Thursday, December 2, 2010

10 Ways to Survive a Child Custody Case

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TEN WAYS TO SURVIVE A CHILD CUSTODY CASE

10. Before embarking on a custody dispute, remember that this should not be about you or the other parent, but what is in the best interests of your children.

9. Talk to an attorney and review the laws of your state. Many states, including in Michigan where I practice, look at what are in the best interests of the children. Try to understand this thoroughly, and be as objective as possible. Go through the legal factors in your state, and analyze them. Try to determine whether or not you have a legitimate case for custody, or perhaps some type of joint /shared custody.

8. Talk to your spouse, former spouse, or the other parent, and attempt to resolve custody and parenting time without the need for filing a legal action.

7. It is important to bear in mind that a custody arrangement which makes sense for an infant or two year old is going to be very different than one for a seven or eight year old. A teenager has different needs. Custody and parenting time for a teenager is often a battle between each parent, and the fact that the teenager wants to spend as much time as possible with friends and school or extra-curricular activities, rather than being with either parent. I have said over the years that a teenage custody battle is one where each parent says, "you take them." The age and needs of your children are extremely important. They should be considered carefully.



Read more here.


Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Mel Gibson Ordered to Pay $20,000 a Month in Child Support

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Oksana Grigorieva recently won a small court battle against Mel Gibson in their ever-evolving child custody lawsuit.

The judge ruled in her favor, and increased the monthly child support payment she receives from Gibson from $5,000 to $20,000, according to TMZ. She originally asked for for $60,000 a month.

"Everything in Hollywood is to excess. Mel Gibson is worth upwards of $1 billion. It's a very modest award by Hollywood standards and a very high award by normal people standards," her child support lawyer told the news source.

Oksana and Gibson's daughter is just 11 months old.

Currently she gets $2,500 a month for her 13-year-old son from another marriage.

She told the news source that the reason why she needed an increase in child support money is because Lucia needs constant security, because she is Gibson's Linkdaughter. Oksana also has more than $100,000 in debt for legal fees and PR costs, according to the news source.


Read more here.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Impact of Child Custody in Levi Johnston, Bristol Palin Case

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Bristol Palin and Levi Johnston may be on-again, off-again, but the impact of their child custody decision will have a long-lasting impact on their child, Tripp. According to the latest news from CNN and other sources, Palin and Johnston have agreed to share legal custody.

The custody agreement reached by the couple states that Palin will have primary physical custody of Tripp, while Johnston will have visitation rights two days per week. This agreement comes several weeks after Bristol called off the couple’s re-engagement.

Impact of Child Custody
In one study, published in the Journal of Family Psychology, psychologist Robert Bauserman, PhD, analyzed 33 studies that included 1,846 sole custody and 814 joint custody children. He found that children from divorced families who either live with both parents at different times or spend a specific amount of time with each parent are better adjusted in most cases than children who live and interact with just one parent.

In another study, published in Law and Human Behavior, the investigators found that families with joint custody had fewer child adjustment problems. In yet another study, also published in the Journal of Family Psychology (2007), researchers found that the more time children lived with their fathers after divorce, the better their current relationships were with their fathers, independent of conflict between the parents.


Read more here!

Monday, July 26, 2010

One-Size-Fits-All Approach to Child Custody Can Endanger Moms and Kids

URBANA – Do child custody evaluators' beliefs about domestic violence sometimes put divorced women and children in danger? A new University of Illinois study reveals that evaluator's beliefs generally fall into two categories, and one group is far more likely to prioritize safety for women and children when making custody decisions.

"Some evaluators see conflict as a natural part of relationships. When domestic violence occurs, they reason that it takes two to tango. When a couple's relationship is over, these evaluators see no reason the mom and dad can't co-parent safely, especially if they've both attended court-ordered anger management classes," said Jennifer Hardesty, a U of I associate professor of human and community development.

"The other group believes that anger management classes work for some couples, but they also know that violence can be used to control and terrorize women, and that children may be used as pawns in the relationship or as weapons against the mother. In such cases, these evaluators carefully craft custody arrangements that will keep the mother and children safe," said doctoral student Megan Haselschwerdt who worked with Hardesty on the study.

The researchers would like to see standardized and mandated training that would teach custody evaluators how to discriminate between types of violence because different kinds of violence require different interventions.

"Unfortunately, many courts are applying a one-size-fits-all model to custody cases. It's important to err on the side of safety. Safety precautions can be relaxed if it turns out that there's not as much of a risk as was thought. That's better than just assuming that there's no risk," Haselschwerdt said.

Approximately 20 percent of divorcing couples in the United States require judicial intervention to reach a custody agreement, and allegations of domestic violence are raised and substantiated in about 75 percent of these cases, she said.

"This means that custody evaluators—many of whom have little formal training in the dynamics of domestic violence—are in a position either to ensure safe custody agreements or to minimize or deny the seriousness of domestic violence and its relevance to child custody," she noted.

In the study, 23 custody evaluators participated in in-depth interviews, answering open-ended questions about their beliefs and how they made decisions.

Members of the "it takes two to tango" school said that most of their cases involved situational violence or arguments that turned physical because couples were unable to manage their conflicts properly—for example, a heated conflict about finances that ended with a shove.

These custody evaluators acknowledged that extreme cases of battering exist but said they almost never saw them.

But Hardesty disagrees. "These evaluators described situations that clearly went beyond situational violence, but they were convinced that was all they were seeing."

"In fact, speaking up for her safety can backfire on a woman if an evaluator decides she is trying to alienate the father from his children by making exaggerated claims. The evaluator may then compensate by prioritizing the father's custody rights," she said.

The more prevalent type of domestic violence is situational violence, which probably occurs in approximately 60 percent of the evaluators' cases.

Read more here.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Child-Custody Cases Demand Discretion, Not New Laws

NO ONE can argue against the goal of giving fathers a large presence in their children’s lives. The question is how to ensure that, when unmarried or divorcing parents cannot agree on child-custody arrangements, men get a fair hearing in family court. Fathers’ rights advocates in Massachusetts argue that custody orders generally favor mothers and are pinning their hopes on House Bill 1400, which promotes the concept of “shared parenting.’’ But the bill, now before the Joint Committee on the Judiciary, is too broad an approach to a challenging issue that demands nuanced, case-by-case decisions based on the best interests of the child.

House Bill 1400 would create a legal presumption for joint custody in situations where there is no evidence of child abuse or neglect. Judges would still have the right to award sole custody to one parent, but would have to provide written justification for their decisions. Massachusetts law currently has no legal presumption in favor of either parent, or even to the primary caregiver

Read more here.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Malaysia Court To Rule On Child Conversion

Malaysia's highest court was asked Monday to decide whether a Muslim convert can change his children's religion without the consent of his spouse, in a test case for the multi-ethnic nation.

The case is being closely watched by Malaysia's ethnic Chinese and Indian minorities who say their rights are being eroded by rising "Islamisation" in a country where 60 percent of the population is Muslim Malay.

Secret conversions of children, which can deprive the non-Muslim parent of custody, and "body-snatching" cases where Islamic authorities tussle with families over the remains of people whose religion is disputed, have raised racial tensions.

The Federal Court was asked to hear the case of Hindu woman S. Shamala who fled to Australia in 2004 with her two young sons after her husband Muhammad Ridzwan Mogarajah converted to Islam and secretly converted the children.

The High Court in 2004 gave Shamala custody of the children on condition she raised them as Muslims, an order Mogarajah appealed in the civil courts, and in the religious courts which operate in a dual-track system in Malaysia.

Under sharia law, a non-Muslim parent cannot share custody of converted children. Non-Muslims also complain that they do not get a fair hearing when such cases end up in the religious courts.

"The significance is as to whether or not in Malaysia under the federal constitution, one parent can convert the religion of the child of the marriage to another religion without the consent of the other parent," Shamala's lawyer Cyrus Das said.



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Monday, March 29, 2010

Tennessee Moves to Split Custody Evenly in Messy Divorces

A Tennessee bill that would evenly split child custody in contentious divorce cases is drawing national attention and dividing groups along gender lines.

On one side is an alliance of women's groups, some judges and the Tennessee Bar Association, who say the change would make divorces tougher to settle and give abusive ex-husbands leverage they shouldn't have. Spending half of the time with each parent would also impose impractical schedules on kids, they say.

On the other side are fathers' rights groups who say kids get deprived of full relationships with both parents. Courts have too long ignored laws calling for custody decisions to be made in children's best interests, they say, and judges are overly influenced by notions about the mother-child bond.

The state's House Children and Family Affairs' Family Justice Subcommittee is scheduled to meet today to review divorce-related data it requested from the Tennessee Bar Association, as it works to determine whether to send the bill to a second committee that could send it to the full House.

Other states, including Missouri, start from a presumption of an even custodial split unless there has been abuse, said Janet Richards, a law professor at the University of Memphis who specializes in child custody matters. Tennessee would be alone in requiring clear, convincing evidence that one parent is unfit before dividing custody unequally, she said.

Read more here and be sure to check out and subscribe to our free weekly newsletter, The Round Up, for more news and upcoming events.

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Thursday, February 25, 2010

Help Line Could Eliminate Tense Child Custody Situations

FLORENCE - Lauderdale County Circuit Judge Jimmy Sandlin said the Co-Parenting Help Line can "defuse a potential volatile situation."

The help line is available for couples who are going through the initial stages of divorce, said program coordinator Debra Simmons. It's a benefit to parents who may have tension when it comes to child custodial issues. The help line, which is beginning its fourth year, is under the umbrella of Families First and is funded through the Alabama Law Foundation.

"We try to solve problems, help them work through the conflict and find a solution that will be agreeable to both parties," Simmons said.

Read more here.

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Monday, February 22, 2010

New Push to Protect Custody Rights of Troops

An Ohio lawmaker who has been blocked four times in his efforts to pass legislation to protect deployed service members from losing custody of their children has launched a new two-pronged effort to try to get his proposal into law.

Republican Rep. Michael Turner will try once again to attach to the annual defense policy bill provisions designed to prevent courts from denying child custody to service members while they are deployed. Turner hopes a promised meeting with Defense Secretary Robert Gates will result in objections to his legislation being dropped.

As a backup plan, Turner also has introduced a separate bill, HR 4469, that falls under the jurisdiction of the House and Senate veterans’ affairs committees. This gives him another avenue if he cannot overcome objections from the Defense Department and Senate Armed Services Committee, which have been the roadblocks to date for his legislation.

Read more here.

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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Deadline for Woman Missing in Custody Case

A judge refereeing a child-custody dispute between former lesbian partners balked Friday at issuing a contempt citation for one of them and instead gave her 30 days to appear in court with the girl or face arrest.

Lisa Miller has disappeared with 7-year-old Isabella Miller-Jenkins, and Miller's former partner renewed her call for help finding the girl.

"Every day I wonder where she is, and if she's OK," said Janet Jenkins, of Fair Haven. "Every time the phone rings, I hope it is someone calling to tell me they have found her."

Miller, the girl's biological mother, was ordered to surrender custody of Isabella on Jan. 1, but she failed to do so. The girl is now considered a missing person.

On Friday, Family Court Judge William Cohen - who had ordered the custody change two months ago - rejected Jenkins' plea for a contempt-of-court citation against Miller but found her in violation of his previous order. He set a Feb. 23 court date, saying if Miller doesn't appear with the child then, he would issue a warrant for her arrest.

Read more here

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