opportunities for visitation with them and helped him  



remain involved in their lives.   Three of  Anton's  relatives  requested  placement :    his  



brother,  mother,  and  cousin.    OCS  conferred  with  the  children's  Tribe  about  the  



possibility  of  placing  Allie  and  Melissa  with  Anton's  brother  and  mother  and  



investigated  all  three  relatives  as  potential  placements,  but  it  ultimately  declined  



Anton's requests for placement with any of the family members he identified.  



                 OCS initially denied placement with Anton's brother, Jeremy, because it  



mistakenly concluded that he was a sex offender, in part because a different person with  



a similar name and birthdate had been convicted of sex crimes.  OCS also had concerns  



                                                     -9-                                                  7712  


----------------------- Page 10-----------------------

  



that  Jeremy  would not adequately protect the children from Anton .  In August  2022  



Jeremy withdrew his request for placement because he intended to serve as a third-party  



custodian for Anton  if he were released from jail in his criminal case.  Jeremy  later  



passed  an  OCS  background  check.    Although  Jeremy  did  not  ultimately  become  



Anton's  third-party  custodian,  Jeremy  did  not  renew  his  placement  request.    A  



representative  of  the  children's  Tribe  attempted  to  follow  up,  but  Jeremy  did  not  



respond.  Jeremy subsequently requested a placement review hearing, but he failed to  



attend the hearing.  



                 OCS  declined  to  place  Allie  and  Melissa  with  Anton's  mother,  Lydia,  



because it concluded she did not believe he was a sex offender, would not be adequately  

protective of the children, and did not have the financial means to care for them.10  OCS  



records also indicated there was a substantiated report that Lydia had committed a sex  



offense when Anton was a child.  Lydia requested a placement review hearing, but she  



did not call in for the hearing, and the court considered her request withdrawn.  



                 Finally,  OCS  denied  placement  with  Anton's  cousin  because  she  or  



someone else in her household had been convicted of a crime that was a barrier to foster  

placement that would have required a variance ; the cousin did not request a variance.11  



                 After efforts to place Allie and Melissa with Anton's relatives failed, OCS  



continued to work with the children's Tribe to identify and assess placement options.   



It eventually placed the children with their maternal uncles, Arnold and Mark Peterson.   



The  Petersons  live  in  Canada.    They  visited  their  nieces  in  person  in  August  and  



                                                                                                                  

         10      We caution that AS 47.14.100(m) provides that "poverty" is not "[p]rima  

facie  evidence  of  good  cause  not  to  place  a  child  with  an  adult  family  member."   

However, any error OCS may have made by relying on evidence of Lydia's limited  

financial means does not affect our analysis in this case.  

         11      See 7 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC)  10.905 (defining barrier crimes  

and conditions); 7 AAC 10.930 (providing for variances for individuals with barriers to  

placement under certain conditions, upon request by individual seeking placement).  



                                                      -10-                                                  7712  


----------------------- Page 11-----------------------

  



November 2022.  In February 2023 the Petersons were in Alaska to visit the children  



again and to attend court proceedings in this case.  During the Petersons' stay in Alaska,  



OCS removed Allie and Melissa from their foster placement on an emergency basis .   



OCS then placed Allie and Melissa with the Petersons and put the Petersons in contact  



with the children's Tribe.  Arnold extended his stay in Alaska to care for the children  



until May, when OCS gave its approval for him to take the children to Canada.  



         C.      Termination Trial  



                 The superior court held a termination trial over four days between  May  



and August 2023.  Witnesses included one of the three OCS caseworkers who worked  



with the family after removal;  an OCS  supervisor;  Anton's brother, Jeremy; and the  



children's maternal uncle, Arnold.  



                 An expert in child welfare  also testified to her conclusion that Allie and  



Melissa would likely suffer serious emotional or physical harm if returned to Anton's  



custody.  Another witness testified as an expert in the cultures of the 56 villages of the  



Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, including Anton's village.  She testified that OCS's actions  



in this case, including seeking termination of Anton's parental rights, were culturally  



appropriate.  



                 Finally, OCS called Anton as a witness.  He invoked his Fifth Amendment  



privilege against self-incrimination when asked about the events underlying his then- 



pending charges and whether he presented "a risk of sexual abuse or violence to [his]  



daughters."    When  asked  how  he  would  be  a  parent  to  Allie  and  Melissa  while  



incarcerated,  Anton  testified  that  he  "hop[ed]  that  [his]  family  members  or  [his]  



relatives would take [his] girls for [him], and then [he] would just take care of them  



as . . . needed."  Anton suggested that placing the children with these family members  



could have enabled more opportunities for him to have visited with his  children and  



remain involved in their lives.  OCS later asked Anton whether it would be correct to  



say "that  [he] d[id]n't care so much whether  [his] parental rights  [were] terminated as  



                                                    -11-                                                 7712  


----------------------- Page 12-----------------------

  



much as [his] concern that the girls be with members of the family that [he] prefer [red]."   



Anton responded, "Yes.  That is correct."  



                 On  the  last  day  of  trial,  the  court  admitted  into  evidence  a  letter  from  



representatives  of  the  children's  Tribe  expressing  its  support  for  placing  Allie  and  



Melissa with their maternal uncles.  



         D.      Termination Order  



                 After trial the superior court terminated Anton's parental rights.  The court  



concluded  that  there  was  clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  OCS  had  made  active  



efforts to prevent the breakup of the family.   In support of its  conclusion that  OCS's  



efforts had been active, the court found that OCS had developed a case plan for Anton  



and worked closely with his Tribe "to provide rehabilitative services and efforts" to his  



family, including researching potential family placements with Anton's relatives and  



ultimately placing Allie and Melissa with maternal uncles in Canada.  



                 The court acknowledged that OCS had not facilitated visitation between  



Anton and his children, but it found that Anton's ability to visit with his children "was  



hampered  by  [his]  imprisonment."    It  found  that  DOC  had  given  OCS  "conflicting  



information about the type of contact [Anton] was permitted to have," including telling  



OCS that Anton was not allowed to have any in-person visitation with his children,  



despite testimony indicating that in fact "there were no restrictions on [Anton's] visits."   



The court found that OCS had "determined it was not in the girls' best interests to have  



in-person or video visits" with Anton while he was incarcerated, but had recently begun  



"sending him regular updates and photographs."  It also found that OCS had offered to  



allow Anton to write letters to his daughters, but that he had chosen not to write these  



letters.  



                 The court found that while Anton was incarcerated, he had "participated  



in some programming, including a  [six]-week anger management course," but he had  



"not been able to participate in the . . . domestic violence intervention program required  



by  his  case  plan"  and  had  not  completed  a  psychological  evaluation.    The  court  



                                                     -12-                                                 7712  


----------------------- Page 13-----------------------

  



acknowledged that Anton "had a difficult time accessing services through DOC while  



incarcerated," in part because of the COVID-19 pandemic.  However, the court found  



that "the nature of [Anton's] pending charges and concerns regarding [his] privilege  



against   self-incrimination   ma[de]   it   nearly   impossible   to   conduct   meaningful  



assessments of his rehabilitative needs before his cases resolve."  It found that "[t]he  



significant rehabilitative efforts that are required in this case  [could not]  effectively  



begin" until Anton was convicted and sentenced or acquitted and released.  It also found  



that Anton had "refused on at least two occasions to communicate with his caseworker."   



It concluded that Anton's "inability to conform to [DOC] rules [had] also interfered  



with his access to rehabilitative opportunities and visitation with his children."  



                 The court also noted that OCS had made various efforts directed to family  



members other than Anton.  It concluded that OCS had made active efforts to reunify  



the children with their mother.  It also found that OCS had investigated the backgrounds  



of Anton's family members who requested placement of Allie and Melissa.  The court  



found  that "[n]one of the family members [Anton] identified are either available for  



placement  or  interested  in  placement,"  that  there  were  "serious  and  credible  safety  



concerns" involving many of them, and that those family members who "expressed at  



least a cursory interest" had not "followed through with the steps necessary to secure  



placement."  The court also found that both Keri and the Tribe supported placing Allie  



and Melissa with their maternal uncles.  The court ultimately concluded that OCS made  



"active efforts as required by AS 47.10.086 and 25 U.S.C. §  1912(d)."  



                 Anton appeals.  



         STANDARD OF REVIEW  



                 Whether OCS made active efforts to prevent the breakup of a family is a  

mixed question of fact and law.12  We review the factual findings underlying an active  



                                                                                                                

         12      Ronan F. v. State, Dep 't of Fam. & Cmty. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

539 P.3d 507, 514 (Alaska 2023).  



                                                     -13-                                                 7712  


----------------------- Page 14-----------------------

  



efforts determination for clear error,13  reversing only if a review  of the entire record  



leaves us with "a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made."14  Whether  



those factual findings satisfy the requirements of ICWA is a question of law to which  

we  apply  our  independent  judgment,15  "adopt[ing]  the  rule  of  law  that  is  most  



persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy."16  



         DISCUSSION  



                  Anton  acknowledges that  OCS  made  active  efforts toward  reunification  



prior to his arrest, but he argues that the superior court erred by concluding that OCS  



made active efforts to prevent the breakup of his family while he was incarcerated.  



                  We observe that OCS's efforts to provide visitation to Anton while he was  



incarcerated were significantly lacking, and its efforts to provide services to him during  



his incarceration were passive in some respects.  



                  But  OCS  made  active  efforts  to  reunify  the  children with both  parents  



prior to Anton's incarceration .  It also made  active  efforts after Anton's incarceration  



to reunify the children with Keri and later worked with the children's Tribe to place the  



children with extended family, including those identified by Anton as supporting the  



goal of reunification.  The strength of these efforts supports the court's conclusion that  



there was clear and convincing evidence that OCS's efforts, considered in their entirety,  



were active.   Accordingly, we affirm the court's order terminating Anton's parental  



rights.  



                                                                                                                    

         13      Id.  



         14      Ronald H. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

490 P.3d 357, 365 (Alaska 2021) (quoting Jon S. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs.,  

Off. of Child.'s Servs., 212 P.3d 756, 761 (Alaska 2009)).  

         15      Id.  



         16      Native Vill. of Kwinhagak v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  

Child.'s Servs., 542 P.3d 1099, 1109 (Alaska 2024).  



                                                      -14-                                                    7712  


----------------------- Page 15-----------------------

  



                 We begin by explaining the law of active efforts under ICWA as it applies  



when a parent is incarcerated.  We then explain why we agree with the superior court's  



conclusion that OCS made active efforts to prevent the breakup of Anton's family.  



         A.       ICWA Requires Active Efforts Even When A Parent Is Incarcerated,  

                  But  The  Circumstances  Of  Incarceration  Affect  What  Efforts  Are  

                  Possible.  

                  "ICWA has no exception for incarceration,"17 and "[n]either incarceration  



nor doubtful prospects for rehabilitation will relieve  [OCS] of its duty under ICWA to  

make  active  remedial  efforts."18    Therefore,  as  in  other  cases  governed  by  ICWA,  



OCS's remedial efforts toward incarcerated parents  of Indian children  "must involve  



assisting  the  parent . . .  through  the  steps  of  a  case  plan  and  with  accessing  or  

developing the resources necessary to satisfy the case plan."19   In other words,  OCS  



must  "actually  help  the  parent  develop  the  skills  required  to  keep  custody  of  the  

children,"20  and  its  efforts  must  be  "tailored  to  the  facts  and  circumstances  of  the  



case."21  



                                                                                                                   

         17      Doe v. State, Dep 't of Health  & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 272  

P.3d 1014, 1021 (Alaska 2012).  

         18      A.M. v. State (A.M. I), 891 P.2d 815, 827 (Alaska 1995), overruled in part  

on other grounds by In re S.A., 912 P.2d 1235 (Alaska  1996).  

         19       25  C.F.R.  § 23.2  (2024); see also  Chloe O. v. State, Dep 't of Health  &  

Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 309 P.3d 850, 856-57 (Alaska 2013).  

         20      Dashiell R. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

222 P.3d 841, 849 (Alaska 2009).  

         21       25 C.F.R. § 23.2; see also Mona J. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs.,  

Off. of Child.'s Servs., 511 P.3d 553, 561 (Alaska 2022); Ronald H. v. State, Dep 't of  

Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  Child.'s Servs., 490 P.3d 357, 368 (Alaska 2021); Bill S.  

v.  State,  Dep 't  of  Health  &  Soc.  Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s  Servs.,  436  P.3d  976,  981  

(Alaska 2019); cf. Lucy J. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

244 P.3d 1099, 1116 (Alaska 2010) (analyzing efforts required to accommodate parent  

with disability).  



                                                      -15-                                                   7712  


----------------------- Page 16-----------------------

  



                 ICWA also does not contain any provision allowing a court to approve the  

discontinuation of active efforts.22   Even if a case has been pending for an  extended  



period and a child's need for permanency favors terminating parental rights,  we  will  



reverse a termination order unless  OCS has proven by clear and convincing evidence  

that it made active efforts to reunite the family.23  



                 However, "[t]he circumstances surrounding a parent's incarceration may  

have  a  direct  bearing  on  what  active  remedial  efforts  are  possible."24    "These  



circumstances  include  the  duration  of  the  parent's  incarceration  and  the  services  

possible  for  incarcerated  parents."25    When  assessing  the  efforts  made  to  provide  



remedial services and rehabilitative programs to an incarcerated parent, we consider not  

only the efforts made by OCS, but also those made by DOC or another agency.26  Active  



efforts may also include "[i]dentifying, notifying, and inviting representatives of the  



Indian child's Tribe to participate in providing support and services" and "facilitating  

the use of remedial and rehabilitative services provided by the child's Tribe."27  



                 When deciding whether OCS's efforts cross the threshold from passive to  



active, we must  evaluate "the State's involvement in its entirety," considering all the  



                                                                                                                 

         22      See 25 U.S.C. 1912(d); cf. AS 47.10.086(b)-(c) (allowing discontinuation  

of reasonable efforts in non-ICWA cases under certain conditions).  

         23      See Bill S., 436 P.3d at 984 (acknowledging "the importance of achieving  

permanency  for  these  young  children"  after  several  years  in  OCS  custody,  but  

nonetheless reversing termination order).  

         24      A.M. I ,  891  P.2d  815,  827  (Alaska  1995),  overruled  in  part  on  other  

grounds by In re S.A., 912 P.2d 1235 (Alaska  1996); see also  T.F. v. State, Dep 't of  

Health & Soc. Servs., Div. of Fam. & Youth Servs., 26 P.3d 1089, 1096 (Alaska 2001).  

         25      Dashiell R., 222 P.3d at 849.  



         26      See T.F., 26 P.3d at 1096 (explaining that ICWA does not specify which  

agency must make active efforts).  

         27      25 C.F.R. § 23.2  (2024); see also Ronald H. v.  State, Dep 't of Health &  

Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 490 P.3d 357, 368 (Alaska 2021).  



                                                     -16-                                                  7712  


----------------------- Page 17-----------------------

  



services provided to the family throughout the history of the case.28  In doing so, we are  



mindful not to excuse "extreme" or "egregious" failures.29  While "perfection is not the  



standard,"30 federal law requires OCS's efforts to be "affirmative, active, thorough, and  



timely" and "intended primarily to maintain or reunite an Indian child with his or her  

family."31  Those efforts should therefore "increase the likelihood that families will be  



reunified,  or  at  least  reduce  the  amount  of  time  it  takes  to  determine  whether  

reunification will be possible."32  



                  Consistent with ICWA's command that active efforts must be "tailored to  

the  facts and circumstances of the case,"33  we have  credited efforts toward someone  



other  than  the  parent  challenging  termination  when  those  efforts  were  directed  at  



preventing the breakup of the family.  Because reunification with an incarcerated parent  



may not be possible within a reasonable timeframe, efforts to reunify the children with  



a nonincarcerated parent are "an important aspect of [OCS's] active efforts to keep the  



                                                                                                                     

         28       Doe v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  Child.'s Servs., 272  

P.3d 1014, 1021 (Alaska 2012) (quoting Jon S. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs.,  

Off. of Child.'s Servs., 212 P.3d 756, 764 (Alaska 2009)); Ronald H., 490 P.3d at 366.  

         29       See Clark J. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

483 P.3d 896, 904 (Alaska 2021).  

         30       See Mona J. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

511 P.3d 553, 566 (Alaska 2022).  

         31       25 C.F.R. § 23.2.  



         32       Jon S. , 212 P.3d at 769 (Christen, J., dissenting in part).  



         33       See 25 C.F.R. § 23.2.  



                                                       -17-                                                    7712  


----------------------- Page 18-----------------------

  



family together."34   Efforts to place children with another relative can play a similar  



role when that placement would further reunification with a parent.35  



                  ICWA's  implementing  regulations  support  our  conclusion  that  these  



reunification and placement  efforts help  satisfy  OCS's  obligations  when  a parent  is  

incarcerated for an extended period.36  The regulation defining "active efforts" provides  



a  non-exhaustive  list  of  actions  that  may  contribute  to  OCS's  "active  efforts,"37  



including various ways of providing a supportive environment for the children and their  

parents.38  We hold that when  a parent has been  incarcerated  for an extended period,  



                                                                                                                    

         34      Dashiell R. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

222 P.3d 841,  850 (Alaska 2009); see also, e.g., Clark J., 483 P.3d at 902; Claudio P.  

v.  State,  Dep 't  of  Health  &  Soc.  Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s  Servs.,  309  P.3d  860,  866  

(Alaska 2013); Doe v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 272  

P.3d 1014, 1021 (Alaska 2012).  

         35       See David S. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

270 P.3d 767, 779-81 (Alaska 2012) (observing, prior to adoption of 2016 regulations  

implementing ICWA, that "OCS's early placement decisions may directly impact the  

ability  of  parents  to  fulfill  the  requirements  of  their  case  plans"  and  therefore  be  

creditable as part of OCS's active efforts); Jon S. , 212 P.3d at  766  & n.35  (crediting  

OCS's attempts to place children with extended family members as part of its active  

efforts); 25 C.F.R. § 23.2 (providing, in regulation that became effective in 2016, that  

active efforts may include "contacting and consulting with extended family members  

to  provide  family  structure  and  support  for  the  Indian  child  and  the  Indian  child's  

parents").  

         36       See 25 C.F.R. § 23.2.  



         37       See  id.  ("Active  efforts . . .  may  include,  for  example . . . ."  (emphasis  

added));  see  also   BUREAU   OF   INDIAN   AFFAIRS,   U.S.   DEP 'T   OF   THE   INTERIOR,  

GUIDELINES FOR IMPLEMENTING THE INDIAN CHILD WELFARE ACT § E.4 (2016) ("The  

examples of active efforts provided in the ICWA regulations reflect best practices in  

the field of Indian child welfare, but are not meant to be an exhaustive list.").  

         38       See   25   C.F.R.   § 23.2   (providing   that   active   efforts   may   include  

"contacting and consulting with extended family members to provide family structure  

and support for the Indian child and the Indian child's parents," "[t]aking steps to keep  

siblings  together  whenever  possible,"  "[i]dentifying  community  resources . . .  and  

  



                                                      -18-                                                    7712  


----------------------- Page 19-----------------------

  



and particularly when the parent remains incarcerated at the time of the termination trial  



and may continue to remain so for a substantial period, OCS's work to place the child  



with an extended family member who supports the goal of reunification may be credited  



by the court toward active efforts.  



         B.       The  Superior  Court  Did  Not  Err  By  Concluding  That  OCS  Made  

                  Active Efforts To Prevent The Breakup Of Anton's Family.  



                  Anton criticizes  OCS's efforts to arrange visitation with his children, to  



connect  him  with  rehabilitative  services  that  were  available  to  him  while  in  DOC  



custody, and to keep him updated regarding his children and involve him in decisions  



about their care.  



                  The record reveals weaknesses in OCS's efforts to prevent the breakup of  



Anton's family, but also some important strengths.   There were  significant problems  



with OCS's efforts to facilitate visitation between Anton and his children while he was  



incarcerated.  And  although  DOC  made rehabilitative services available to Anton in  



jail,  OCS's  efforts in connection with those services were passive in some instances .   



However, OCS also made efforts to reunify the children with Keri and later coordinated  



with  the  children's  Tribe  in  attempts  to  place  the  children  with  extended  family  



members, including relatives identified by Anton who could have been able to provide  



more opportunities for visitation with him.  



                  Below we evaluate the efforts OCS made during Anton's incarceration to  



(1) facilitate visitation, (2) provide rehabilitative services, and (3) reunify the children  



with Keri and later place them with extended family members.  Finally, in subsection  



(4) we explain our conclusion that, when OCS's efforts are considered in their entirety,  



                                                                                                                  



actively assisting the Indian child's parents or, when appropriate, the child's family, in  

utilizing and accessing those resources," and "[c]onsidering alternative ways to address  

the  needs  of  the  Indian  child 's  parents  and,  where  appropriate,  the  family,  if  the  

optimum services do not exist or are not available").  



                                                      -19-                                                  7712  


----------------------- Page 20-----------------------

  



there  is  clear  and  convincing  evidence  that  OCS  made  active  efforts  to  prevent  the  



breakup of Anton's family .  



                  1.      OCS's       efforts     to   facilitate     visitation      while     Anton       was  

                          incarcerated were significantly lacking.  



                 Anton argues that OCS  should have done more to provide visitation and  



other opportunities for contact with his children while he was incarcerated.   OCS's  



efforts to maintain family contact during this period consisted primarily of offering to  



allow Anton to write letters to his children, passing along cards he sent, and sending  

him photographs of the children.39  OCS also developed, but did not implement, a plan  



that would have allowed Anton to have phone calls with the children.   Finally,  OCS  



inquired about the possibility of setting up video visits with the children.  



                 The superior court identified several reasons for OCS's failure to arrange  



in-person visitation or phone calls with the children .  Among these, it noted that there  



had  been  a  miscommunication  between  OCS  and  DOC  about  whether  Anton  was  



allowed to have phone calls or in-person visits with children and that restrictions due to  



the COVID-19 pandemic had limited  Anton's opportunities for  in-person  visitation.   



The  court  also  found  that  OCS  eventually  "determined  it  was  not  in  the  girls'  best  



interests to have in-person or video visits" with Anton.  



                 Anton argues that "the superior court's finding that OCS denied visitation  



for acceptable reasons was clearly erroneous."  However, the court did not characterize  



the reasons for the lack of visitation as "acceptable," and the record supports its factual  



findings  regarding  the  many  factors  that  interfered  with  visitation.    The  physical  



distance between Wildwood and the children's foster home in Anchorage also helps to  



explain why OCS was unable to arrange in-person visitation.    There was also some  



                                                                                                                   

         39      The superior court found that Anton had declined to write any letters.  This  

finding  is  supported by the trial testimony of  one of the assigned caseworkers, who  

distinguished between "letters" and "cards" and stated that Anton had not sent letters  

but had sent cards to his children for Christmas and birthdays.  



                                                      -20-                                                   7712  


----------------------- Page 21-----------------------

  



evidence that it was difficult to schedule phone calls with Anton while he was in DOC  



custody.  



                  Notwithstanding these challenges, OCS's failure to facilitate any form of  



visitation between Anton and his children for more than three years without formally  

notifying him that it had decided to deny visitation is a serious lapse.40  OCS introduced  



scant evidence that would excuse or explain its failure to arrange a videoconference  



visit between Anton and his children after DOC offered to set up such a visit.  Although  



testimony that OCS and the children's guardian ad litem had concerns about in-person  



visits with Anton supports the superior court's finding that OCS "eventually determined  



it was not in the girls' best interests" to have in-person visits, the court 's  finding that  



OCS had reached the same conclusion regarding  virtual  visits  lacks support.   In any  



event, a determination by OCS that visitation - whether in-person or virtual - is not  

in a child's best interests does not, on its own, excuse the failure to offer visitation.41  If  



OCS decides it is in a child's best interests to deny visitation, it must inform the parent  

of the denial  and the parent's right to request a review hearing.42  OCS did not do so  



here.  



                  Anton  understandably  criticizes the "inconsistency among the reasons"  



OCS  gave  for  failing  to  arrange  visitation,  which  he  argues  shows  that  "OCS  was  



actively working to prevent a relationship between [him] and his children."   There is  



some evidence to the contrary, including  evidence that OCS facilitated visitation and  



provided Anton with taxi vouchers to help with transportation prior to his incarceration .   



                                                                                                                     

         40       Cf. AS 47.10.080(p) (stating that OCS generally must provide "reasonable  

visitation," but may deny visitation "if there is clear and convincing evidence that visits  

are not in the child's best interests," while providing that if OCS "denies visitation to a  

parent," it "shall inform the parent . . . of a reason for the denial and of the parent's . . .  

right to request a review hearing").  

         41       See id.  



         42       Id.  



                                                       -21-                                                    7712  


----------------------- Page 22-----------------------

  



But considering the record as a whole, OCS's efforts to facilitate visitation in this case  



fell well short of active efforts.  



                  2.      OCS and DOC made rehabilitative services available to Anton  

                          while he was incarcerated, but its efforts were passive in some  

                          respects.  



                 Anton contends that OCS's efforts fell short because it failed to direct him  



to  rehabilitative   services  that  he  could  access  while  in  DOC  custody.    Anton  



acknowledges that DOC made "some relevant programs" available to him and that these  



                                                  43 

services  count  toward  OCS's  efforts,                but  he  argues  that  merely  making  services  

available  does  not  satisfy  the  active  efforts  standard.44    He  argues  that  there  is  no  



evidence  in  the  record  that  OCS  identified  services  that  he  could  access  while  

incarcerated  or  helped  take  him  through  the  steps  of  his  case  plan,45  despite  his  



demonstrated ability and willingness to seek out services on his own initiative.46   He  



also observes that OCS failed to acknowledge any of the services he completed in his  



case plan evaluations.  



                                                                                                                   

         43      See Dashiell R.  v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  Child.'s  

Servs., 222 P.3d 841, 849 (Alaska 2009).  

         44      See A.M. I , 891 P.2d 815, 827 (Alaska  1995), overruled in part on other  

grounds by In re S.A., 912 P.2d 1235 (Alaska  1996); see also Clark J. v. State, Dep't of  

Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 483 P.3d 896, 903 (Alaska 2021); cf. Duke  

S. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs., 433 P.3d 1127, 1137  

(Alaska 2018) (applying "reasonable efforts" standard).  

         45       Cf. 25 C.F.R.  § 23.2 (2024)  ("Where an agency is involved in the child- 

custody proceeding, active efforts must involve assisting the parent or parents or Indian  

custodian  through  the  steps  of  a  case  plan  and  with  accessing  or  developing  the  

resources necessary to satisfy the case plan.").  

         46       Cf.  Wilson W. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of  Child.'s  

Servs., 185 P.3d 94, 101 (Alaska  2008)  ("If a parent has a long history of refusing  

treatment and continues to refuse treatment, OCS is not required to keep up its active  

efforts once it is clear that these efforts would be futile.").  



                                                      -22-                                                   7712  


----------------------- Page 23-----------------------

  



                 Anton's  case  plan  called  for  him  to  complete  a  domestic  violence  



intervention   program,   parenting   classes,   a   substance   abuse   assessment,   and   a  



psychological  assessment  by  a  specialist  with  a  background  in  child  sexual  abuse  



offenders.  It also called for him to participate in a sober support group.  



                 Anton  received  some  of  these  services  while  incarcerated,  including  a  

substance abuse assessment that either DOC or OCS encouraged him to complete.47  He  



also  participated  in  a  six-week  anger  management  course.    Anton's  participation  in  



these DOC programs is relevant to our analysis of OCS's efforts, regardless of whether  



OCS actively identified these services as relevant or referred Anton to them.  While  



Anton correctly suggests that it would have been helpful for OCS to inquire with DOC  



to determine what services could be made available to him while he was incarcerated,  



we do not require OCS to refer an incarcerated parent to programs in which the parent  

has already voluntarily enrolled.48  



                 However,  Wildwood  did  offer  sober  support  groups,  and  OCS  did  not  



show that Anton had been referred to such a group or that he had participated in one.   



OCS  also  did  not  update  Anton's  case  plan  to  acknowledge  the  limited  services  



available to him while he was in custody.  Finally, apart from some evidence that either  



DOC  or  OCS  encouraged  Anton  to  pursue  the  behavioral  health  assessment  he  



completed, there is little indication in the record that  OCS was  actively taking Anton  



through the steps of his case plan while he was incarcerated.  



                 The  circumstances  of  Anton's   incarceration  made  it  impossible  or  



impractical for OCS to provide some of the services listed in his case plan, which affects  



                                                                                                                  

         47      The superior court found that Anton had not participated in a substance  

abuse assessment.  However, that finding is clearly erroneous.  The record shows that  

Anton   completed   a   behavioral   health   assessment,   including   a   substance   abuse  

assessment, while he was at Goose Creek.  

         48      See A.M. v. State (A.M. II), 945 P.2d 296, 305-06 (Alaska 1997).  



                                                      -23-                                                  7712  


----------------------- Page 24-----------------------

  



our assessment of  OCS's efforts.49   For example,  because  Wildwood did not offer  a  



domestic violence intervention program, it was not  possible for  OCS  to provide that  

 service to Anton.50   The circumstances of Anton's then-pending criminal charges  for  



 sexual assault and uncharged allegations that he had sexually abused Iris, considered  



alongside  his assertion of the privilege against self-incrimination at trial,  support the  



 superior  court's  finding  that  it  would  be  "nearly  impossible  to  conduct  meaningful  



assessments of his rehabilitative needs before his cases resolve."  



                  As  the  superior  court  observed,  the  practical  difficulties  presented  by  



Anton's  incarceration  during  the  COVID-19  pandemic  are  also  relevant  to  the  

assessment of OCS's efforts to provide services  in this case.51   Anton  challenges the  



court's finding that these circumstances "made it difficult" for OCS to engage with him,  



but because this  finding is supported by trial testimony and not clearly erroneous, we  

will not second-guess it.52   The record  also  shows that Anton declined multiple calls  



from  OCS  caseworkers,  hindering  their  efforts  on  his  behalf.    Finally,  the  record  



 supports  the  superior  court's  finding  that  Anton 's  misconduct  "interfered  with  his  



access to rehabilitative opportunities and visitation with his children."  This misconduct  



led Anton to be reclassified to a more restrictive status, affecting his access to visitation.   



                                                                                                                    

         49       See A.A. v. State, Dep 't of Fam. & Youth Servs., 982 P.2d 256, 261 (Alaska  

 1999) (noting that "practical circumstances surrounding a parent's incarceration" are "a  

 significant factor in our evaluation of the adequacy of the State's efforts").  

         50       The  record  does  not  indicate  whether  a  psychological  evaluation  was  

available while Anton was incarcerated.  

         51       See  id.; see also A.M. I , 891 P.2d  815,  827  (Alaska  1995), overruled in  

part on other grounds by  In re S.A., 912 P.2d 1235 (Alaska  1996); T.F. v. State, Dep 't  

of Health  & Soc. Servs.,  Div. of Fam. & Youth Servs., 26 P.3d 1089, 1096 (Alaska  

2001).  

         52       See  Maisy  W.  v.  State,  Dep 't  of  Health  &  Soc.  Servs.,  Off.  of  Child.'s  

Servs., 175 P.3d 1263, 1267 (Alaska 2008) ("[W]e will not reweigh evidence when the  

record provides clear support for the superior court 's ruling.").  



                                                       -24-                                                   7712  


----------------------- Page 25-----------------------

  



Like  other circumstances of Anton's incarceration,  it  is relevant to the active efforts  

inquiry  because  it  affected  his  access  to  services,53  limiting  "what  active  remedial  



efforts [were] possible."54  



                 3.       OCS made active efforts to reunify the children with Keri and  

                          later to place them with either Anton's or Keri's relatives.  



                  OCS made efforts to reunify the children with Keri for at least the first 18  



months after it took custody, including connecting Keri with services, arranging a trial  



home visit, and helping Keri arrange childcare so she could participate in parenting  



classes.  We agree with  the superior court that  these efforts were  active.  While the  



record does not indicate what efforts  OCS may have made toward Keri after it filed a  



petition to terminate her parental rights in May 2021, the efforts it made before then are  

"an important aspect of [OCS's] active efforts to keep the family together."55  



                 Working  alongside  the  children's  Tribe,  OCS  also  made  efforts  to  



investigate  the  possibility  of  placing  the  children  with  several  members  of  Anton's  



family that Anton identified as potential placements.  Anton suggested that placing the  



children with these family members could have enabled more opportunities for him to  



visit with his children and remain involved  in their  lives.   OCS's efforts to place the  



children with these relatives were consistent with Anton's statement at the termination  



trial that he cared more that his children be placed with his preferred family members  



than that he retain his parental rights.  



                  OCS eventually placed the children with members of Keri's family - the  



children's maternal uncles - who took steps to keep Keri involved in the children's  



                                                                                                                   

         53      See Doe v. State, Dep 't of Health  & Soc. Servs., Off. of  Child. 's Servs.,  

272 P.3d 1014, 1022 (Alaska 2012); T.F., 26 P.3d at  1096; A.A. , 982 P.2d at 262-63.  

         54      See A.A., 982 P.2d at 261.  



         55      Dashiell R. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

222 P.3d 841, 850 (Alaska 2009).  



                                                      -25-                                                   7712  


----------------------- Page 26-----------------------

  



lives and expressed a commitment to maintaining the children's connection with their  



Tribe.  



                  OCS's efforts to place the children with family members were not perfect :   



Most notably, it initially excluded Anton's brother, Jeremy, from consideration because  



it confused him with a sex offender with a similar name and birthdate.  However, even  



considering this mistake, OCS's efforts to place Allie and Melissa with family members  



were "affirmative, active, thorough, and timely," and the record supports the conclusion  



that these efforts were  "intended primarily to maintain or reunite" the children "with  

[their] family" by supporting the goal of reunification with  either Anton or Keri.56  In  



particular, OCS 's significant efforts, in coordination with the children's Tribe, to place  



the   children   with   members   of   Anton's   family   who   could   have   enabled   more  



opportunities for him to visit with his children support the superior court's active efforts  



determination.  



                 Anton  argues  that  OCS's  efforts  were  insufficient  because  it  did  not  



"include  [him]  in  decision-making  and  important  updates  regarding  his  children,"  



including decisions about foster placements.  We reject this argument.  OCS did include  



Anton  in  its  decision-making:    It  took  seriously  his  preference  that  his  children  be  



placed with members of his family, and it made active efforts to honor that preference.   



And although OCS's efforts to keep in contact with Anton and provide updates about  



his  children's  wellbeing  were  lacking  in  many  respects,  as  we  have  explained,  the  

context of Anton's incarceration affects the scope of the efforts that ICWA requires.57   



To the extent that Anton is asserting additional rights to participate in decision-making  



and receive updates beyond what ICWA requires, he has not articulated a basis for those  



                                                                                                                   

         56      See  25 C.F.R. § 23.2  (2024)  (providing  that active efforts may include  

"contacting and consulting with extended family members to provide family structure  

and support for the Indian child and the Indian child 's parents").  

         57      See A.A., 982 P.2d at 261.  



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rights,  which  are  not  among  the  enumerated  residual  rights  retained  by  parents  of  

children in OCS custody.58   Therefore, while the gaps in OCS's communication with  



Anton are relevant to whether  OCS made active efforts to prevent the breakup of his  



family,  Anton has  not  shown  that  OCS  violated  a  duty  to  involve  him  in  decision- 



making or to keep him informed.  



                 4.       Considered in their entirety, OCS's efforts were active.  



                 We conclude that OCS proved by clear and convincing evidence that its  



efforts in this case, considered in their entirety, were active.  This conclusion depends  



in part on the strength of OCS's efforts to reunify the children with both parents prior  



to Anton's incarceration.  It also depends on the strength of the efforts OCS made after  



Anton's  incarceration  to  reunify  the  children  with  Keri  and  later  to  work  with  the  



children's  Tribe  to  place  the  children  with  extended  family  members,  including  



relatives Anton identified who could have supported the goal of reunification.  



                 As Anton concedes, OCS made active efforts toward both him and Keri  



during the brief period when he was not incarcerated, including arranging visitation,  



including him in team decision meetings, and providing him with taxi vouchers to help  



him travel to and from visits and other appointments.  



                 The  circumstances  and  duration  of  Anton's  incarceration  necessarily  



delayed the possibility of reunification with him:  Between removal and the termination  



trial, Anton was incarcerated for more than three years - the majority of his children's  



lives, up to that point.  He faced a presumptive sentence of multiple decades in prison  



if he were to be  convicted -  as he later was -  on the most serious charges against  

him.59    Restrictions  due  to  COVID-19,  Anton's  reclassification  to  "close  custody"  



                                                                                                                 

         58      See AS 47.10.084(c); see also Jude M. v. State, Dep't of Health & Soc.  

Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  394 P.3d 543, 551 (Alaska 2017)  (noting that residual  

rights of parents of children in OCS custody are limited) .  

         59      See AS  12.55.125(i)(1)(D), (i)(3)(C).  



                                                     -27-                                                  7712  


----------------------- Page 28-----------------------

  



status,  and his decision to decline some calls from OCS caseworkers  also interfered  



with OCS's ability to provide Anton with both rehabilitative services and visitation.  



                  Given these circumstances,  we give  substantial weight  to  OCS's efforts  

after  Anton's  incarceration  to  reunite  the  children  with  Keri.60    We  agree  with  the  



superior court that these efforts were active.  



                  We also credit OCS's efforts to place the children with Anton's and Keri's  



family members because those efforts advanced the goal of reunifying the children with  



their parents.  In particular,  OCS's efforts  in partnership with the children 's Tribe  to  



place the children with  paternal relatives  are relevant because placement with those  



family members could have  helped Anton make progress on his case plan goals by  

providing  "family  structure  and  support"61  and  enabling  more  opportunities  for  



visitation than were available while the children were placed with a non-relative foster  

parent.62  



                  OCS's  rehabilitative  efforts  toward  Anton  were  certainly  flawed.    Its  



efforts to facilitate contact with Anton's children while he was incarcerated were sorely  



lacking.   Although  services were  available to Anton during his incarceration,  OCS's  



efforts  in  connection  with  those  services  were  passive  in  some respects.    However,  



OCS's efforts  in this case  extended  well  beyond the services it provided  directly  to  



Anton,  and  we conclude that its efforts  "crossed the threshold between passive and  

active efforts."63  



                                                                                                                    

         60       See Dashiell R., 222 P.3d at 850.  



         61       See   25   C.F.R.   § 23.2   (providing   that   active   efforts   may   include  

"contacting and consulting with extended family members to provide family structure  

and support for the Indian child and the Indian child 's parents").  

         62       See David S. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

270 P.3d 767, 779 (Alaska 2012).  

         63      Pravat P. v. State, Dep 't of Health & Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.'s Servs.,  

249 P.3d 264, 272 (Alaska 2011).  



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          CONCLUSION  



                     We  AFFIRM  the  superior  court's  order  terminating  Anton's  parental  



rights. 



  



                                                                  -29-                                                            7712  

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