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A Dallas family鈥檚 baby was taken into state custody after a hospital visit. Now they鈥檙e suing Texas

Temecia and Rodney Jackson speak to protestors outside the Department of Family and Protective Services building in Dallas April 13, 2023. They say their newborn daughter Mila was wrongfully taken by Child Protective Services days after a postpartum doctor's visit.
Toluwani Osibamowo
/
四虎影院
Temecia and Rodney Jackson speak to protestors outside the Department of Family and Protective Services building in Dallas April 13, 2023. They say their newborn daughter Mila was wrongfully taken by Child Protective Services days after a postpartum doctor's visit.

A Dallas couple whose newborn daughter was taken into state custody with erroneous court documents following a hospital visit two years ago sued the state of Texas Tuesday.

Their lawsuit, filed on behalf of the family by ACLU Texas, alleges the DFPS process that led to baby Mila Jackson鈥檚 removal left the family with a label on their record that does not clear them of wrongdoing and disrupts their privacy.

鈥淚t hasn't just been, 鈥榦h, Mila's home and everything is all great,鈥欌 Temecia Jackson told 四虎影院. 鈥淚t's still been fighting for our reputation in the community. It's still fighting for our mental health and all of that.鈥

Child Protective Services ultimately returned Mila Jackson to her parents three weeks after a doctor reported Temecia and Rodney Jackson to the state for alleged medical neglect.

Baylor Scott and White Doctor Anand Bhatt diagnosed three-day-old Mila Jackson with jaundice when her parents took her in for a routine postpartum checkup. Later that day, Bhatt called to tell the Jacksons he believed Mila needed to be cared for in the hospital.

The Jacksons opted to pursue an alternative treatment plan at home with their midwife to avoid being separated from Mila. . Bhatt tried to coordinate a care plan with the Jacksons鈥 midwife but said he was unable to reach the family after multiple calls, and he reported the Jacksons to DFPS.

When Mila was a week old, an investigator and constables arrived at the family鈥檚 DeSoto home and took the newborn from her parents. Bhatt named Rodney Jackson as Mila鈥檚 father but named a different woman 鈥 Nichovia Nichols 鈥 as Mila鈥檚 mother, according to the lawsuit.

That name, along with Nichols鈥 criminal and family history, made it onto the affidavit authorities used to take Mila into CPS custody. The investigator referred to Temecia Jackson as 鈥淢s. Nichols鈥 in texts, according to the suit. DFPS corrected the mistake days later but said it would not lead to Mila鈥檚 return.

After just over three weeks in CPS custody 鈥 and community backlash 鈥 DFPS dismissed the case against the Jacksons and returned Mila home. But their involvement with the state didn鈥檛 end.

Protestors gathered outside the Department of Family and Protective Services on April 13, 2023 while Temecia and Rodney Jackson visited their daughter Mila inside. The newborn has been in the custody of Child Protective Services for roughly two weeks.
Toluwani Osibamowo
/
四虎影院
Protestors gathered outside the Department of Family and Protective Services on April 13, 2023 while Temecia and Rodney Jackson visited their daughter Mila inside. The newborn has been in the custody of Child Protective Services for roughly two weeks.

DFPS told the Jacksons they had 鈥渞eason to believe鈥 the parents medically neglected Mila and they were being put on for perpetrators of child abuse or neglect, according to the lawsuit 鈥 without any opportunity to challenge the allegations beforehand. The parents requested an administrative review of those findings and provided DFPS with records to make their appeal.

Nearly a year later, the designation on their case changed from 鈥渞eason to believe鈥 to 鈥渦nable to determine,鈥 which removes the Jacksons鈥 case from the Central Registry. But their records are still public, and the suit states DFPS gave them no options to appeal that decision and get the allegations removed from the department鈥檚 systems entirely.

The DFPS specialist found there wasn鈥檛 enough evidence to support allegations of medical neglect against the Jacksons, and they were within their rights to treat Mila at home under their midwife鈥檚 medical supervision, but still, DFPS did not rule out the allegations because there was 鈥渟ignificant concern for risk,鈥 according to the suit.

Because of the unilateral decision to issue the 鈥渦nable to determine鈥 designation with no options for appeal, the lawsuit alleges this part of the DFPS administrative process violates the family鈥檚 constitutional rights.

鈥淗aving a DFPS record is something that DFPS can use against families when determining whether or not to remove a child from the home,鈥 said Charelle Lett, an attorney with the ACLU of Texas. 鈥淗aving this 鈥榰nable-to-determine鈥 designation and not being able to have these records removed has a heavy weight on families, especially in situations like this where they literally did things that they were legally entitled to do as parents.鈥

The ACLU of Texas is seeking a declaratory judgment in Travis County court that the state administrative rules at the center of the case are unlawful and the open-ended finding on the Jacksons鈥 DFPS record be erased. The civil rights group says this case is emblematic of the struggles Black families face: and .

A spokesperson for DFPS said the agency does not comment on pending litigation.

Following Mila鈥檚 return, Temecia Jackson said the family resettled in Dallas with Mila and their two older boys to get away from the traumatic memories of Mila being taken from their DeSoto home. Mila, now 2 years old, is healthy, in daycare and goes to a new pediatrician, but her mother said she hasn鈥檛 returned to work for fear of being separated from her daughter once again.

Rodney Jackson is now uncomfortable being an active participant in volunteer work in the community and coaching his kids鈥 sports teams because he feels his reputation has been jeopardized by the DFPS investigation, according to the suit. It also alleges DFPS has visited their home multiple times asking for a 鈥淩odrick Jackson.鈥

鈥淲e have been parents for 12 years,鈥 Temecia Jackson said, 鈥渁nd for this to all of the sudden happen and for them to give Mila back to us with no court hearing or anything like that 鈥 so pretty much, 'hey, we're giving her back to you. You're not guilty. Here she is,' yet we still have to almost carry this guilty designation on us, it is, again, more things that we have to heal from.鈥

Got a tip? Email Toluwani Osibamowo at tosibamowo@kera.org. You can follow Toluwani on X .

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Toluwani Osibamowo covers law and justice for 四虎影院. She joined the newsroom in 2022 as a general assignments reporter. She previously worked as a news intern for Texas Tech Public Media and copy editor for Texas Tech University鈥檚 student newspaper, The Daily Toreador, before graduating with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in journalism. She was named one of Current's public media Rising Stars in 2024. She is originally from Plano.