RightsForMothers.com

November 8, 2009

Shared Parenting?

Some things are just wrong. And one of them is when fathers take babies from mothers, even keeping them from seeing each other.

Peter can keep trying, but the fact is women were equipped to have and feed and nourish babies. Most people get that. But it seems the shared parenting crowd will keep trying to make it about them and not the children. There is ABSOLUTELY nothing wrong with sharing parenting, in the fashion that the children are used to. If dad took care of them more, he should continue to be with them more. If mom took care of them more, she should continue with the caretaking. If the children feed at dad’s breast more….

From US News & World Report:

Breast-Feeding Benefits Moms and Babies: Report

Nursing exclusively for six months, then with foods until at least 12 months is ideal, dietitians say

Posted November 6, 2009

FRIDAY, Nov. 6 (HealthDay News) — Breast-feeding offers health benefits for infants and mothers, and should be promoted and encouraged, says an updated position paper released by the American Dietetic Association.

“It is the position of the American Dietetic Association that exclusive breast-feeding provides optimal nutrition and health protection for the first 6 months of life, and breast-feeding with complementary foods from 6 months until at least 12 months of age is the ideal feeding pattern for infants. Breast-feeding is an important public health strategy for improving infant and child morbidity and mortality and improving maternal morbidity and helping to control health care costs,” the ADA said in a news release.

The authors of the position paper conducted an evidence-based review of breast-feeding’s history, practices and health benefits in the United States and other countries. They concluded that breast-milk features optimal nutrient composition for infants and reduces the risk for many acute and chronic conditions. The health benefits of breast-milk for infants include:

  • A stronger immune system
  • Decreased risk of asthma, lower respiratory tract infections and gastroenteritis
  • Improved protection against allergies and intolerances
  • Proper development of jaw and teeth
  • Association with higher IQ and better grades in school
  • Reduced risk for sudden infant death syndrome, as well as chronic diseases, including obesity, diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and childhood leukemia.

The benefits of breast-feeding for mothers include:

  • Quality time spent bonding with baby
  • Quicker return to pre-pregnancy weight due to increased calorie expenditure
  • Less postpartum bleeding, faster shrinking of the uterus and return to menstrual cycle
  • Lowered risks for breast and ovarian cancer, as well as type 2 diabetes
  • Better bone density with less risk of hip fracture
  • Improved self-esteem and less risk of postpartum depression
  • Cost savings from not buying formula.

The paper’s authors said dietetic technicians, registered (DTRs) and registered dietitians (RDs) “have an important role in promoting and supporting breast-feeding for its short- and long-term health benefits for both mother and infants. RDs and DTRs also have an important role in conducting empirical research on breast-feeding-related topics. Research is especially needed on the effectiveness of breast-feeding promotion campaigns.”

The position paper was published in the November issue of the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.

October 18, 2009

The Leadership Council is Conducting a Survey, Please Participate!

The Leadership Council is conducting a survey on noncustodial or custodially-challenged mothers.  Here is some information about this great organization:

Welcome. . . The Leadership Council is a nonprofit independent scientific organization composed of respected scientists, clinicians, educators, legal scholars, and public policy analysts. We are committed to providing professionals and lay persons with the latest scientific information on issues that may affect the public’s health and safety. We also seek to correct the misuse of psychological science to serve vested interests or justify victimizing vulnerable populations — especially abused and neglected children.

Before you begin, read the instructions:

Instructions

The survey is very simple to navigate. You will be asked a series of questions on each page. Provide as much information as you can for each question. If you are unsure of the answer to a question, please answer as best you can and note it in the section at the end of the survey provided for additional information. If you cannot answer, please leave the question completely blank wherever possible. Answers such as “not sure” or “I don’t know” may not be accepted by the system (particular for dates).

The survey asks questions about abuse allegations, court appearances, appeals, and so forth. If you have multiple instances of these, please indicate the first incident or the most serious incident, and note any additional information in the spaces provided or at the end of the survey. If you suppply us with your case caption, we can use that information to conduct further research into your case (with your permission), so please enter this information if available.

The survey is designed to gather information about one child at a time. If you have more than one child involved in your case(s), you may take the survey additional times for each of your children. However, if the majority of your case relates to only one child, or the responses are nearly the same for all of your children, you may want to simply take the survey once and note the other child(ren)’s involvement when applicable, rather than taking the survey multiple times.

The survey takes approximately 20-30 minutes to complete. It is important that you have all the necessary documents in front of you before you begin. This may include court dates, financial statements, police reports, criminal records and other kinds of documentation. Please note that you may still complete the survey even if you are missing information. You may also contact us at any time by e-mail to submit additional information.

You must finish the survey in one sitting. You cannot “save” your progress and continue later. Please make sure you have at least 20 minutes to complete the survey.

Please gather all information and documents NOW before you begin.

Please go to the survey at this link here.

October 14, 2009

Gail Lakritz: How Abusers Use the Court System to Continue to Victimize Their Partners and Children

As seen on Human Rights for Abused Mothers and Children:

How Abusers Use The Court System To Continue to Victimize Their Partners and Children

How Abusers Use The Court System To Continue to Victimize Their Partners and Children

Written by Gail Lakritz and presented by Angela Warren at the Pueblo Conference on Oct. 14, 2009

When a woman finally makes that decision to end the abuse and to flee the abusive situation, she rightfully expects that the police, her lawyers and the courts will protect her and her children from further harm. Being a member of the Sheriff’s Posse, that is what I was thought. After all, the courts always operate solely by the law, correct? (Scan audience for nods of agreement) We all know that does not happen and that is why I was so confused by my litigation. When injustice reared its ugly head, it flew in the face of everything I thought our country stood for, and, as with most victims of abuse, I came to realize that the system is stacked against the victim.

Today, I want to speak to you about some of the ways the abuser will use the system to further the abuse during the litigation process. It is my hope that, by exposing these tactics, you will recognize in your peers, and perhaps yourselves, what is being done has real, and all too often, deadly consequences.

The litigation abuse begins the moment the abuser is arrested. He plays on the sympathy of the arresting officers. He will use excuses to enlist them in his game. He is, after all, a master at deception. He has years of practice. He is the person who can look you straight in the eye and lie. During the ride to the lock up, he will say things like “She is an alcoholic or a drug addict”, “She is always picking on the kids” or “She takes all the money and spends it on herself and we never have enough to eat.” Anything that will garner sympathy and sway them to lessen the severity of what is written in the arrest report. And, being taught to spot the antagonist of a situation as they true perpetrator of the situation, the police officer, who is generally male, will empathize with the abuser, and slant his report to favor the abuser. He will ignore what he has been taught, that the victim is most often the one who is hysterical and angry at having been attacked and side with the often calm and rational sounding architect of the situation. And the abuser has gained his first needed corner stone to further the abuse, for in the future, any calls to 911 will be met with skepticism by the police and all future reports of violence will be seen as insane acts by the actual victim.

During the booking process and his appearance for arraignment, when the victim is not present to hear what is being said to the magistrate, he will again repeat his reasons for the attack. Laying the blame on the victim. Now he has widened his circle of conspirators. Word will filter from these people to the Bailiff and on to the judge that there were “extenuating circumstances” that predicated the attack.

Now, as we all know, the key to any successful litigation is money. With money, comes the right lawyers and a venue that is considered to be the “home turf” for that lawyer. Abusers control the money, therefore, they can afford the lawyers who consider winning to be the sole measure of success, not the just application of the law.

In each court system in America, there are lawyers that are known to be the “dirty trick” lawyers. They are the ones who use often unethical and illegal means to deny the Constitutional Rights of a litigant and victim. They will look the other way, or outright encourage, the use of terror tactics against a victim. Judges and other lawyers within the local Bar Association know who these practitioners are will look the other way. In some court systems, judges will actually instruct new lawyers with “I don’t care what you do in my courtroom so long as I am not investigated” leaving the avenue open for them to ply their brand of law in any manner they see fit. The idea is to win, not to be just. The abuser will seek out these lawyers, perhaps getting the name of one from a police officer or someone else in the system who just happens to be overheard talking or from another inmate in the lock up.

So now, the abuser has assembled his “dream team”. The police, the dirty tricks lawyer and the complacent judge. What more could he ask for than to have swayed the system and set the victim up for further abuse? The abuser will get a slap on the wrist, be sent to Anger Management and, in some jurisdictions, have his record of abuse sealed. In Anger Management, the prep will learn new and better ways of abusing. He will learn to abuse without leaving the outward marks that would land him back in jail. He will hone his skills, through the knowledge passed on by other perpetrators attending these sessions. The things that worked for them will be shared in group in the form of “I reacted to the situation by….” You fill in the blank, as each and every one of you know the tactics, know how the pain can be caused both mentally and physically to a victim without leaving the marks or a trail of abuse.

The first thing the abuser will do after being released from jail is to widen his circle of allies. His dirty tricks lawyer has instructed him to get out in front of his victim, and being the superior liar that he is, he is only too willing to accommodate. Generally, abusers are loners, having few friends and having disassociated themselves from family. He has allowed only minimal if any contact between his victim and her family. He will suddenly become the “social butterfly” contacting people to enlist their help, always with the story of having been the victim in the situation. Neighbors that were shunned by him in the past are now become his confidants. Whispers of abuse by the victim are passed from one person to another. This serves two purposes. It provides a support system for the abuser as well as removing any hope of support for the victim.

The next step to the tried and true method of using the system to abuse is to make the victim seem insane to the system. The abuser or one of his allies will begin the relentless process of attacks that are designed to discredit. Break-ins of the home of the victim are a common means as are well placed phone calls where the abuser uses threats, such as the victim never seeing her children again. An abuser will actually enlist the help of the unwitting child, promising rewards of gifts or, if teenagers, no boundaries to live by. The abuser will reward the child for such things as removing evidence against the abuser from the victims home, lying to police or being complacent about what was witnessed in an incident. Often, no system of reward is needed. It is fear of the abuser, that places the child in the unenviable situation of having to lie. The child senses what will cause the wrath of the abuser to rise against them. If you come away from this presentation with anything, this is the one piece of information I hope you retain. The cycle of abuse is learned and continued by this one tactic alone, using the children as tools of abuse. Any person within the system who even suggests that the abuser use this tactic is guilty of nothing less than murder.

Police, having been repeatedly told that the victim is insane, will respond to such things as break-ins as a sign that the abuser is correct in his assessment of the victim. All too often, the abuser will leave something that informs the victim he was there, but at the point in time that the police are called, the victim will not know what is missing, if anything. Sometimes the victim will find veiled death threats, a picture that only the victim and her abuser knows the meaning of, a cartoon left on the computer screen, that is meant to frighten and intimidate. A tire will be slashed when her car is hidden from public view, mementos that have little or no monetary value will be missing. Reporting these incidents to the police enforce the abuser’s position. And, when the victim turns to her lawyer for help, if she has one, she is told to ignore all violations of her home and person. You see, it takes two lawyers to execute a well choreographed legal Tango, and by this time, the repeated calls to the police by the victim, the well placed lies by the perpetrator, and, with the assistance of the complacent judge, her lawyer has been won over to not assist in any meaningful manner. Thus the victim is turned into the abuser and seen only as a source of possible revenue for her own lawyer who will offer little if any assistance in seeing that justice is blind, not blinded by gold.

During the actual litigation process, there will be a number of players that will be easily swayed by the events that have lead up to this process. GALs and CLRs are swayed by having contact with the abuser and his ever growing stable of allies, lawyers, police and judges. If the children are afraid of the abuser, they dare not say anything to these people that would endanger themselves. Social workers, mental health professionals, even medical doctors who rely on the system for income will not oppose the well built facade of the abuser and his well scripted theater of abuse.

At this point, I would like to see a show of hands. How many of you are judges? Please raise your hands. Keep your hands raised, please. How many are police officers? Keep your hands raised, please. How many of you are lawyers who represent abuse victims exclusively? Good, now if you could all stand up and look around. Do you recognize people from your own court systems in this room? Isn’t it nice to know that some of the people who are not standing could, and I emphasis the word could, be manipulating you? Thank you, you may all be seated.

How do the dirty tricks lawyers actually manipulate? First, talk is cheap, and the dirty tricks lawyer and his client never seem to run out of voice. They will take every chance to influence the judge and the opposition lawyer if there is one, the GAL and CLR, the therapist and mental health evaluator , the social worker, shelter workers and people in the Court Clerk’s office. Ex parte is common and rampant in any court system. It can’t be stopped unless you, the judges, choose to stop it. A few well placed words prior to the opening of court, the happened, but planned, introduction of the abuser to you prior to proceedings so that you can see how likeable this person is and to get his side, again getting out ahead of the opposition in the litigation. Tools used to put a human face on an inhuman act of violence.

During the early stages of the litigation, the dirty tricks lawyer and an abuser will go for the “all or nothing” approach to a custody question. The abuser, and his lawyer, being confident in the groundwork they have already laid, will not present a parenting plan. They will often seek to move out of the jurisdiction, often so far away from the abused, as to effectively terminate all parental rights. The abused, on the other hand will present a generous plan which will include more time with the abuser than a court would normally mandate. The judge, being the Solomon of the court, knows he cannot split a child down the middle, will have to award temporary custody to one parent or another, and this is usually to the person who already has “possession” of the child at the time of the hearing. (make the hand sign for quotes when you say the word possession). If the victim was forced to flee without the child, or if the child happens to be visiting the abuser at the time of the hearing, guess who gets the temporary custody? Yup, the abuser.

This is the beginning of the motions process. The abuser’s lawyer will file motions with the court, often filing them back to back, and always asking for contempt sanctions against the victim. If the victim is unrepresented, this confuses and terrorizes her. If she is one of the fortunate ones, one of the women who was able to afford a lawyer, and motions and subpoenas are filed on her behalf, they are ignored by the dirty tricks lawyer. In the meantime, if she is Pro Se, her filings are ignored by the clerk’s office or disappear all together. It never ceases to amaze me how often victims report missing filings, even whole files of proceedings that have gone missing. I can only surmise how it could happen, all of which violate state law. When she asks for a subpoena which must go through the courts for approval, the subpoena that is received for service contains errors made by the person who entered it into the system, precluding the effectiveness of that subpoena. These errors would only be obvious to a trained lawyer, thereby giving the dirty tricks lawyer a reason to quash.

The motions process will offer more ample opportunities for the dirty tricks lawyer to ply his trade. He will mail important filings to the wrong address, often transposing the actual numbers, to prevent receipt in time for rebuttal. He will refuse to accept mail from the Pro Se and then claim that it was not sent to him. He will state a date and time verbally, but put another date and time in writing, often bolding it to attract attention to the erroneous information. He will send a copy of a minor issue in a motion, with proof of mailing, and have a second copy hand served. The problem with this is that he has actually filed two separate motions with the court, one of paramount importance and the one of minor importance. He will then have proof of two separate deliveries to the victim and state that the one hand served was in reference to the major issue while the one mailed was in reference to the minor issue. Of course, he will blame all of this on the victim. She gave me the wrong address, I never got it, she was served and I have the proof.

Depositions are an extremely useful tool for the trickster. Though most states follow the rules of the Federal Courts for deposition, tricksters do not. As all lawyers know, the only time depositions should be used is when information cannot be gotten by subpoena. The dirty tricks lawyer will force deposition to make the victim face her abuser in an environment controlled by the trickster. One deposition trick will be to inform the pro se that a date and time for a deposition of his client has been set. He will send a list of questions to be asked, and state that the deposition will be limited to these questions. This offers the opportunity to pound the Pro Se with intimidation and terrorist tactics of threats. It also forces the Pro Se into setting up a second deposition of her own. Not knowing that it is not required to submit questions in advance, the Pro Se will dutifully submit the entire list of questions to the trickster, giving him time to concoct answers that would favor him. And lest the abuser make a mistake, there is nothing to worry about. The Court Reporter in attendance is one favored by the lawyer. One only need to Google the search term “Changed Transcripts” to confirm this is a common practice. The number of hits are well in excess of 7,000,000.

Proffers are useful when it comes to the dirty tricks lawyer. It is not uncommon for them to submit Proffers to the Pro Se that are never filed with the courts. These are filled with the lies that the abuser intends on in court and are designed to see which arguments are going to be used to counteract the lies in court.

Surprise witnesses are the life blood of the trickster. No subpoena has been issued to these people to appear, but they just happen to be in the area when the court date came up. Judges have a duty to curtail the use of these convenient witnesses, but seldom do, preferring to overrule objections. Often, they are nothing more than hired guns for the defense, parroting whatever the trickster wants them to say. There is often no rebuttal for their testimony, as the Pro Se or her lawyer had no time to prepare for their appearance.

Witness tampering is blatantly illegal but used by the dirty trick lawyer and his client at every turn. All that is needed is for the potential witness to be mislead with a story of the victim being the true abuser, and after all, if they testify, they would be putting the children, and perhaps themselves, in danger. Surely, anyone in their right mind would not want to testify under these circumstances, given that few people are willing to testify in the first place. If that doesn’t work, there is intimidation of the witness. Most people have something in their backgrounds they would prefer no one find out. The dirty tricks lawyer is a master at using innuendo and sources like police, family and acquaintances to find that one skeleton. If that doesn’t work, there is always the avenue of the witness’s employer. Innuendo can be placed in letters to the employer from the lawyer stating that this or that has never been cleared.

In his bag, the dirty trick lawyer and his client rely on the assistance of Child Protective Services. If a direct call from his client does not produce the desired response, there is always the “innocent and disconnected” third party report. These reports can vary from the upper end of sexual abuse or exploitation of the child to reports that the mother is furnishing drugs to the child to such things as a child being left alone. In one case I know of, the GAL was talked into calling CPS when a teenage boy overdosed. What the GAL forgot to report was that the 15 year old had arrived from his father’s home with a plastic bag full of pills, and when the mother discovered them, he grabbed them and downed them in an attempt to get rid of the evidence. The same mother was accused of leaving the than 16 year old alone for two hours by the same GAL. Again the GAL left out a very important fact. The child was at the home of a friend.

Court orders are often altered to reflect what the attorney and abuser wants. One mother, while living here in Colorado heard a knock on her door one day. The father, who had never once exercised his visitation, had moved five years previously to Washington state. He went to the local Colorado police with an altered court order for full custody of the son, than 7 years old. No one questioned the validity of the order, in fact, the police were only too willing to help him in removing the child from the mother. She never saw her son again. She was able to locate him last year in a suburb of Seattle, but now 20, he has had it drilled into his head that she wanted nothing to do with him and had willing given him up.

If all else fails, there is always the use of Parental Alienation to fall back on. Dr. Richard Gardner, using no identifiable research and much to the consternation of all recognized authorities, first placed this Syndrome in the minds of the courts to discredit mothers and to help men save on alimony and child support payments. We are all familiar with the theory that states that the mother is toxic to the relationship between the father and his children and that the only true cure for this toxicity is to severely limit visitation or to remove it all together. Abusers and their attorneys love to use PAS. It is one of the most effective forms of abuse of the victim.

Through all the court abuse, and I have only touched on some of the verifiable things that women suffer in the courtroom, there is a continued onslaught from the abuser. Stalking, break-ins, destruction of property and threats of further harm to the victim are normal. Checks for alimony or child support that are never received are also widely reported. Harassment is an ongoing problem to the victim. Planting seeds of doubt of a mother’s love for her child in the child’s mind, any avenue an abuser can think of will be used.

All of this for one objective, to carry on the abuse. And, the players in the courtroom are all aiders and abettors to that abuse, whether they realize it or not. The crimes we allow these people to get away with are crimes that are punishable by law, and by each and every one of you allowing them to be predicated on victims of violence, you are taking part in those crimes.

Now, as one last thing, I would like some of you to take part in a fun little exercise to reinforce some of what you have heard here today. I would ask that every judge in the audience stand up and glace around the room. I want you to pick out a person here that you do not know and walk over to them and without saying a word, I want you to grasp their hand and shake it.

Now, again without giving this person your name, I want you to whisper in their ear the year, color and make and model of the car your closest loved one drives. Now, I want you, without giving the city or town you live in, to tell them the street address of that person. Good. You have just given someone who may be a trickster lawyer or an abuser all the information they need. You have just put your loved one in danger, possibly signing that their death warrant.

Think about it and try to have a nice day.

Authors Note: I, Gail Lakritz, grant permission for any and all parts of the above to be reproduced so long as the express purpose of the reproduction is for use in combating violence against women and children. All other reproduction of this article for any other purpose is expressly forbidden.

October 11, 2009

Attention Judges and Lawmakers: This is the REAL AGENDA of the Father’s Rights Movement

I had been alerted to this website today, and I find myself feeling sick (again).  It is these corrupt tactics that ensure children are taken from their mothers.  I see these tactics used and talked about all the time….they are implied by father’s rights lawyers in their advertising.  Mothers need to know what they are up against if their abuser wants the children.  Because one of the main reasons besides wanting to punish and control his victim (you), gettting out of paying child support and possibly getting it from his victim is at the top of his list.

Personally I think that if the child support issue was tossed out or dealt with more fairly for everyone’s sake, fathers would probably be in favor of letting children continue being with their primary caregiver instead of ripping them away. But there are always the abusers out there that nothing else matters except hurting their victim.

This is from a real father’s rights site and repost on the appropriately named blog World O’ Crap:


How Fathers Can Win Child Custody

Introduction

So you have a child with a soon-to-be ex-girlfriend or ex-wife, and you are wondering what is going to happen to your children. The first thing you need to be aware of is this: The laws and family court system are not set up fairly towards fathers. The laws are set up to award custody to the parent who has had the most involvement so far raising the child, which means the parent who has worked the least – this is virtually always the mother. This usually guarantees that the mother will receive custody of the child, and since child support is mandatory, that you will be paying several hundred dollars in child support to her each month. Now does this make sense?

Hell no!  Why should the parent who has had the most involvement in raising the child get custody of the child?  But even more importantly, why should the other parent have to pay to support that child after splitting with its mother?  (As the author says later, “A fairer system would be to eliminate child support and have the parent who is fortunate enough to be awarded custody have full responsibility for providing for the children when they are with that parent.” And if we had that fairer system, you could let your bitch of an ex have custody of the damned rugrats.  But since we have our current unfair system, your only recourse is to get custody of the kids so that you can save some bucks.  Um, and do what’s best for your precious offspring.  Yeah, that’s the ticket!

If you believe that you are the better parent, you need to read this guide and find out everything you need to know in order to have the best chance at obtaining full custody. If you choose not to get full custody of your child, not only are you in for a lifetime of emotional headaches but a lot of child support – which you will find does not all get spent on your child.

But what if you don’t believe you are the better parent?  Well, fight for full custody anyway, because otherwise you’ll be paying child support, and it will go toward such things as paying the mortgage for the house your child lives in — a house that your ex will also get to live in.  And that’s not fair!!!

The amount of child support you will end up paying as your child grows up is enough to buy a nice house. Let’s say you split up with your ex, and you have two children together, ages 1 and 4. The court orders you to pay $500/mth per child, based on your $45,000/year income, until the children turn 21 (some states end child support when the child turns 18, and others require it through age 21 and beyond). By the time your children are grown, you will have paid $444,000 in child support. The main cost of raising a child is childcare; outside of childcare (which ends around age 12), do you really believe that $1,000 is being spent on your two children each month?

The USDA has estimated the costs of raising a child.  In a single-parent home, with a pre-taxed income of $39,1000 per year, it would be $518 a month for the one-year-old, and $558 a month for the four-year-old (it gets progressively more expensive as the kids get older).  So yeah, I can really believe that $1000 a month is being spent on your two hypothetical children.

As the author notes, now that your ex is single, she’ll have to work full-time to support herself and the kids, and since she’ll make less money than you, “how does that qualify her as a better parent than you?”  (Not counting the fact that all the time she’s already spent raising the kids may have contributed to her having a better relationship with them.  However, if she gets custody of the children, the courts will make you pay child support.  And ”the main reason why the system is set up this way?”

The government would rather have you subsidize her than pay for her going on welfare. And the feminists have convinced the lawmakers and judges in society that women shouldn’t have to work to support their children if they don’t feel like it.

So, since she now works full-time, making her no better as a parent than you are, why should the feminists force you to subsidize her, so that she doesn’t have to work to support her children?  If the damn goverment would just let her go on welfare, then things would be just fine.  But NOOOO!  It insists that you support your kids.

But why pay child support when it’s so much cheaper to just get custody of the kids — so, let’s learn “The Rules of Winning Child Custody.”

1.  Get an agressive lawyer

When you consider how much money you have to lose in child support over the years until your child turns 18 or 21, and the amount of emotional stress you will go through all of those years if your ex wins custody, and the fact that the court system is stacked against fathers, do you really think it’s wise to handle your case without the assistance of an attorney?

Sure, lawyers are expensive, but think of all the money you’ll save by not having to pay child support.

I hear you ask, “Doesn’t it actually cost money to raise kids, so that if I do get custody, I’ll still have to pay for their upkeep?”

Heck no!  You can send them out to work as chimney sweeps, and actually make money on the deal!

2.  Use the court system to wear down your ex

Whether you are representing yourself or have hired an attorney, keep in mind the more work you create for your ex, the more you will wear down her resolve to fight you and keep full custody of the kids. If your ex’s main reason for retaining full custody of your children is to collect free child support from you, it will vanish fast once all of the child support is going to pay her attorney to fight you in court.

And if, because of your aggressive use of the court system, she is forced to use all her child support funds to pay lawyers, will your kids suffer?  Who cares.  The important thing is preventing your ex from benefiting from your dough.  (The best interests of the children never really come up in this piece, oddly enough.)

3. Keep the playing field uneven

If your ex does not have an attorney, consider yourself fortunate – this gives you a huge advantage. The less she knows about the legal system, the better chance you have that she will do something in the eyes of the court that will hurt her chances of getting custody. If she asks for your opinion on whether she needs an attorney, try to convince her that she does not need one and emphasize the cost to her.

In fact, tell her that lawyers charge a billion dollars an hour, so you certainly aren’t going to use one.  Say that you don’t want to make this process adversarial, and that you don’t see why the two of you can’t work out a joint custody arrangement that will make things as easy as possible for the kids. … And if your ex believes you, then you and your lawyer (the most blood-thirsty one in the state) can use it as evidence that she’s mentally incompetent.

4. Harrass your ex, both in person and via the court system

When you talk to your ex, such as when you are arranging to exchange the children for your visitation, be sure to bring up issues with her raising your children that bother you. The more you point out ways she needs to change her behavior in order to be a better parent and maintain custody, the more you will bother her. You know your ex – will she eventually give in if you continue to bring up issues that bother her and continue to take her to court?

You know your ex — can you cause her to have a mental breakdown if you keep harping on what a bad mother she is, and how the courts are going to take away her kids?

5.  Cause your kids to bond with people in your camp, so the judge will think twice about taking them away from their new loving relationships

What you can do: Get remarried first, then file for custody. If you have relatives nearby, pay them to baby sit so they become a big part of your child’s life.

You can dump the new wife and the paid relatives once you have custody.

6.  Make it look like your kids’ lives suck

If you have not yet split up physically, try to remain in the house with the children and have your ex move out. If you have left the home, start building a case as to why the child is not doing well living at the house, attending the nearby school, etc. Do research on the school or daycare the child is attending to obtain evidence of why that particular facility is bad for your child. Information on schools can be found on the state department of education websites, and information on daycares is generally also available from the state, usually from the department responsible for welfare.

Start building a case about why the house the kid has always lived in, and the school he’s always attended, are bad for him, even though you evidentially thought they were just fine when you were with his mother.

7.  Make your ex look crazy

Collect any records you have on the mental instability of your ex or her family, including medical records, and any police reports or convictions of their physical violence. Have a tape recorder handy to tape her if she has angry outbursts.

And how do you collect medical records on your ex and her family?  Well, use your imagination on that one.

And try to provoke her, so you can tape her angry outburts — it will not only help your case,  it’s also good, sadistic fun!

8.  Make the mother of your children appear to be a shiftless, drunken, drug-crazed slut

If there is no substantial change in circumstances, you will need to provide the court with a composite of reasons why your ex is unfit. For example, a strong case might provide evidence that your ex abuses alcohol, drugs, sleeps around and goes from boyfriend to boyfriend who use drugs in front of the children, cannot maintain a stable residence, leaves the children excessively in daycare, which is a substandard daycare, smokes in the house and in the car although the children are asthmatic, cannot maintain a steady job, and frequently withholds visitation from you.

This would be a “strong case,” hint, hint.  Surely you’ve got reason to believe that your ex does most of the things on that list.

9.  Take a tip from Coppola’s The Conversation, and “Record All of Your Phone Conversations With Your Ex and Your Children”

Some states permit you to record phone conversations without the other party knowing. There is a list of all 50 states and their laws on recording phone calls located at http://www.rcfp.org/taping/. If you live in one of the states where it is legal, you should start automatically recording every conversation you have with your ex or your kids when they are at her house.

And, through selective editing, you can use these conversations to prove all kinds of stuff..

10.  At custody evaluation time, get a hired-gun psychology to counter the court’s feminazi social worker

When you file for a change of custody, the court will probably order a custody evaluation. These are assessments by a social worker that usually end up favoring the mother. The type of person that is attracted to this type of job are low income women with a chip on their shoulders; they are not going to be predisposed to making a determination that children should be with their fathers. [...] One way to combat these custody evaluations is to preempt them with a psychological evaluation of your own. Find a child psychologist who has a reputation for being favorable to fathers, and preferably also one on the court’s approved list of psychologists, if the court has one, and have him do a preliminary evaluation of your child.

Social workers are poor, man-hating lesbians – that’s the only reason they would think that a fine father like yourself shouldn’t have custody of your two adorable children, little, um, “Boy” and “Other Kid.”

11.  Get your hired psychologist to ask your kids “leading questions” about how unfit their mom is

You may want to give the psychologist leading questions to ask your child, such as whether your child would rather live with you, if mother abuses drugs, alcohol, or smoking in front of the child, if people close to the mother abuse or sexually touch the child, etc. – whatever bad things your child has indicated to you about living with your ex.

If your child has indicated that the worst thing about living with his mother is that she makes him do his homework, then have the shrink ask him if his mother is damaging his mental health by pushing him too hard.  If he’s complained about how she withheld his allowance because he didn’t clean up his room, then suggest that the psychologist ask him if she is an obsessive control freak with a cleanliness obsession.  And so on.

Anyway, those are just a few of tips on “How Fathers Can Win Custody.”  And do your best to win custody, because otherwise you’ll have to pay child support, and that can really put a crimp in your lifestyle.  Plus, your ex, whom you hate, will have control of that money.  And that’s what winning custody is all about: spiting your ex.

October 6, 2009

Domestic Violence by Proxy: Why Terrorist Tactics Employed by Batterers Are Not So-called “Parental Alienation Syndrome”

My dear friend, I’ll call Marie, has lost her children to her abuser.  He claimed “parental alienation syndrome” in court because the children were afraid of him. The court would not consider that the children often witnessed her being beat by him, and sometimes he would unleash his anger on them. She lost her children because of this claim used by abusive men to take children from their victims. This is done by them because, short of actually killing her, they know nothing will hurt a mother worse than losing her children. It has been about a year since she has seen her children now.

Once the abuser has the children, the brainwashing starts. The abuser and/or court and court whores do not allow the mother to see the children…the children are led to believe by the abuser that the mother does not love them anymore. They are told she does not want them, and would rather leave them with him because they are too much of a bother. Month after month, year after year, as the children are withheld from seeing their mother, they are told this over and over and begin to believe it.  Marie believes wrongly she is a victim of “parental alienation syndrome” because her children do not wish to talk to her anymore.

What a noncustodial mom may call “parental alienation” is not this sham syndrome. It is domestic violence by proxy….this is the way your abuser continues to abuse you, because, above all, he can think of doing nothing else in life than to make your life a living hell. This is what Marie lives with.  She kind of understands this…but still has the notion of the sham syndrome at the back of her mind.

This is an excellent explanation of it by the Leadership Council (I hope this helps Marie and other mothers understand what they are being subjected to):


Domestic Violence (DV) by Proxy:
Why Terrorist Tactics Employed by Batterers Are Not “PAS”

September 16, 2009

As more and more abused women lose custody to batterers in family courts, they are wrongly embracing the very ideas that enabled their abusers to gain custody in the first place. False accusations of “parental alienation” are often used by batterers to gain custody and to defend against accusations of abuse.

Some unfortunate women after years of enduring domestic violence have lost custody to the batterers who abused them. In these cases, batterers have made good on their threat to attack their ex-partner in the place she is the most vulnerable—by taking her children away from her. After separation, these batterers continue to wage their campaign of manipulation and abuse by attempting to convince involved children that their mothers never loved them. Looking for a way to describe their batterers’ behavior, some mothers have called what their batterer is doing “parental alienation syndrome.”

In reality, what these women are describing from their ex-partners is better termed Domestic Violence by Proxy (DV by Proxy), a term first used by Alina Patterson, author of Health and Healing. DV by Proxy refers to a pattern of behavior which is a parent with a history of using domestic violence or intimidation, uses a child as a substitute when he no longer has access to his former partner. Calling this behavior “parental alienation” is not strong enough to convey the criminal pattern of terroristic behaviors employed by batterers.

When his victim leaves him, batterers often recognize that the most expedient way to continue to hurt his partner is to assert his legal rights to control her access to their children. By gaining control of the children, an abusive male now has a powerful tool which allows him to continue to stalk, harass and batter an ex-partner even when he has no direct access to her. Moreover, by emotionally torturing the child and severing the bond between children and their mother, he is able to hurt his intended victim — the mother — in a way she cannot resist.

DV by Proxy includes tactics such as: threats of harm to children if they display a positive bond to the mother, destroying favored possessions given by the mother, and emotional torture (for example, telling the child the mother hates them, wanted an abortion, and is not coming to get them because they are unloved).

DV by Proxy may also include coaching the child to make false allegations regarding their mother’s behavior and harming or punishing the child for not complying. DV by Proxy perpetrators may also create fraudulent documents to defraud the court in order to prevent the mother from gaining custody. Whether or not the child is biologically related to them is irrelevant to perpetrators of DV by Proxy. The perpetrator’s main motivation is to hurt his ex; whether or not his own child is harmed in the process is irrelevant to him.

This is very different from “parental alienation syndrome” as described by the late Richard A. Gardner. Dr. Gardner described PAS as an internal process by which a child aligns themselves with a preferred parent to protect themselves from the divorce conflict. “PAS” is conceptualized as a psychological process of identification with a parent who, according to the theory, encourages this identification at the expense of the other parent.

PAS inducing parents, according to Gardner, are often unconscious of what they are doing to encourage the identification. In contrast, perpetrators of DV by Proxy are very conscious of what they are doing. Controlling, coercive, illegal acts often done by abusive and controlling people, usually men, are not subtle, and do not encourage an identification with a parent. Criminal, fraudulent, coercive acts are visible and obvious. These behaviors encourage compliance by threats and fear. Behaviors involved in DV by Proxy are deliberate and often illegal. These behaviors include: battery, destruction of property, locking children in rooms to prevent them from calling parents, falsifying documents, along with other similar overt behaviors.

The most dangerous aspect of Gardner’s PAS theory is that that the alienating parent’s behavior is theorized to be so subtle as to be unobservable. In other words, the behaviors that are supposed to cause the alienation are assumed to be happening without any proof that they have actually occured. As many women have discovered this makes a charge of “alienation” almost impossible to defend against.

While Gardner’s theories regarding PAS have been shown to be overly general and have not been supported by careful research, behaviors seen in DV by Proxy can be readily observed. Behaviors involved in DV by Proxy are deliberate and planned; many are illegal, and if the child is given the freedom to talk, will be described in great detail by the child.

If the child’s formerly favorable view of the victimized parent changes when exposed to tactics like this over time then it is more likely a form of “Stockholm Syndrome” or traumatic attachment to the abuser, rather than the alignment with one parent and negative reaction to the other that Gardner described as “alienation”.

A recent and comprehensive article on PAS and its use in the court system, by Jennifer Hoult can be downloaded here.

For further information:

* Are Protective Parents Losing Custody to Alleged Abusers? Evidence shows that women who raise concerns about family violence during custody litigation run the risk of losing their children.
* Stopfamilyviolence.org: The people’s voice for family peace. Stop Family Violence is a national grassroots organization with a mission to organize and amplify our nation’s collective voice against family violence.
* CA3 -Children Against Court Appointed Child Abuse
* High-conflict divorce or stalking by way of family court? Massachusetts Family Law Journal, 2004. http://www.mincava.umn.edu/reports/linda.asp
* Hoult, Jennifer. (Spring 2006). The Evidentiary Admissibility of Parental Alienation Syndrome: Science, Law, and Policy, Children’s Legal Rights Journal, 26(1) pp. 1-61.  (Find this in the “One-Stop Page”)

October 3, 2009

Child Custody Battles: Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Can Be Common for Family Court Victims

Is what you’ve experienced just like being in a war?  Sure it is, complete with the bombshells of lies and “bought and paid for” opinions lobbed your way, thanks to the Whores of the Court associated with the family law cases.   The most traumatic thing that can happen to a mother is losing her children, and if it is to her abuser, it can be even more horrific.

Now, realizing that trying to give anti-depressants or counseling to some like prisoners at the Auschwitz concentration camp is absolutely insane. It is the situation that has caused the trauma…you are NOT a headcase.  But realizing that some of the feelings you have are normal for what you have experienced is half the battle.

Here is some information on post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) from HelpGuide.org:

Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

Symptoms, Treatment, and Self-Help

Post-traumatic Stress Disorder

If you went through a traumatic experience and are having trouble getting back to your regular life and reconnecting to others, you may be suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). When you have PTSD, it can seem like you’ll never get over what happened or feel normal again. But help is available – and you are not alone. If you are willing to seek treatment, stick with it, and reach out to others for support, you will be able to overcome the symptoms of PTSD and move on with your life.

What is post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)?

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a disorder that can develop following a traumatic event that threatens your safety or makes you feel helpless. Most people associate PTSD with battle-scarred soldiers – and military combat is the most common cause in men – but any overwhelming life experience can trigger PTSD, especially if the event is perceived as unpredictable and uncontrollable.

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can affect those who personally experience the catastrophe, those who witness it, and those who pick up the pieces afterwards, including emergency workers and law enforcement officers. It can even occur in the friends or family members of those who went through the actual trauma.

Traumatic events that can lead to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) include:

  • War
  • Rape
  • Natural disasters
  • A car or plane crash
  • Kidnapping
  • Violent assault
  • Sexual or physical abuse
  • Medical procedures (especially in kids)

PTSD is a response by normal people to an abnormal situation

The traumatic events that lead to post-traumatic stress disorder are usually so overwhelming and frightening that they would upset anyone. When your sense of safety and trust are shattered, it’s normal to feel crazy, disconnected, or numb – and most people do. The only difference between people who go on to develop PTSD and those who don’t is how they cope with the trauma.

After a traumatic experience, the mind and the body are in shock. But as you make sense of what happened and process your emotions, you come out of it. With post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), however, you remain in psychological shock. Your memory of what happened and your feelings about it are disconnected. In order to move on, it’s important to face and feel your memories and emotions.

Symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)

Following a traumatic event, almost everyone experiences at least some of the symptoms of PTSD. It’s very common to have bad dreams, feel fearful or numb, and find it difficult to stop thinking about what happened. But for most people, these symptoms are short-lived. They may last for several days or even weeks, but they gradually lift.

If you have post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), however, the symptoms don’t decrease. You don’t feel a little better each day. In fact, you may start to feel worse. But PTSD doesn’t always develop in the hours or days following a traumatic event, although this is most common. For some people, the symptoms of PTSD take weeks, months, or even years to develop.

The symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) can arise suddenly, gradually, or come and go over time. Sometimes symptoms appear seemingly out of the blue. At other times, they are triggered by something that reminds you of the original traumatic event, such as a noise, an image, certain words, or a smell. While everyone experiences PTSD differently, there are three main types of symptoms, as listed below.

Re-experiencing the traumatic event

  • Intrusive, upsetting memories of the event
  • Flashbacks (acting or feeling like the event is happening again)
  • Nightmares (either of the event or of other frightening things)
  • Feelings of intense distress when reminded of the trauma
  • Intense physical reactions to reminders of the event (e.g. pounding heart, rapid breathing, nausea, muscle tension, sweating)

PTSD symptoms of avoidance and emotional numbing

  • Avoiding activities, places, thoughts, or feelings that remind you of the trauma
  • Inability to remember important aspects of the trauma
  • Loss of interest in activities and life in general
  • Feeling detached from others and emotionally numb
  • Sense of a limited future (you don’t expect to live a normal life span, get married, have a career)

PTSD symptoms of increased arousal

  • Difficulty falling or staying asleep
  • Irritability or outbursts of anger
  • Difficulty concentrating
  • Hypervigilance (on constant “red alert”)
  • Feeling jumpy and easily startled

Other common symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder

  • Anger and irritability
  • Guilt, shame, or self-blame
  • Substance abuse
  • Depression and hopelessness
  • Suicidal thoughts and feelings
  • Feeling alienated and alone
  • Feelings of mistrust and betrayal
  • Headaches, stomach problems, chest pain

Getting help for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)

If you suspect that you or a loved one has post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), it’s important to seek help right away. The sooner PTSD is confronted, the easier it is to overcome. If you’re reluctant to seek help, keep in mind that PTSD is not a sign of weakness, and the only way to overcome it is to confront what happened to you and learn to accept it as a part of your past. This process is much easier with the guidance and support of an experienced therapist or doctor.

It’s only natural to want to avoid painful memories and feelings. But if you try to numb yourself and push your memories away, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) will only get worse. You can’t escape your emotions completely – they emerge under stress or whenever you let down your guard – and trying to do so is exhausting. The avoidance will ultimately harm your relationships, your ability to function, and the quality of your life.

Why Should I Seek Help for PTSD?

  • Early treatment is better. Symptoms of PTSD may get worse. Dealing with them now might help stop them from getting worse in the future. Finding out more about what treatments work, where to look for help, and what kind of questions to ask can make it easier to get help and lead to better outcomes.
  • PTSD symptoms can change family life. PTSD symptoms can get in the way of your family life. You may find that you pull away from loved ones, are not able to get along with people, or that you are angry or even violent. Getting help for your PTSD can help improve your family life.
  • PTSD can be related to other health problems. PTSD symptoms can worsen physical health problems. For example, a few studies have shown a relationship between PTSD and heart trouble. By getting help for your PTSD you could also improve your physical health.

Source: National Center for PTSD

September 30, 2009

More Corrupt California Judges and Court Whores: Orange County’s Kristin Hanson Has Been Waiting SIX YEARS for Hearing While Daughter Grows Up With Sexual Perp Dad

I have known Kristin for a while now….it is horrible to go for YEARS without being with your child.  I remember how excited she was to briefly visit her daughter Rachel at school last year, after not seeing her for FIVE YEARS.  Her corrupt bastard ex-husband  JERRY MORGAN FIXED that though…and that was the last time she saw her daughter.  The following is a series of videos of Kristin being interviewed on a television show recently.

Kristin HANSON (mother who lost custody to the sexual perp/dad) Interviews with William Wagener:

Kristin HANSON, says her daughter at age 8 complained to a head shrinker Ms. Hanson took her to that her Dad, Jerry had “abused” her. Kristin had been the unfettered custodial parent with dad, Atty. Jerry Morgan, being a non-Custodial Dad. Kristin then found herself in a royal battle, spending over $200,000 on atty.s she borrowed from her Mom, $80,000 on 1 attorney, just trying to get to a JURY TRIAL, and after all that money and time of 6 years WITHOUT her daughter. Custody was reversed without CPS doing a real investigation, she says. Now her daughter 14 years old is becoming desperate and despondent. All CALLs are monitor, because MOM ran away with her when she was 8, because her daughter, she says did NOT want to go to Dads house. Now 6 years later and more than 1/4 million dollars later, she has ZERO custody, and only monitored taped phone contact.

If the original allegation of abuse was false, both she and her daughter have paid dearly, and grandmother too. If it was true, it proves the CPS is incapable or recognizing TRUE abuse, and doing the correct thing. INVESTIGATE and give a Jury trial. For lack of a Jury trial much suffering and waited money has occurred. If Atty. Jerry Morgan used his inside knowledge of the Court system and his BAR brotherhood with Kristin’s atty. to avoid a jury TRIAL on the merits, then a crime has been committed, but what atty. would take on such a case to bring justice? None. that is the problem today. Its all about $$, not the best interests of the child.

The LIVE TV show with Kristin HANSON about the loss of her 8 year old daughter six years ago continues. LIVE on TV with host William

WAGENER. After investigation of over 400 similar child custody cases, it seem obvious to Wagener, that the best thing, is to NOT take the child from ANY Parent until a JURY TRIAL, if already done, Mandate a Jury Trial within 10 days of taking a child. More than 20 million American Children today have been done MORE HARM from CPS actions, more have died from foster care or CPS actions than from the natural parents, be they good bad or in between. Abolish Federal Funding for VAWA, CAPTA, and similar programs. they distort justice.

BRING BACK JURY TRIALS, and have CPS workers who commit perjury do mandatory 7 year in Prison, and 7 years out working for to pay restitution to their victims.

3rd of 3 video clips on Kristin HANSON’s trauma of complaining about ABUSE by bio-DAD, via a head shrinker, Ms. Hanson trusted, and CPS failed to investigate properly Ms. Hanson, and court, gave custody to the DAD, implying Kristin Hanson was alienating daughter from DAD

without foundation. Yet, the Courts and attorney’s who promised a JURY trial, after milking Kristin and her mother, grandmother of Rachel of over $250,000.oo never got a JURY trial on the merits after 6 years. One wonders, if EVEN a mildly “Abusive” parent, with 50% time would not be better than have ZERO Time with the good parent and feeding the cabal of greedy attorney endless stream of hard earned and saved money.

September 28, 2009

Family Court Judge’s Association Warns Claims of “Parental Alienation Syndrome” and “Parental Alienation” Are Often Used By Abusers and Have No Grounding in Reality

Here is the new Judicial Guide to Child Safety in Custody Cases from the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Family Violence Department.  Again the fake, so-called “Parental Alienation Syndrome” and the use of “parental alienation” is warned against and the Council tells the courts they should not accept this BS.

The only entities that do believe in this fairy tale syndrome are father’s rights groups who are fronted by abusive violent men and the Whores of the Court that sustain themselves by use of these false syndromes.

2009: A Judicial Guide to Child Safety in Custody Cases

National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Family Violence Department

Page 12:

C. [§3.3] A Word of Caution about Parental Alienation34

Under relevant evidentiary standards, the court should not accept testimony regarding parental alienation syndrome, or “PAS.” The theory positing the existence of PAS has been discredited by the scientific community.35 In Kumho Tire v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137 (1999), the Supreme Court ruled that even expert testimony based in the “soft sciences” must meet the standard set in the Daubert case.36 Daubert, in which the court re-examined the standard it had earlier articulated in the Frye37 case, requires application of a multi-factor test, including peer review, publication, testability, rate of error, and general acceptance. PAS does not pass this test. Any testimony that a party to a custody case suffers from the syndrome or “parental alienation” should therefore be ruled inadmissible and stricken from the evaluation report under both the standard established in Daubert and the earlier Frye standard.38

The discredited “diagnosis” of PAS (or an allegation of “parental alienation”), quite apart from its scientific invalidity, inappropriately asks the court to assume that the child’s behaviors and attitudes toward the parent who claims to be “alienated” have no grounding in reality. It also diverts attention away from the behaviors of the abusive parent, who may have directly influenced the child’s responses by acting in violent, disrespectful, intimidating, humiliating, or discrediting ways toward the child or the other parent. The task for the court is to distinguish between situations in which the child is critical of one parent because they have been inappropriately manipulated by the other (taking care not to rely solely on subtle indications) , and situations in which the child has his or her own legitimate grounds for criticism or fear of a parent, which will likely be the case when that parent has perpetrated domestic violence. Those grounds do not become less legitimate because the abused parent shares them, and seeks to advocate for the child by voicing his or her concerns.

To read the entire report, “A Judicial Guide to Child Safety in Custody Cases (2009)” by National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Family Violence Department, please click here.  This report should be very useful to both moms and dads who are under attack by claims of PAS against them.

September 26, 2009

More Help for Moms: Family Law Domestic Violence Benchbooks

September 25, 2009

Corrupt Bastard Dr. Stephen Doyne Continues To Give Child Custody to Rapists

“I have done everything I can to as a mother to protect our children and give them a voice.  The trust and faith I once had in our system to protect children and rule in their best interests is lost forever.”    Heather Hughes

May the children be rescued soon.  Read about Doyne’s qualifications here: The American Board of Nonexistence

Trauma, Women and Homelessness

Many women who are victims of family courts have trauma just as bad as a vet returning from war.  I know this as a victim of family court whose abuser now has her children.  I know this a war-time veteran.  And I know this as a homeless person.  When the courts and court whores continue to enable the abuser, it makes life even more horrific for the victims.  I hear from many victims unable to work anymore or are having a hard time holding down a job.  Even if they are lucky enough to have kept employment, onerous child support payments may have made it so they can’t have a home.  I know many mothers in this situation.  Fathers have help from fatherhood groups that get grants from the federal government.  Mothers do not get this help.  I wonder how much help there is for women veterans out on the streets…I haven’t found much help for them or for mothers.  God help us all, for we don’t have the help fathers have…

From CNN:

U.S. seeing more female homeless veterans

By Thom Patterson
CNN

(CNN) — When Iraq war veteran Angela Peacock is in the shower, she sometimes closes her eyes and can’t help reliving the day in Baghdad in 2003 that pushed her closer to the edge.

Sgt. Angela Peacock is seen in 2004, after she returned to the United States from duty in Iraq.

Sgt. Angela Peacock is seen in 2004, after she returned to the United States from duty in Iraq.

While pulling security detail for an Army convoy stuck in gridlocked traffic, Peacock’s vehicle came alongside a van full of Iraqi men who “began shouting that they were going to kill us,” she said.

One man in the vehicle was particularly threatening. “I can remember his eyes looking at me,” she said. “I put my finger on the trigger and aimed my weapon at the guy, and my driver is screaming at me to stop.”

“I was really close to shooting at them, but I didn’t.”

Now back home in Missouri, Peacock, 30, is unemployed — squatting without a lease in a tiny house in a North St. Louis County neighborhood.

She points to the Baghdad confrontation as a major contributor to her struggles with drug abuse and post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. She says she’s one step away from living on the street. See details on vets, including homeless »

Shortly after her discharge in 2004, Peacock said, she developed an addiction to pain pills. After her husband left her, she was evicted from her apartment, which she said made it impossible for her to obtain a lease or a mortgage.

She spent the next few years “couch surfing” from friend to friend, relative to relative. Video Watch how Los Angeles helps its 15,000 homeless vets »

“I could be kicked out of this house at any time,” she said.

Experts say that Peacock’s profile is similar to that of many female veterans returning from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In fact, the rate of female homeless vets is increasing in the United States, according to the federal government and groups that advocate for homeless people.

The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs defines PTSD as a type of anxiety that affects people who’ve experienced a particularly traumatic event that creates intense fear, helplessness or horror.

“You’re sitting on your couch and you hear a car go down the street, and you think it’s going to come through your house — so you kind of catastrophize things automatically,” Peacock said. “That’s stuff normal people don’t do, but if you’re in a combat zone on convoys all the time, you can’t help but do that.”

People in Peacock’s life “just don’t get it,” she said, “so you just isolate.”

PTSD can trigger depression, experts say, leading to job loss and a rapid downward spiral toward homelessness. Many times, these newly homeless women also have children to care for, advocates say.

Making matters worse, Peacock and other returning vets from Iraq and Afghanistan have been hammered by a struggling economy and skyrocketing unemployment rates.

The jobless rate for post-9/11 veterans is higher than the overall U.S. rate and has nearly doubled in the past year to 11.3 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

In addition, about 1.5 million veterans — 6.3 percent — had incomes below the federal poverty line, according to a 2005 congressional analysis of census figures.

Homeless U.S. veterans

Estimated homeless veterans: 131,000
Estimated homeless female veterans: 13,100
Estimated post-9/11 veterans: 7,400
Estimated number of female post-9/11 veterans: 740
12 percent of homeless veterans younger than 34 are women
Jobless rate for post-9/11 veterans: 11.3 percent

Sources: Department of Veterans Affairs, Bureau of Labor Statistics

With the U.S. Army now at 15 percent female, and more women providing supporting roles in combat zones, female vets are becoming homeless at a faster rate than men, said Department of Veterans Affairs spokesman Pete Dougherty.

Conservative estimates count about 131,000 homeless veterans in the United States, most of them from the Vietnam War era. The VA has pinpointed 3,717 homeless veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan, but the nationwide total could be as many as twice that — about 7,400, he said.

The VA estimates about 10 percent of all homeless veterans are women, making the estimated number of homeless Iraq-Afghanistan female veterans about 740. Dougherty said that number is rising.

Peacock blames her PTSD on many incidents during her time in the military, including “a bunch of small near misses, like sniper fire on a convoy, and waiting for somebody to throw an IED over, and the constant fear that I’m going to die.”

She also says she was raped by a noncommissioned officer while deployed in South Korea in 2001.

She said that on the advice of a soldier who outranked her, she never officially reported the rape. “He said if you tell, they’re going to put you on trial and make you look like a party girl,” she said.

Peacock said the Army reached out to her to investigate the rape accusation, but she refused to cooperate because she didn’t think the investigation would do any good. CNN.com contacted the Army about Peacock’s story and has not yet received an official response to her allegations.

Known in the ranks as MST, military sexual trauma is another factor homeless advocates point to as a possible cause for PTSD.

To fight the problem, some communities are developing outreach systems to catch homeless women vets before they fall too far. Tracking veterans and determining early on when they’ve lost jobs and are about to lose their housing has met with some success, said Steve Berg, vice president of programs and policy at the National Alliance to End Homelessness.

At-risk vets would get immediate assistance, said Berg, such as help negotiating with a landlord or finding a new job or short-term financial assistance. iReport.com: Ask a veteran about his or her greatest concerns

Another idea that has had some success, according to Berg, is called the rapid rehousing approach — identifying veterans when they first show up at a homeless shelter. “If you help them get right back into housing, you get better results than if you let people stay homeless for a long time and then try to fix them,” Berg said.

Now heading the VA is Eric Shinseki, the Army four-star general who retired in 2003, shortly after angering some Bush administration officials by telling a Senate panel that more troops were needed to pacify Iraq after the invasion.

Shinseki has vowed to end homelessness among veterans within five years.

Funds totaling $75 million from the VA and the Department of Housing and Urban Development in 2008 made vouchers available for 10,000 units of permanent housing for homeless vets in all 50 states.

Shinseki has announced another $75 million in June aimed at providing another 10,000 homes.

“They’re good programs,” Berg said, “but they don’t have a big enough capacity.”

Theoretically, if $75 million a year gets 10,000 veterans off the streets and into homes, it could be possible to house all 131,000 homeless veterans with about $975 million, Dougherty said.

The Senate is considering legislation to provide care and services for homeless veterans with children. Cosponsored by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Washington, the bill would authorize $50 million in VA special needs grants over five years.

Peacock, who has no children herself, says she’s been sober for three years. Determined to “heal her demons,” she says she’s working on a 12-step addiction program and receiving hourlong sessions each week with a VA therapist.

Peacock also said she takes part in a VA vocational rehabilitation program that has provided her with a dog she named GI Joe. “Well — his name was already Joe — I added the ‘GI,’ ” she laughed.

Eventually, she plans to return to college, become a “transpersonal psychologist” and help others with PTSD.

“It’s like spiritual psychology,” Peacock explained. “You explore your place in the world and your place in life.”

Her plan is “to save myself first, and then I can help somebody else.”

“I’m getting there,” Peacock said. “It’s kind of slow, but I’m clean and sober and I have a new support circle and I’m in my hometown again. It’s definitely better, and I’m not done yet.”

September 21, 2009

Attention Barbara Kay of Canada: You Are Dangerous…I Hope You’ve Opened Your Eyes in the Past Year

barbarakayHey Barbara Kay, I sincerely hope you’ve opened your eyes about violence against women and children in the past year.    (Are you really Mike Murphy in drag?)   Your actions of “coming to the rescue of all men with allegations against them” is dangerous, and I wonder how you’d react if you were raped going out to your car one night.  Throw in a severe beating, and let him urinate all over you after he is done with raping you (this happened to my cousin), and let’s see how you feel.  And father’s rights loser Paul Clements can tell you that you lied about being raped.

Try telling this to Meara McIntosh of Alberta.  She tried telling the authorities and the family court of the violent nature of her ex, Rich Saunders of Drumheller, AB.  Nobody believed her because of father’s rights pundits like you, spewing your drivel about false allegations from women.  Rich took little dear 3 year old Colton for a weekend visit last year after Meara was court ordered to turn the child over for the visit.  Rich killed little Colton and himself that weekend.  Now, with Colton buried  in his beloved Halloween costume, Meara couldn’t even afford to get a headstone for his grave (and he still needs one).  Maybe instead we can make November a fundraising month for buying headstones for all the victims of domestic violence.  Here are a few Canadians we can start with:

Theresa Thomas, a 58 year old from Vancouver, was killed by her husband on August 4, 2009.
Joan Paget, from Alberta, along with her daughter, Jolene, and her nine year old granddaughter, Misty, were killed by Joan’s husband on July 26, 2009.
Kristel Duval, 25 year old from Montreal, was killed by her husband on July 6, 2009.
Selamawit Negasi, 46 year old from Edmonton, a mother of 3 children, was killed by her husband July 5, 2009.
Brenda Blondell, 59 year old from British Columbia, was killed by her husband on June 22, 2009.
Maria Nzokilandevi, 53 year old from Ontario, mother of 3 children, was killed by her husband on June 12, 2009.
Michelle Simone, a 45 year old from Ontario, was killed by her husband on June 7, 2009.
Kerry Walters, a 25 year old from Ottawa and her 11 month old baby girl, Starla, were killed by Kerry’s husband on May 16, 2009.
Lorna Kate Redhead of Shamattawa, a 42 year old from Manitoba, was killed by her husband on May 16, 2009.
Gail Saltel, a 47 year old from Alberta and her 17 year old daughter, Erika, were killed by Gail’s husband on May 4, 2009.
Jessica Martel, 26 year old from Edmonton, a mother of 3 children, was killed by her husband on April 29, 2009.
Tubi Kawaja, 35 year old from Calgary, mother of a 3 year old boy, was killed by her husband on April 4, 2009.
Pamela Olara, 32 year old from Toronto, a mother of 4 children, was killed by her husband on April 2, 2009.
Jinane Ghannoum, 38 year old from Montreal, a mother of 3 children, was killed by her husband on March 24, 2009.
Kuldeep Kaur Badyal, 32 year old from Vancouver, a mother of 2 children, was killed by her husband on March 5, 2009.
Sherry Martin, 52 year old from Ontario, was killed by her husband on February 24, 2009.
Deborah Volker, 44 year old from Alberta, a mother of 3 children, was killed by her husband on February 23, 2009.
Shelley Richards, 56 year old from British Colombia was killed by her husband on February 10, 2009.

From a study cited by the National District Attorney’s Association in the United States, which I am sure they are more qualified than you to speak on this matter:

To the contrary, the available research suggests that false allegation rates are not significantly high.  For example, a 1990 study by Thoennes and Tjaden evaluated 9,000 divorces in 12 states7 and found that sexual abuse allegations were made in less than 2 percent of the contested divorces involving child custody.  Within this group, it appears false allegations occurred in approximately 5% to 8% of cases.8 This study is one of the most comprehensive and least subject to bias and sampling problems, since its sample is so large and representative of the population of those divorcing with custody and visitation disputes.9

7 Thoennes & Tjaden, The Extent, Nature and Validity of Sexual Abuse Allegation in Custody/Visitation Disputes, Child Abuse and Neglect 1990, 14:151-163.
8 Id.
9 Kathleen Coulborn Faller, David L. Corwin & Erna Olafson, Literature Review: Research on False Allegations of Sexual Abuse in Divorce, APSAC Advisor 1993, 6(3), page 9.

Not all women are truthful, as shown in the study above, but a vast majority are.  Not all guys are bad…there are many good fathers out there.  But to blanket-protect many abusers that are dangerous to the lives of women and children is just WRONG!  Shame on you, Barbara Kay!

For what it is worth (and it isn’t that much), here is her horrifying opinion last year from the National Post:

Barbara Kay, October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month; How about making November false allegations awareness month

Posted: October 06, 2008, 9:11 PM by Jonathan Kay

Domestic Violence Awareness Month was first observed in October, 1987 and is celebrated on the first Monday in October. That’s today, October 6. Fittingly enough, this morning’s Globe and Mail carries an editorial on the sometimes tragic effects when innocent men are charged with false allegations of sexual abuse.

The editorial recounts the story of a young father who was savagely beaten to death with a baseball bat by a young man who took the word of two girls, aged 13 and 15, when they claimed the victim had “touched them inappropriately.” The girls had lied and clearly incited their male “protector” to violence, but they were not charged with any crime. Nor was an 18-year old woman who accompanied the murderer and presumably, at the very least, approved of his actions. Perhaps she even egged him on. She was only charged with “breaking and entering.” The editorial indignantly concludes that “the authorities need to punish” those whose false accusation are at the root of such incidents.

The Globe editorialists’ indignation suggests a certain naiveté about the prevalence of this practice. They would profit from spending a few days in family court, where, in the interest of tipping custody battles in their own interest, women’s false allegations of domestic violence and sexual abuse of children against their former partners are so rife – and virtually never punished – that it is apparently the best-kept secret crime in the western world. Oh, perhaps these men are not beaten up with baseball bats, but they do lose their homes, their children, often their jobs and friends, spend time in jail, are rarely given the benefit of the doubt – and many of them kill themselves from despair.

In 2000, it was reported that the FBI’s DNA testing over a three year period had exonerated more than 30% of their 4,000-plus sexual assault suspects. Going further back, in the FBI’s Behavioural Science Unit’s 1983 study of False Allegations, a total of 220 out of 556 rape investigations – 40% – turned out to be false. Over a quarter turned out to be actual hoaxes (remember the infamous Tawana Brawley, who at 15 falsely accused a number of white men of a marathon three-day gang rape, some of them police officers? At least she got successfully sued for defamation, but that was small potatoes for the havoc she wreaked in those men’s lives). About 4,000 allegations of rape a year are levelled in Manhattan. About half never happened. Police officials in New Zealand state that 64% of rape reports are false.

False reports of child abuse are even more prevalent. A 1999 National Post article reported on a study by two law professors from Queen’s University: “The academics looked at 196 abuse allegations involving separated parents. Of these, 46 cases resulted in judgments that abuse did occur. Of the 150 unproven cases, the trial judges believed the allegations were intentionally false (either a parent or child made them up) 45 times. Thus it appears there are as many cases of false accusations of child abuse as there are provable, true incidents.

After lifting the veil on the prevalence of false claims, the two law professors then detail[ed] the costs – emotional, financial and legal – of such accusations. Since mothers make the preponderance of abuse claims – true and false – it is fathers who bear the bulk of this burden. Further, it is important to remember that even if the charges are found to be baseless in criminal court, they can subsequently re-appear in family court. This means the father may never escape the stigma of being falsely accused of child abuse. And just one instance of a mother being charged with making false accusations was reported in the study, even though the data suggests one quarter of child abuse charges are likely to be deliberately invented.”

All allegations of sexual abuse or domestic violence should be routed immediately to criminal court and the burden placed on the accuser to prove (usually) her case. Real punishment should follow on false accusations of abuse of any kind. When women get away scot free with ruining men’s lives – or provoking tragedies like those detailed in this editorial – it is inevitable that the message trickles down to society at large that false allegations against men by women and girls are tolerated and even triviliazed. I don’t think those girls thought they were doing anything “wrong,” certainly not committing a crime. I  daresay they would not have been so insouciant about accusing the unfortunate young man if they were aware that false allegations result in serious consequences.

I would love to see the Globe and Mail follow up their editorial with an in-depth story on the state of false allegations in Canada today. As a kind of ironic “homage” to domestic violence month.

September 20, 2009

Insanity? No, It’s Family Court in America?

yaaaImagine that your home was broken into, vandalized and burglarized one night. You were roughed up and tied up while he ransacked your home. Fortunately, he left you shaken and hurt, but not seriously injured such as to require hospitalization. You were successfully able to identify him and his vehicle as he sped away.

Upon your call to the police, the offender is apprehended with the goods in his possession and brought to court to stand trial for his crimes against you.

You arrive in court and the first thing the judge asks you is if you are willing to go to mediation with the burglar. When you refuse, the judge labels you ‘uncooperative’ and ‘hostile’ to the burglar’s continued relationship with you. Even though the burglar was caught red-handed with your goods, and you were an eye witness to the crime, the judge now decides that he can’t possibly decide the case without first appointing a social worker termed a “burglary evaluator” to assess yours and the burglar’s relationship.

When the social worker/evaluator can not determine what is best for your relationship or your stolen goods, they ask the judge to have both you and the burglar psychologically evaluated, because you seem “anxious”, “angry” and “uncooperative” with the burglar. The court-appointed psychologist, who has no experience in being the victim of violent crime and has not studied the effects of such trauma, also determines that you are uncooperative, hostile, anxious, and you have a negative opinion of the burglar that can’t be healthy. After all, the burglar had nothing but good things to say about you, your home and your belongings during his evaluation.

The psychologist recommends that you be restricted from access to your belongings until you can accept the burglar’s rightful relationship to continued access to your home and personal effects. He further recommends you attend weekly conjoint therapy with the burglar to work on being more cooperative with him in the future.

All at your expense of course.

The judge decides to wait a year or so to see how you work through your relationship with the burglar before he can decide upon the burglary conviction. He chastises you that you had better really work at the relationship or he may just grant the burglar’s request to maintain sole ownership of your property. None of these “experts” can be sued civilly for their negligence and incompetence because they have judicial or quasi-judicial immunity.

Insanity? Nope. It’s Family court in America.

Domestic violence victims walk into family court to ask a judge to protect their children from a known abuser. Instead, they face the above-described nightmare that can span years and put them into financial ruin, mental and emotional exhaustion, not to mention directly back into the path of the abuser. Judges pressure them to mediate, assign a custody evaluator who pressures them to accept 50/50 joint physical and legal custody with theirs and their children’s abuser.

They and their children are put through psychological evaluations by persons with little to no training in domestic violence, and some judges force co-parenting therapy and reunification therapy upon mother and child with their perpetrators. If they can not fit into the mold of cooperative “co-parenting” and the children continue to be reluctant to visit with the man that abused them, they face losing custody to him.

We have spent millions of dollars printing brochures and making public service announcements to victims of domestic violence encouraging them to leave violent relationships and telling them of the harmful effects on their children.

But when they do get the courage to leave, the same system tells them they are wrong to try to protect their children once they have divorced their abuser, and that they should now fully and freely support unsupervised visitation with the same dangerous person. Contrary to popular belief, children of batterers can be at just as much risk psychologically, sexually, and even physically after the couple splits up as they were when the family was still together. In fact, many children experience the most damaging victimization from the abuser at this point.

Most people assume that a fit mother never loses custody. If only that were true. The American Judges Association reports that “Studies show that batterers have been able to convince authorities that the victim is unfit or undeserving of sole custody in approximately 70% of challenged cases.” Unfortunately, state laws also says that none of these people can be held accountable, either.

And so we go on, handing down family violence from one generation to the next…

Pornography at the Root of More and More Domestic Violence Incidents

Yes.

From the Examiner:

Pornography at root of more and more domestic violence incidents

By Loretta Park (Standard-Examiner Davis Bureau)

Last Edit: 5 min 40 sec ago (Sep 19 2009 – 10:39pm)

The complexities surrounding domestic violence are being complicated by a new factor: The prevalence and easy access to pornography.

More women requesting help are reporting that their abuser views pornography, according to officials who work with abused women.

“Five years ago pornography wasn’t something we talked about,” said Kay Card, director of Safe Harbor, a women’s shelter in Davis County.

The pornography is a “cancer,” she said.

“Women can’t compete with the Internet,” Card said.

They report their abuse starts with put-downs, progresses to physical abuse, sexual insults, sexual abuse and rape.

“They appear to be living normal lives, but you don’t know what people are doing on the Internet in the middle of the night,” Card said.

Utah’s Domestic Violence Coalition wants to get the message out, that it is not OK to physically, psychologically, emotionally or financially abuse another person, whether it is wife, girlfriend, husband, boyfriend or a child.

Judy Kasten-Bell, executive director of the Domestic Violence Coalition council, said, since there have been 11 deaths in Utah so far this year related to domestic violence.

The first this year was the murder of Brittany Nichols, 23, in North Ogden on Jan. 4. Her killer, Johnny Maurice Bell, was sentenced recently to 16 years to life in the Utah State Prison.

“There is no room in our community for domestic violence,” Kasten-Bell said.

The struggling economy is also complicating efforts to help abuse victims. Jobs are the key to helping women get away from their abuser and back on their feet.

Top of Utah women escaping domestic violence are spending more time in shelters than a year ago due to the poor economy.

When the economy plummets, abuse cases of all types, tend to increase, said Jason Wild, interim director for the Family Connection Center in Layton.

But women are more reluctant to report abuse because they are financially dependent on their partner and are afraid they will not be able to make it on their own, he said.

“We’re not seeing a massive increase in numbers (of women reporting abuse),” said Raquel Lee, assistant director of Your Community Connection in Ogden.

“What is happening, it is taking longer to get on their feet,” Lee said about the women who do leave a violent relationship.

Many of the women who come to the shelters for help are unemployed, which makes it almost impossible for them to find a place to live, said Card.

Annette MacFarlane, director of Your Community in Unity, in Brigham City, agrees.

“The reason many women go back to their abuser is because they do not have a job or a place to live,” said MacFarlane.

One in four women have experienced or are in a violent domestic relationship, she said.

From July 1, 2008, to June 30, 2009, her agency took 3,845 phone calls from victims, as well as friends and family members seeking help on behalf of another.

So a recent $250,733 award from the Department of Justice was welcome news, MacFarlane said. The funds will be used for several programs, including transitional housing and to help women who are getting out of abusive relationships.

Currently, the agency provides funding for one year of rent, but with the added funds, the agency will be able to provide rent assistance for 18 months.

Card said her agency is feeling the economic pinch in another way: For the first time there is a drop in private donations, which are used to help pay for (doctor) co-pays, bus fares, dental work for children, and prescriptions.

In addition, Card’s shelter is seeing a decrease in donations of items like paper towels, toilet paper and reams of copy paper.

Women seeking help do not fit society’s stereotypes, MacFarlane said.

“She doesn’t live in a trailer court with a husband wearing a ‘wife beater’ undershirt,” MacFarlane said. “The reality is they represent the demographics of our community.”

September 18, 2009

Hawaiian Protest Highlights Problem of Abusers Getting Custody of Children from Their Victims

Good for Dara and this group for educating the public on how abusers are getting custody of children from mothers.  It is happening everywhere!  Not only do the moms pay dearly from the corrupt and/or incompetent courts and court whores, but the children suffer too being with the abuser.  Studies show that, if the abuser hadn’t already started abusing the children also before the breakup, 40 to 60% of the time he will start after.  Often I hear from moms about the drugs their children are put on to quell/mute the stress from being with the abuser.  When will this madness end?  This is from thegardenisland.com:


Residents protest domestic abuse

Dara Carlin of O‘ahu, a domestic violence survivor advocate, consultant, trainer and expert witness, left, talks about the issue of abuse on Kaua‘i with Hoyt Bozeman outside the state courthouse Thursday morning in Lihu‘e. Paul C. Curtis/The Garden Island

By Paul Curtis – The Garden Island

Published: Monday, September 14, 2009 2:10 AM HST

LIHU‘E — Domestic Violence Awareness Month is still a few weeks away, but someone who knows a flawed system when she is ensnared in one feels the need for “sunlight” on the problem on Kaua‘i is more immediate.

Jonea Schillaci-Lavergne, who won a historic California court case but still lost her daughter to another state’s child-protective system, followed her daughter to Kaua‘i to be close to her and has organized at least two rallies to raise awareness of what she sees as problems in the state-run system designed to protect Hawai‘i’s youngest, most-vulnerable residents.

“I feel that the public really needs to be more informed about what’s going on on Kaua‘i,” she said during a telephone interview Tuesday. “Child abuse should not be kept a secret. We have to put the sunlight on the problem.”

The name of her group is the Kaua‘i Angels, patterned after the Maui Angels, a similar group of concerned adults on Maui who are pushing for state Family Court reform on the Valley Isle.

While Schillaci-Lavergne’s first rally, Thursday morning in front of the state courthouse here, started slowly, she said by telephone Friday morning that more people joined in at the Kapule Highway-Ahukini Road intersection near the entrance to Lihu‘e Airport, and well-wishers honked their horns at those sign-holders most of Thursday morning.

Gatherings are also planned at two busy sections of state highways Thursday, Sept. 17, the day the group also plans to meet with Mayor Bernard P. Carvalho Jr., she said.

The rallies are from 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. at the airport intersection, and along Kaumuali‘i Highway near Kilohana and Kaua‘i Community College from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

The purpose of the rallies is to inform the community that Schillaci-Lavergne and others feel the Kaua‘i Family Court and its court-appointed experts are not doing enough to protect children from abuse and domestic violence, she said in a press release.

Child sexual abuse, in particular, has become a national epidemic, and judges spend more time ignoring and suppressing facts and medical evidence than investigating and prosecuting perpetrators, she said.

Marsha Kitagawa, a spokesperson for the state Judiciary, said state judges are prohibited under the Revised Code of Judicial Conduct from making public statements that “might reasonably be expected to affect the outcome or impair the fairness of a matter pending or impending in any court.”

Still, Kitagawa said “The Family Court protects a child’s best interests in several ways. In general, a parent’s right to custody may be curtailed, suspended or terminated if the judge finds that the parent is a threat to the safety of the child or additional visitation days would not be in the child’s best interests.

“Despite having legal representation and ample opportunity for recourse, litigants like Ms. Shillaci-Lavergne continue to be dissatisfied with the court’s decisions and blame the system and/or the judge,” Kitagawa said in an e-mail Friday afternoon.

“Child-custody cases involve difficult and emotionally-charged issues and, unfortunately and all too often, the non-prevailing parties involved in these types of cases wrongly perceive the justice system to be unfair, unjust, or ineffectual,” Kitagawa said.

“Regardless of how the parents/parties may feel, the Family Court’s and judges’ first and foremost objective is to protect the best interests of the child, as required by law.”

Schillaci-Lavergne is undeterred. “I’ve seen so much struggle and suffering going on. It’s a problem everywhere,” she said.

“It’s not a fun subject. I didn’t choose it,” she said of her cause to let people know about what she sees as the broken Family Court system she says protects the abuser, sometimes just to punish the protective parent who reports the abuse. “It chose me.”

Efforts to reach state Department of Human Services Child Welfare Services officials for comment on the allegations were unsuccessful by press time.

A group of concerned parents who were unable to protect their children from abuse gathered and demanded a state audit of the Maui Family Court, she said in her e-mail about the origins of the Maui Angels.

The Kaua‘i Angels are asking that child-abuse cases be properly investigated and that the protective parents be allowed due process in court to fight for and protect their children from abuse, she said.

“Children should not be placed with the abuser.”

Approximately one in three girls and one in five boys will be sexually abused (in most cases by a family member) by age 18.

“These statistics are unacceptable for our children and, as a community, we need to end this problem immediately,” she said in her e-mail.

Dara Carlin, who holds a master’s degree and has spent 20 years as a child and family therapist on O‘ahu, said what’s happening in Hawai‘i is both “disillusioning and disheartening.”

Carlin said at the rally Thursday at the courthouse that while she is totally “for the parent-child relationship,” she is “100 percent against victim-perpetrator relationship.”

She also totally understands that, culturally, because of the shame brought on families by the offenses, people are sometimes reluctant to come forward and admit that they have been or are being abused, she said.

And, in some segments of the population, it may be OK to kick a dog in the head, but it’s never OK to kick a child or wife or other woman in the head, Carlin said.

Ernest Sisca, a Wailua Homesteads resident and one of the half-dozen men who gathered at the courthouse, said he came to support Schillaci-Lavergne, who gave up her California home and career in order to be close to her daughter on Kaua‘i, where the daughter lives with her father.

The group is selling T-shirts to raise funds for the cause. The front of the shirt says “Children Against Court Appointed Child Abuse,” and the back says, “I’ll wear the black and blue so the children won’t have to.”

For more information, contact Schillaci-Lavergne, 707-364-5069, or visit www.angelgroup.org.

September 17, 2009

California Mother Finds Her Dead Children Last Night, Killed by Father in Yet Another Murder-Suicide

There is just no way to catch these all…I try and focus on helping moms by providing information that could help them.  Other bloggers, such as Dastardly Dads, have been pretty good at keeping up, but there are just so many.  May these two dear children rest in peace, and their mother eventually find peace in her soul.  As we know, short of actually killing the mom, nothing hurts her worse than taking her children.  From MSNBC:


Mom finds slain bodies of 2 kids, ex-husband

12-year-old son, 6-year-old daughter killed in Southern California home

msnbc.com staff and news service reports
updated 5:49 a.m. ET, Thurs., Sept . 17, 2009//

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. – A mother found her two children and ex-husband dead in an apparent homicide at an apartment in Southern California, police said Thursday.

Ventura County sheriff’s Detective Eric Buschow said a woman discovered the bodies of her 12-year-old son, her 6-year-old daughter and her ex-husband in an apartment in Thousand Oaks on Wednesday night.

“It’s a really disturbing scene,” Buschow told the Ventura County Star. “We have a lot of work to do.”

The newspaper quoted neighbors as saying the male victim was a devoted father.

“I am absolutely blown away,” local resident Jason White added. “This is a very relaxed, very quiet, family-oriented, high-rent district. It’s an extremely safe area.”

Geez, why do they keep calling these guys who kill their children “such a nice guy?”

Los Angeles Times UPDATE:  We now have more information, just as we suspect, a child custody battle at the heart of it…

By Catherine SaillantSeptember 17, 2009 | 7:26 p.m.

Distraught over his divorce and the loss of his job, James Mulvaney did the unthinkable, Ventura County authorities say.

Sometime after his ex-wife dropped their two children off at his Thousand Oaks apartment Tuesday, Mulvaney stabbed 12-year-old Jason and 7-year-old Jennifer to death in their bedrooms.

The 52-year-old father then took his own life by overdosing on prescription pills, a preliminary review Thursday by the county medical examiner’s office indicates.

Pending toxicology tests are needed to confirm the finding, but Mulvaney’s body had no visible trauma and prescription medicines were found in the residence, Deputy Medical Examiner Michael Tellez said.

Autopsies revealed that the children died of multiple stab wounds, Sheriff’s Det. Eric Buschow said. The killings were so frenzied that the scene in the children’s bedrooms shook even seasoned homicide investigators.

“Whatever took place in there was horrific,” Buschow said.

Investigators are calling it a murder-suicide. They didn’t find a suicide note and said Mulvaney had no criminal record.

But court records show that Mulvaney and his ex-wife, Julie Mulvaney, had been battling in court over child custody, the sale of a home and financial issues for more than a year.

Then, in early September, Mulvaney was let go from a senior position at Citibank in Camarillo, a job he’d held for more than a decade, a bank source said. A Citibank spokesman confirmed that Mulvaney was a former employee but declined to provide any other information about him.

Julie Mulvaney, also a banker, filed for divorce in February 2008. Though their marriage had legally ended last November, the couple was headed for a January trial to resolve outstanding issues, the court records show.

Neighbors say that Mulvaney moved to his apartment at the Knolls, located in one of Thousand Oaks’ wealthiest neighborhoods, about six months ago. He was frequently seen taking his children to the park or the swimming pool.

“In this economy, a lot of marriages are failing,” said Kathleen Zlokowich, who lives in another section of the large complex. “And it seems like the husbands all end up here.”

After his wife dropped off the kids Tuesday, Mulvaney took his son to soccer practice as usual that night, Buschow said. His ex-wife began to worry when she discovered that the children had not shown up for school on Wednesday, he said.

She drove to apartment about 5:45 p.m. and found the bodies after entering the unlocked front door, Buschow said.

“We can’t know what was going on in his head,” the detective said. “But I can’t imagine what would lead someone to do this to his own children.”

September 11, 2009

What’s Wrong with Father’s Rights

From xyonline:


Tue, 08 Sep 2009 – 10:53 | Michael Flood

Twenty years ago I joined my first anti-sexist men’s group. I’ve had a passionate commitment to profeminism ever since, nurtured through men’s anti-violence activism, Women’s and Gender Studies, editing a profeminist magazine, and now pursuing a career in feminist scholarship. Men’s violence against women is an obvious area for anti-sexist men’s activism, as it’s one of the bluntest and most brutal forms of gender inequality. I’ve organised campaigns in groups like Men Against Sexual Assault, run workshops in schools, helped run a national White Ribbon Campaign, designed violence prevention programs for athletes and others, and done research and writing on violence against women. But I’ve also been forced to critique and confront anti-feminist men in ‘men’s rights’ and ‘fathers’ rights’ groups. Their efforts are having a growing influence on community understandings of, and policy responses to, gender issues.


To read “What’s Wrong with Father’s Rights”” by Dr. Michael Flood, please click here.



September 9, 2009

Judge’s Association Warns: “Parental Alienation Syndrome” and Claims of “Parental Alienation” Have No Grounding in Reality

Here is the new Judicial Guide to Child Safety in Custody Cases from the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Family Violence Department.  Again the fake, so-called “Parental Alienation Syndrome” and the use of “parental alienation” is warned against and the Council tells the courts they should not accept this BS.

The only entities that do believe in this fairy tale syndrome are father’s rights groups who are fronted by abusive violent men and the Whores of the Court that sustain themselves by use of these false syndromes. 

2009: A Judicial Guide to Child Safety in Custody Cases

National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Family Violence Department

Page 12:

C. [§3.3] A Word of Caution about Parental Alienation34

Under relevant evidentiary standards, the court should not accept testimony regarding parental alienation syndrome, or “PAS.” The theory positing the existence of PAS has been discredited by the scientific community.35 In Kumho Tire v. Carmichael, 526 U.S. 137 (1999), the Supreme Court ruled that even expert testimony based in the “soft sciences” must meet the standard set in the Daubert case.36 Daubert, in which the court re-examined the standard it had earlier articulated in the Frye37 case, requires application of a multi-factor test, including peer review, publication, testability, rate of error, and general acceptance. PAS does not pass this test. Any testimony that a party to a custody case suffers from the syndrome or “parental alienation” should therefore be ruled inadmissible and stricken from the evaluation report under both the standard established in Daubert and the earlier Frye standard.38

The discredited “diagnosis” of PAS (or an allegation of “parental alienation”), quite apart from its scientific invalidity, inappropriately asks the court to assume that the child’s behaviors and attitudes toward the parent who claims to be “alienated” have no grounding in reality. It also diverts attention away from the behaviors of the abusive parent, who may have directly influenced the child’s responses by acting in violent, disrespectful, intimidating, humiliating, or discrediting ways toward the child or the other parent. The task for the court is to distinguish between situations in which the child is critical of one parent because they have been inappropriately manipulated by the other (taking care not to rely solely on subtle indications) , and situations in which the child has his or her own legitimate grounds for criticism or fear of a parent, which will likely be the case when that parent has perpetrated domestic violence. Those grounds do not become less legitimate because the abused parent shares them, and seeks to advocate for the child by voicing his or her concerns.

To read the entire report, “A Judicial Guide to Child Safety in Custody Cases (2009)” by National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges Family Violence Department, please click here.  This report should be very useful to both moms and dads who are under attack by claims of PAS against them.

September 7, 2009

What Will $90,000 Buy You In A Custody Case With A Child Rapist



Father given full custody by Wilson County (TN) Circuit Court Judge Clara Byrd.  Decision reversed on appeal thankfully.

Judge Byrd reprimanded in Wilson County case

A ten member panel of state judges has issued a public reprimand for 15th Circuit Court Judge Clara Byrd due to her actions in a child custody case, the Associated Press reported last week.

Full Story: Macon County Times

But guess what?  Judges get reprimands only to go back to court to continue the damage.  Why isn’t this judge in prison?

Wilson County Judge Clara Byrd.  Could she have a "Cleopatra Complex" issue?

Wilson County Judge Clara Byrd. Could she have a "Cleopatra Complex" issue?

September 5, 2009

Societal Bias Against Non-Custodial Moms: Leveling the Playing Field for Everyone

This is a guest contributor post from a Texas mom…wow, great job!

SOCIETAL BIAS AGAINST NON-CUSTODIAL MOMS

Leveling the Playing Field for Everyone

by

Anna Richards

When a mom gets custody of the kids in a divorce, you never hear the question, “How did she get custody?”  Yet, when a dad gets custody, the non-custodial mom is constantly asked, “How did he get custody?”  As if to say ‘What did you do….”  Tragically, more often than not, contested custody awards are decided on the basis of who runs out of money first and not what is best for the kids.  There is a huge gap between the legal ideology espoused by the Texas Family Code and the everyday reality of peoples’ lives.  I say this because I have personally witnessed blatant errors of law made by a family court judge that an appellate judge most assuredly would have reversed had the would-be appellant been armed with a good legal brief and  $10,000-$15,000.  Legal errors that impact the course of individuals’ lives happen every day and cannot be reversed without God….er em, I mean The Almighty Dollar.

I have heard there is still a bias toward women in Texas, and they say that about 70% of women are still awarded custody.  Technically, if a judge rules correctly, both parties should be considered equally.  More and more men are getting custody in Texas, but apparently statistics show that the odds are still stacked in favor of women.  My theory is that paradoxically, those favorable odds are actually detrimental to women and here is why.

Since increasing numbers of dads are entering into the fight for custody, in order to beat the odds, they have to be willing to lie in order to portray their wife as a mentally ill crack whore who needs to be kept as far away from his precious children as possible.  All of a sudden, what was once the meaningless trivia of their everyday life together as husband and wife becomes blown so far out of proportion that this weary new mom is now a lazy crack addict who completely neglects poor little junior.  She tells her supposed soul mate about a nightmare she had – he reframes it in court as a hallucination, probably due to one of the many pills she pops; which in reality is a single Ambien to help her sleep after the death of someone close to her.  I have observed first-hand a parade of embellished and highly exaggerated allegations masquerading as the truth.  If I had believed what was being said about this person, I wouldn’t have given her custody either.

The law should protect innocent people from psychological predators who play dirty head games such as the ones mentioned above just to maintain control.  I am emphatic about this because I believe the double-edged sword of a custody battle cuts not only into the heart of the child who is the innocent casualty of the failed marriage, but leaves such a scar on the soul of the maligned mother that she may well never heal….not that the sociopathic ex would give a damn, but we who pick up the pieces in the aftermath of the destruction should give enough of a damn to try to change things.  Grandparents, aunts, uncles, brothers, sisters, friends, clergy – somehow we need to find a way to vindicate those of the stigmatized minority who are worthy and good moms, and protect the victimized children caught in the crossfire of the battle.  One way we can do this is to lobby for reform of the Texas Family Code, particularly in how it is applied in a real time courtroom setting.

Of the things parents forget during a divorce, the most common is that their opinion of their spouse differs with their child’s opinion.  Unfortunately, however, in their parting of ways, angry parents transfer all of their animosity toward their estranged spouse to the children, whether consciously or unconsciously (my opinion is that most of the time it is conscious and intentional).

I think that if this State really wants to contribute to the well-being of its little citizens, the children, it will take seriously the duty to understand that parents are in a heightened state of emotional pain when ending a relationship, and are more likely to act immaturely, irrationally, and without regard to their children’s well-being than they would if they were in a stable relationship.  Therefore, legal safeguards must be enacted to protect vulnerable children from the unnecessary abuse hurled at them by one or more temporarily insane parents determined to destroy the other parent at all costs, including the emotional health of their child.

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