The American
Coalition for Fathers and Children
The American Coalition for Fathers and
Children is dedicated to creating a
family law system which promotes equal
rights for all parties affected by divorce.
Contact the ACFC at 1-800-978-3237 or
visit them on the web at
www.acfc.org.
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Dad-Bashing Judge Gets an Official Kick
in the Behind
Some of you may recall Kentucky
judge D. Michael "Mickey'' Foellger, who in
2004 made headlines by telling men behind on
their child support obligations that they had
to either have vasectomies or go to jail. I
slammed Foellger on several radio shows and
in my co-authored column
It's Child Support Guidelines that Need Surgery,
Not
'Deadbeat Dads' (Kentucky Post, Cincinnati
Post, 5/12/04). Family law attorney Jeff
Leving and I wrote:
"Foellger insists he's not
forcing sterilization on anybody, since
the offenders in his court can choose 30
days in jail instead. However, most men
who fall behind on child support have led
law-abiding lives and legitimately fear
for their safety and mental stability if
they are incarcerated.
"For example, in McCracken
County earlier this year a man slit his
throat in the courtroom after being sentenced
to two years in jail for being $7,000 behind
on child support. According to newspaper
accounts, the man pleaded to the judge 'Don't
put me in jail, I'm going to kill myself'
before taking out a razor blade.
"By threatening to jail
the men, Foellger is in effect impelling
them to get sterilized. In fact, Foellger
says that all but one of the men offered
his 'deal' have chosen vasectomy over jail.
"This represents a serious
human rights violation. Kentucky's child
support guidelines need to be overhauled
to ensure that support obligations are in
line with obligors' ability to pay.
In addition, the system needs to be more
flexible and responsive, so men who are
down on their luck don't become criminalized.
And while the public may be legitimately
annoyed with these 'deadbeats,' nobody should
be jailed or sterilized for the 'crime'
of being poor."
According to the Associated
Press'
Northern Kentucky judge suspended for lack of
patience, temper (5/30/06), Foellger is
now being disciplined for his courtroom bullying:
"A northern Kentucky judge has
been suspended for being sarcastic, insulting
and verbally abusive to people who appeared
in his courtroom.
"The Judicial Conduct Commission suspended
Campbell County Family Court Judge D. Michael
Foellger for 30 days, without pay, beginning
last Friday.
"Judge Foellger displayed 'a gross lack of
patience and loss of temper' in dealing with
attorneys and their clients as well as clerks
and court designated workers 'by shouting and
by using inappropriate, demeaning, sarcastic,
insulting and abusive language,' the Judicial
Conduct Commission said in a written report.
"'Instances of such conduct were not isolated,
but were persistent and pervasive,' the commission
said Friday.
"The state judicial code of conduct requires
judges to be patient, dignified and courteous
to people who appear in their courtrooms.
"Foellger waived formal disciplinary proceedings
and agreed to the commission's findings and
accepted the suspension.
"In its report, commission members said Foellger
has expressed remorse and apologized for his
conduct. They said Foellger also has taken remedial
steps to control his emotions and that he has
pledged that the conduct will not be repeated.
"The commission said in the report that it will
require periodic review of Foellger's courtroom
conduct to ensure compliance."
It couldn't have happened to a nicer guy...
John Stossel Defends Divorced Dads in New Book
20/20 anchor John Stossel has a section defending
divorced dads in his new book
Myths, Lies, and Downright Stupidity: Get Out
the Shovel--Why Everything You Know is Wrong.
He discusses the work of Dr. Sanford
Braver, author of
Divorced Dads: Shattering the Myths,
and Braver's debunking of the famous Weitzman
hoax.
One of the most pervasive and pernicious
myths of our time is the idea that men gain
economically from divorce while women suffer
from it. The myth stems from a now discredited
study conducted over two decades ago by feminist
Lenore Weitzman, author of the 1985 book
The Divorce Revolution. Weitzman concluded
that women's standard of living after divorce
dropped by three quarters while men's rose over
40%. The media trumpeted her research and it
led to sharp increases in child support guidelines.
However, years later Weitzman was forced to
admit that her findings were vastly overstated,
due to a huge mathematical error.
Despite this, the myth that
men gain economically from divorce remains pervasive,
and is repeated even today by numerous writers
and commentators, including conservatives like
Dennis Prager, feminists like Ann Crittenden,
and even by masculists like Tom Leykis.
Braver helped uncover and expose
the Weitzman hoax. According to Braver, when
all relevant factors are taken into account,
including the numerous tax advantages custodial
parents enjoy, the "men gain/women lose" idea
is badly in error.
To hear Braver discuss this
issue on
His Side with
Glenn Sacks go to
Do Men Gain Economically from Divorce? (2/29/04).
Braver's newer research shows that child support
guidelines have become so stacked against noncustodial
parents that they often push noncustodial parents'
living standards far below those of custodial
parents. I detail this in my co-authored column
New Study Shows Massachusetts' Child Support
Guidelines Among Worst in Nation (Massachusetts
News, 7/28/04). Family law attorney Jeff Leving and I wrote:
"A new study of child support
has concluded that Massachusetts' guidelines
are among the most poorly designed in the nation.
"The study examines the child support guidelines
of seven geographically and politically diverse
states, including Massachusetts. The researchers
conclude that 'under current child support guidelines,
the majority of custodial parents currently
have higher standards of living than their matched
noncustodial parents,' and that Massachusetts'
guidelines represent the most 'dramatic' example
of this inequity...
"Leaving aside the popularity of anti-father
politics, the authors conclude that the support
guidelines have become tilted against noncustodial
parents because they fail to consider the large
tax benefits custodial parents enjoy, as well
as noncustodial parents' child-related expenses...
"After accounting for taxes and noncustodial
parent expenses, Braver and Stockburger conclude
that a Massachusetts custodial parent need earn
only 40% of what a matched noncustodial parent
earns in order to enjoy a standard of living
equal to that of the noncustodial parent. By
contrast, U.S. Census data shows that the median
income of the category closely resembling female
divorced custodial parents is far higher--85%
of that of male noncustodial parents. In fact,
in six of the seven states studied, the median
income a custodial parent needs to have a standard
of living equal to that of the noncustodial
parent is below 85%, often dramatically so.
"The guidelines have been slanted
against divorced dads so sharply that their
obligations often cause them to fall deeply
in arrears, particularly if they have been laid
off or have suffered drops in income. Some struggle
to stay out of jail, while others feel it's
hopeless and disappear. Most of these men aren't
deadbeats, but instead fathers who supported
their children honorably while married and after
their divorces. What rationale is there for
Massachusetts' child support guidelines if they
serve to drive away one of the two people who
most love a child?"
Stossel also discusses Parental Alienation Syndrome
and the way divorced dads are often driven out
of their children's lives by vindictive mothers.
He says:
"The media automatically cast
divorced parents in the roles of villainous
father and heroic mother. Many mothers are heroic,
but so are many fathers. But a divorced mother
as the villain? Heaven forbid! That would stand
the world of media victimology on its head."
To learn more about Braver's
work, see his web page
here. Thanks to
Jane Spies
of the National
Family Justice Association for the news
tip.
Woman Framed in Sex Abuse Case
I've written on numerous occasions of men
being falsely accused of rape or child sexual
abuse, or being framed on false sex abuse charges
as part of a custody battle. In an interesting
twist,
this article discusses a case where a woman
was apparently framed by her adopted son on
a false sex abuse charge, and was sentenced
to a staggering 25 to 50 years in prison.
According to
Was a woman wrongly convicted in sex case?:
"Lorinda Swain is serving 25-50 years at
the Huron Valley Women's Complex in Ypsilanti
for having oral sex with her adoptive son when
he was eight.
"But her chief accuser - her adoptive son, Ronnie
- admits that he lied about the entire abuse.
'I never meant for it to happen like this,'
said Ronnie.
"Ronnie Swain, now 18, was a troubled youth.
He used drugs, watched porn, ran with the wrong
crowd. He also molested his young niece.
"'I touched her private parts,' he told 24 Hour
News 8.
"As the investigation began, he thought of a
way to protect himself. He was repeatedly asked
if he'd ever been molested.
"Upset with Lorinda because she was stealing
money from family members to feed her own drug
habit at the time, Ronnie told the investigators
she abused him.
"'I thought she'd get clean (of drugs,)' he
said. 'Next thing you know I'm in court testifying
about something I lied about,' he said.
"His biological grandmother, Mary Stephens,
said she knew 'from day one' that Ronnie lied
to about the whole thing.
"'When that verdict came down I just about fell
out,' Stephens said, with tears in her eyes.
'It's hard.'
"'I've been here wrongfully and I'm worried
that I'm not going to get justice,' Lorinda,
45, said in a phone interview with 24 Hour News
8.
"At her trial, Ronnie is remembered as being
wishy-washy on the stand. He fell silent while
testifying when he was asked if he was telling
the truth.
"The 2001 trial in Calhoun County had no DNA
evidence, only Ronnie's word against Lorinda.
The jury found her guilty, and in 2002 she was
sentenced to 25-50 years in prison.
"Ronnie said he is 'furious about' the verdict,
and has since tried to kill himself.
"Over the past five years, through various appeals,
questions about the case still remain.
"While awaiting her original trial, Lorinda's
cell mate in Calhoun County Jail was Deborah
Charles, a woman with 12 aliases and 24 felony
convictions. Charles testified that Lorinda
admitted her guilt."
Read the rest of the article
here.
As an aside, I'm always extremely distrustful
of alleged confessions of guilt by defendants
to jailhouse informants, as happened here. I
always figure that if the prosecution has to
rely on a jailhouse informer, they must have
a very weak case, or even that they are trying
to frame somebody. If I ever served on a jury
where the prosecution pulled a stunt like that,
I think I'd immediately vote to acquit...
Agape Press Covers Defeat of SB 1482
Agape Press covered our
successful
campaign against SB 1482--see
Senator Withdraws Bill Giving Custodial Parents
Free Rein to Move Away (5/26/05). The article
also quoted me on one of my pet peeves--the
way taxpayer funded domestic violence groups
are able to lobby against fathers on our dime
and our time.
According to the article:
"Among the legislation's supporters, Sacks
notes, were the California National Organization
for Women and the California Commission on the
Status of Women, and he says several domestic
violence groups were lobbying in favor of the
bill as well.
"Such groups 'want to insist that if there's
a divorce or separation, Mom should be able
to do whatever she wishes with her kids,' Sacks
insists. 'Those groups are funded by your tax
dollars and my tax dollars,' he says, 'and basically
all of these groups are trying to do whatever
they can to change the law so that if a divorced
or separated mother wants to get rid of her
children's father, she can -- and there's going
to be very little that can stop her.'"
Glenn Discusses SB 1482 Campaign on American
Family Radio
I discussed the
Campaign Against California Senate Bill 1482
on American Family Radio on May 17.
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Help for Michigan Dads
Michigan family law attorney Mindy L. Hitchcock
has experience fighting for noncustodial parents
against Michigan's abusive FOC. Her
holistic approach to divorce gets results
for her clients while avoiding the scorched
earth approach to law that leaves families emotionally
and financially devastated.
www.Lady4Justice.com
The
Second Wives Club
The Second Wives Club is what women in blended
families are looking for: Remarriage, divorce,
child custody, and step parenting discussed
in a solution-oriented, mature, and intelligent
way; articles and news written by thought-provoking
experts and journalists; personal accounts and
advice from some of life's most interesting
women.
www.SecondWivesClub.com
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Jane Spies Exposes Missouri Child Support Enforcement
Whitewash
I've written before of the case of Herbert L. Chalmers,
a St. Louis man who committed a quadruple murder-suicide
in April over a child support dispute which left him
to survive on $400 a month. Chalmers claimed that he
was the victim of a child support enforcement mistake.
It turned out, of course, that child support enforcement
had made an error, and was charging Chalmers five times
what he actually owed. For my previous commentary, see
I Couldn't Be Less Surprised.
Missouri child support enforcement is under some
pressure because of this, and is being investigated.
Jane Spies of the
National Family Justice
Association reports that this "investigation" is
a whitewash. According to the story
Review finds few child support errors (St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, 5/16/06).
"Spurred by a shooting rampage in St. Louis last
month, a quick review of Missouri's child support system
indicates 99.24 percent of support records contain no
errors, officials said Tuesday.
"The results were viewed as either a hearty validation
of the system or too good to be true.
"The Department of Social Services was 'very, very
pleased' with the findings, said spokeswoman Deborah
Scott. The department felt the glowing results showed
a wider review was unnecessary. But state Auditor Claire
McCaskill said she doubted the findings, criticized
the review's limited scope and said she now harbored
even more interest in auditing the state's child support
enforcement program.
"The Family Support Division, which handles the child
support duties, ran the internal review after Herbert
L. Chalmers, reportedly upset by his child support payments,
killed four people and himself on April 18. He was supposed
to be paying $133 a month in current child support,
but a state worker entered a figure of $724.92, which
is what he owed in back support. State officials later
admitted to a data entry error. So they set out to determine
if the mistake was an aberration or part of a pattern.
"The division spot-checked 396 cases in St. Louis and
St. Louis County, a representative sample of the more
than 88,000 cases in the region. It hunted for just
one specific error: whether the amount on the child
support order matched the amount logged into the state's
computer database. In 393 cases, the amounts matched.
"The three cases with errors featured two cases off
by $1 each and one case with an $161.50 error in each
monthly payment. But the severe miscalculation had little
impact: The noncustodial parent had not made a payment
in years, Scott said. The errors were fixed.
"It is possible to use the limited review to hint
at the number of mistakes statewide, assuming the St.
Louis samples were representative, said the Rev. Mike
May, chairman of the mathematics and mathematical computer
sciences department at St. Louis University.
"Using the state's error rate of .75 percent, May
expected 1,868 to 3,737 cases to contain these particular
data entry errors out of the state's total caseload
of 373,677.
"Scott said even an error rate below 1 percent allowed
room for improvement. The department recently won funding
from state lawmakers to establish a new call center
dedicated to fielding questions in child custody cases.
Scott said the move would allow caseworkers more time
to work cases and boost collections.
"McCaskill said she was skeptical of the review's success
because previous audits from her office have found a
range of problems with the state's child support enforcement
system, such as improperly distributing child support
payments and not using all available resources to locate
parents who owe money.
"This analysis by the department goes under the category
'too good to be true,'" McCaskill said.
"For the department to come out with this self-review,
McCaskill said, "that probably moves them up on our
list of where we need to do audit work."
"Jane Spies, executive director of the National Family
Justice Association, a Georgia-based family advocacy
group, also criticized the state's finding as too narrow
and not independent.
"'I just think it is really misleading,' Spies said."
The statement that a "review of Missouri's child support
system indicates 99.24 percent of support records contain
no errors" is outrageous--they only looked for one,
narrow type of error. There are a wide variety of error
committed by Child support enforcement bureaucracies.
As I noted in my co-authored column
Persecuting Low Income Parents (Cincinnati Post,
Kentucky Post, 8/26/05):
"Beyond mistaken identity...common agency errors
include: mathematical errors; failure to record or transfer
records of payments; billing men for children they did
not father; failing to stop child support when a child
reaches the age of emancipation; accepting custodial
parents' false reports of nonpayment; and failure to
update child support orders with later court rulings
affecting modifications."
Finding Your N.U.T.s.--Non-negotiable
Unalterable Terms
Wayne M. Levine, M.A., founder of
BetterMen, has written a new book with
sage advice and proven tools for men
who want to be BetterMen in their relationships
and in their lives. Finding Your
N.U.T.s offers men the truth about
themselves, their relationships, their
responsibilities as men, and the power
they have to be BetterMen.
www.bettermen.org
Tom Ellis Rides
Against the Wind
Congratulations to Thomas
Ellis on selling 1,000 copies of his
self-published
The Rantings of a Single Male: Losing
Patience with Feminism, Political Correctness...
and Basically Everything. It's
quite an accomplishment, given that
the publishing industry gives vastly
more attention to Women's Studies books
than Men's Studies.
Rantings describes the rise
of feminism from the mid '70s to the
present, through Ellis' personal experiences,
and is loaded with outrageous stories.
Available at
Amazon,
Barnes&Noble Online and
in Bulk.
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Dead Guy Falls Behind on His Child Support, Has Taxes
Seized--'Being Dead Is No Excuse for Not Paying,' D.A.
SaysAccording to
Dead Man Billed For Child Support:
"A widow says she's still getting bills from the
Nebraska Child Support Office addressed to her late
husband, asking for money. The Nebraska Child Support
Office is asking for payments, even though her husband
passed away a year ago.
"'He has two children that live in Texas and he had
been paying child support on them,' said Dawn Hunt.
"Hunt used to live in Lincoln, but after her husband
died, she moved to Des Moines, IA, and got a new job.
"'Mid-November, I received a bill in Chad's name
to my new address in Iowa. It was from the Nebraska
Child Support Office. I opened it up and it said, 'your
child support is past due,' and I was like 'what is
this?'" said Hunt.
"Hunt said she was told that the child support office
knew he was deceased. Hunt said the office person she
spoke with told her that an order needed to be made
to stop payments and that the office would take care
of it...
"Hunt has racked up around $4,000 in owed child support
since his death. Due to the owed child support, Dawn
Hunt's federal tax refunds were withheld for about a
month because she filed jointly with her husband."
Perhaps the least trustworthy words ever are when
an error is pointed out to child support enforcement
and they promise to "take care of it."
BTW, I was just joking about "'Being Dead Is No Excuse
for Not Paying,' D.A. Says." No district attorney would
ever say such a thing. I think.
Concerned
about Financial Issues in Your Divorce?
If you're concerned about financial issues in
your divorce, contact
Jim DiGabriele
of DiGabriele, McNulty & Co by email
here or at
973-243-2600. |
Domestic Violence Expert Says DV Policies Based
on Gender Politics, not Science
Dr. Donald Dutton's
new book Rethinking Domestic Violence
is out. Dutton is one of North America's leading proponents
of sanity in the domestic violence sphere.
According to Dutton,
his new book "reviews all research on causes, incidence
and policy toward domestic violence called Intimate
Partner Violence (IPV). It concludes IPV causation is
best explained by personality disorder and that gender
analysis is not supported by the data. It shows how
the male perpetrator-female victim stereotype is not
typical. Similarly, it reviews evidence for both mandatory
arrest and no drop prosecution and finds that both have
failed. It recommends a more flexible professional approach
that blends, criminal justice, community psychology
and community mental health approaches."
Dutton appeared on
His Side with
Glenn Sacks last
summer--to listen,
go to
Congress
to Vote on Renewing Anti-Male Violence Against Women
Act (VAWA) (7/3/05).
I also quoted him extensively
in my column
Domestic Violence Treatment Policies Put Abused Women
in Harm's Way (Daily Breeze [Los Angeles],
11/7/05). I criticized
domestic violence treatment programs for following an
ideological, women good/man bad model, as opposed to
actually dealing with the psychological problems that
abusive men have. I wrote:
"Psychologist Donald G. Dutton, author
of The Abusive Personality: Violence and Control
in Intimate Relationships, asserts that personality
disorders are the cause of most domestic violence. According
to Dutton:
"'Treatment providers who work with
abusive men are very frustrated by the current domestic
violence treatment paradigm. Research shows that Duluth-oriented
treatments are absolutely ineffective, and have no discernible
impact on rates of recidivism. These methods cannot
work because they preclude patients from developing
the crucial therapeutic bond with their treatment providers.
However, when we treat offenders like normal patients
by focusing on personality disorders and employing cognitive-behavioral
treatments, we see progress.'"
To learn
more about Dutton's new book, click
here. Dutton's email address is
dondutton@shaw.ca.
Dad's Time Tracker - Get More Time With Your
Children and Manage Your Child Support
Dad's Time Tracker helps divorced fathers
collect the information necessary to get more
parenting time, lower their child support, or
gain custody of their children by creating a
child support payment record and thorough tracking
of expenses. This tool makes co-parenting
easier because key "friction" areas--expenses,
medical issues, contacts, day care information,
parenting time--are addressed in advance.
www.dadstimetracker.com
How to Win Shared Custody
If you are an active, engaged, committed, dedicated,
loving parent facing a divorce, family law attorney
Nicholas
Palermo's The Ten Essential Elements
to Winning Joint Shared Physical and Legal Custody
can help you protect your relationship with
your children.
www.TenEssentialElements.com
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Sorry but I'll Have to Pass
It's almost the one year anniversary of the death
of Perry Manley, a Seattle fathers' activist who committed
"suicide by cop" last June. Manley entered the
federal courthouse in Seattle with what appeared to
be a grenade, refused to surrender or negotiate, and
made a sudden move, after which police fired, killing
him. Unfortunately in the wake of his death Manley has
been made into a hero by certain misguided fathers'
activists. For example, one activist recently wrote:
"I have never forgotten Perry Manley...I grieved for
him then. I grieve for him now. I remember when they
shot him down. I watched it all unfold on TV...Perry
wasn't asking for much. He just wanted justice and to
be a Dad. Instead people treated him like a 'kook.'
But we know he was a martyr for our cause--no matter
what anyone says to the contrary. I will never forget
him. He fought alone like so many of us...I will never
forget Perry, I will always honor what he stood for."
Another wrote:
"Manley devoted his life fighting government imposed
control of our income and interference in our lives
when parents divorce. He stood largely alone and
was essentially driven crazy to a degree...it's important
that we don't forget about him and honor what he stood
for."Sorry, but I'll have to pass. I gave my opinion
in this enewsletter at the time of the shooting last
year, and was greatly criticized by some for it. What
I wrote still seems accurate to me. It appears below,
exactly as it was a year ago:
My Opinion of Perry Manley's 'Suicide by Cop'
Many of you have written to me asking
my opinion of
Perry Manley's 'Suicide by Cop' Monday in Seattle.
Manley, angry over a family court matter, entered the
courthouse with what appeared to be a grenade. According
to police, Manley refused to surrender or negotiate,
and made a sudden move, after which police fired, killing
him. The grenade turned out to be a fake--Manley was
unarmed.
As for Manley's family court grievance,
the facts, as far as I can ascertain them, are:
Manley divorced in 1990 from his
wife, with whom he had 3 kids.
Manley claimed the child support
system had treated him unfairly. I don't know if this
is true, but it certainly is a common problem for divorced
dads.
Manley claimed that his ex-wife
interfered with his visitation with his kids and alienated
them against him. Again, I don't know if this is true,
but it certainly is a common problem.
Manley claimed that paying child
support in and of itself was unconstitutional and a
violation of his human rights. He made this his central
issue, as opposed to the alleged violations of his custody
and visitation rights.
Manley claimed that a judge who
had ruled against him had violated the constitution
in his dealings with him, thus violating his oath of
office and committing "treason" which, Manley said,
is punishable by death.
I have received many letters telling
me that Manley is a hero, and even that I should honor
him (or his memory) on my radio show this Sunday. I'll
pass. Manley was unarmed, and that certainly counts
in his favor, but his actions were reckless and needlessly
put innocent civilians in harm's way. It served no constructive
purpose but instead makes it easier for our many enemies
to portray divorced dads as violent nuts.
While many divorced dads are abused
by the child support system, it is unclear whether the
child support demands upon Manley, who had three children
in need of support, were unreasonable. Manley made child
support, not his rights as a father, his central issue.
Had Manley done what
David Chick
did, I could support him.
David Chick
is a hero.
Gary
LaMusga is a hero.
Jolly Stansby
and
Ron Davis and
Gary S. and
Edgar P.
and
John Brumbaugh and
Benoit
Leroux are heroes. Manley may (or may not) have
been a victim of a family law system which has torn
millions of fathers and children apart. But either way
there was nothing heroic about his actions this week."
Around the same time last year,
in a letter to one of my detractors, I wrote:
"If Manley had talked about
his access to his children and made them the issue,
I would be a lot more sympathetic. But he rarely mentioned
that, instead focusing on this child support constitutionality
nonsense. He was asked to pay $650 a month to support
three children (apparently it was only $210 a month
in the beginning). Was that unfair? Is that what he
died for? OK, he
didn't like paying through the government, which I understand,
but where's the real grievance here? He had 3 kids in
need of support, he was the family breadwinner so he
was obligated to pay it--so what? I've got 10,000 letters
in my email box from guys who have bigger grievances
than this. If he made the issue his access to his kids
I'd sympathize, but he hardly even mentioned his kids.
Also, given his mental instability (which many who knew
him have written to me about), it's possible that he
was alienated from his kids in part because of his own
actions, not his ex-wife's."
Mom Who Killed Son Still Entitled
to Alimony From Father, Court Rules
One of my readers sent me this incredible
story--Alimony
Upheld For Mom Who Kicked Son To Death:
"Linda Calbi admitted she kicked her
14-year-old son, causing injuries that led to his death.
But a judge has ruled that she's still entitled to alimony
payments from her ex-husband.
"Christopher Calbi had sought to end the payments, claiming
his ex-wife violated her moral obligation to provide
a safe home for their two children after the couple
divorced.
"Superior Court Judge Eugene Austin refused. He suspended
the $3,183 monthly payments while Linda Calbi spends
30 months in jail; however, the judge said that when
she gets out, she can apply to have them resumed.
"Her ex-husband also must continue to make $400 monthly
payments toward the $50,000 back alimony debt that he
had amassed.
"'I am not going to terminate the contract,' Austin
said. 'It's a valid obligation negotiated between the
parties. Mrs. Calbi has pleaded guilty. She will do
her time. But for the next 30 or 40 years, you two are
parents of the same child and you both are going to
have to deal with that.'
"During a court hearing in Bergen County, the Teaneck
man said he has a 'huge hole' in his heart and has become
'financially destitute' since the Aug. 2003 death of
his elder son, Matthew.
"Linda Calbi was originally charged with murder, but
was allowed to plead guilty to aggravated assault after
admitting that she kicked Matthew in her Old Tappan
home, causing injuries that led to his death.
"'That someone like me should have to support the woman
who did this to my child is beyond comprehension,' Christopher
Calbi said after the court hearing.
"His ex-wife's attorney, Ian Hirsch, called the ruling
fair, arguing that the woman's crime cannot be used
as a legal reason to end alimony payments.
"'Mr. Calbi is using his son's death to take away any
obligations he has,' Hirsch said. 'I think he's trying
to take advantage of a tragedy and turn it around to
his economic benefit.'"
You gotta love this attorney--dad
not wanting to pay money to the woman who killed his
son is "taking advantage of a tragedy and turning it
around to his economic benefit." Bad dad--how could
he be so rotten?
One more question--can you imagine
a judge ordering a woman to pay alimony to the ex-husband
who murdered her child? In fact, in California has a
recent law which created a presumption that a victim
of domestic violence should not be required to pay support
to a violent spouse.
Divorced Dads in Annie's Mailbox
There are a couple of interesting
letters from divorced dads in recent Annie's Mailbox
columns. One involves a mother undermining a
dad's attempt to teach his son the value of money
and of keeping commitments. In our current climate,
whenever dads try to teach their children financial
restraint they are stereotyped as cheap or as deadbeats.
"Dear Annie: I have a 16-year-old
son whom I love very much. I have been divorced from
his mother for eight years, remarried for the last six.
'Brendan' lives with his mother in the same city, so
I see him a lot.
"We had a good relationship until
recently. I told Brendan I would give him a car and
pay for the insurance if he kept his grades up. He agreed.
His first report card, he got a D in one subject. The
car stayed at my house. Four weeks later, he got another
D on his mid-term.
"The day after he received his
grades, Brendan gave my wife and me a very impressive
presentation, with charts and everything. He promised
to work hard, do extra credit and show us his test scores
every week. We caved and let him have the car. Well,
he had an excuse every week why he didn't have his test
scores. When his grades came, he had two Ds.
"I told Brendan to bring back the car, and he said I
needed to talk to his mom, my ex. Naturally, she took
his side and wanted the car to stay at her house, and
didn't care that Brendan and I had an agreement. The
car is now back at my place, but Brendan is angry with
me, and my ex is probably going to buy him a car.
"I want my son to learn that there are consequences
for being irresponsible. Am I wrong? -- Worried Dad
"Dear Dad: You are not wrong.
A car is a privilege, not a right, no matter what some
kids think. You kept your end of the bargain, and if
his mother buys him a Porsche, let it be HER problem.
Your ex is teaching Brendan that he doesn't have to
work for anything and that it's OK to renege on agreements.
We hope you will keep trying to teach him otherwise,
Dad."
One can almost hear 16 year-old
Brendan fuming to his friends that his dad is a cheapskate.
I wonder who taught him to think that way about his
dad?
Another recent column deals with
Parental Alienation Syndrome:
"Dear Annie: My son's mother and
I broke up more than four years ago, when he was an
infant. My son is now 5 years old. Unfortunately, I
have heard my son tell his friends and others some very
bad things about me. The verbal poisoning from his mother
is getting worse. Almost every time I see him, I hear
something new or he tells me about the horrible things
he was told I did to his mother.
"Up until now I have answered him by saying, 'I am
sorry you had to hear that, but let's move on.' However,
I am concerned if I do not respond to his comments,
he will have no choice but to believe the terrible things
she (and possibly her family) are saying about me.
"I realize I have no control over what my ex says,
but I am sure this poison can be very damaging to a
child in the long run. How do I respond to my son without
being derogatory toward his mother?
The High Road Is a Lonely
Place
"Dear High Road: Try diplomacy first. Talk to your
ex-wife and explain what you are hearing from your son.
Tell her you understand that she holds a grudge, but
such comments undermine your child's emotional stability
and security. Ask her to cease and desist for his sake.
If this doesn't work, we recommend family counseling
for you and your son, and if possible, include your
ex. Sometimes an unbiased third party can work through
these destructive behavior patterns.
"Lastly, there is nothing wrong with telling your
son, 'Mommy sometimes says angry things because she
is unhappy that our family isn't together anymore. I
am very sorry that Mommy is unhappy, but I want you
to know how much I love you.' This says nothing derogatory
about Mom, but does reassure your son about your feelings
for him - and that is what counts."
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Help for California Divorced Dads
The Divorced Fathers Network helps dads
in Los Angeles, the Bay Area and Santa
Cruz. Local chapters sponsor free
weekly co-parenting classes, individual
mentoring for fathers and much more.
www.divorcedfathers.com
Help for Boston Dads
Boston family law attorney Nick
Palermo is a shared custody advocate
who believes that divorced dads are
parents, not visitors. The Law Offices
of Nicholas Palermo is a dedicated and
committed trial law firm which has worked
to make shared custody for all fit parents
the law of the land.
LAW OFFICES OF NICHOLAS PALERMO
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Huh?
In her recent article
Mothers Make a Beautiful Mark on Public Life Peggy
Drexler, author of Raising Boys Without Men,
writes:
"Are mothers goddesses? Or are we responsible for
everything that's wrong with our children, our families
and the world?
"We hail mothers as life-givers and supreme nurturers,
then blame them--and ourselves--when children and families
develop problems.
"Cultural convenience continues to define good and bad
mothering, just as it has through the ages. Mothers
have traditionally been viewed as saints, victims or
villains. It wasn't that long ago when clinicians thought
mothers caused autism and schizophrenia, along with
70 other psychopathologies. Even today, mothers are
easy targets of blame when children develop disorders
of one kind or another or when marriages go sour."
Drexler pounds home her "mothers get all the blame"
theme through her book, too. Peggy and I must live in
different countries. In the United States men and fathers
are blamed for all family problems, including divorce,
and Drexler is part of the problem. In my column
Raising Boys Without Men: Lesbian Parents Good,
Dads Bad (World Net Daily, 9/10/05) I wrote:
"Drexler, like many feminists, has a double standard
about divorce. When men divorce women, they're rats
and deserters. When women divorce men, they're independent
and liberated. Raising Boys makes numerous critical
references to fathers who've divorced their wives: Martha's
husband 'left her high and dry'; Beverly's husband abandoned
her 'abruptly' when their children were small; and Pam's
marriage ended because of her ex-husband's alleged 'lack
of family commitment.' In fact, the only father who
departed from his family against the mother's wishes
and isn't vilified for it is a guy who died.
"Yet not one of the many divorced mothers and divorced-turned-lesbian
mothers in Raising Boys is ever criticized or
even chided for breaking up her family by divorcing
her children's father. The vast majority of divorces
involving children are initiated by women, and research
shows that the primary reason is not abuse or adultery,
but instead emotional reasons such as a perceived lack
of closeness or of not feeling loved and appreciated.
Legitimate concerns, but were they proffered by a man
who had broken up his family they would engender little
sympathy."
After my column
Are Boys Really Better off Without Fathers? (San
Francisco Chronicle, 8/31/05) came out last fall
Peggy was invited to debate the issue with me on one
of the biggest radio shows in the country (sorry--I
can't reveal which one) but declined.
In her new article Drexler also propounds the Drexler
Doctrine--boys don't need fathers. She writes:
"It's increasingly clear that even without the presence
of a strong father, mothers are fully capable of engendering
character, self-confidence and ambition in their children.
Just ask San Francisco's mayor, Gavin Newsom; bicyclist
and cancer survivor, Lance Armstrong; and former President
Bill Clinton. All credit their single mothers by circumstance
as instrumental in their success."
That Newsom was raised by a single mother is of some
dispute. One of my San Francisco readers wrote me:
"I question whether he was raised by a divorced mom,
and if it is true, that he didn't suffer. His father
is William Newsom, a long time State Court of Appeal
judge and somewhat of a kingmaker in San Francisco politics...I
seriously doubt he was raised by a single mother and
if he was, his father, who was a political advisor to
him, was very influential in his promotion to County
Supervisor and Mayor."
The idea that Bill Clinton is an example of good
character is also of some dispute, though obviously
to become president of the United States is a fantastic
achievement. As for Armstrong, Paul Coughlin, author
of
No More Christian Nice Guy: When Being Nice--Instead
of Good--Hurts Men, Women, and Children and
a cycling fan, writes:
"I keep an eye on Lance Armstrong
and I'm amazed by his abilities, especially his cadence
and lightness on the pedals as he flies up mountains.
I'm also familiar with his background, apparently more
so than Drexler. Young Lance Armstrong was not 'emotionally
healthy.' He was, by his own admission, a lost and angry
young jerk. Two trainers, Chris Charmichael and Johann
Bruyneel, took him under their paternal wing and coaxed
stellar talent out of his troubled body and soul. Eddy
Merckx, perhaps the greatest cyclist ever, was also
a huge influence in Lance's life. When others abandoned
him professionally, his agent Ken Stapleton stayed by
his side.
"And it was another racer who, seeing young, brash,
angry Lance in a field sprint with him near the finish
line, who taught Lance a lesson in humility that he
never forgot. The well-respected racer hit his brakes
because he did not want to appear on the same podium
as troubled Armstrong. This man gave up money and fame
to distance himself from a young racer whose emotional
immaturity and reckless disregard earned him a growing
list of detractors who rightly complained that Armstrong
did not know how to win well or live well.
"He was not always the good ambassador of one of the
world's most incredible sports that he is today. It
took the intervention of some big souls to make that
happen."
In other words, Armstrong's childhood was not the "fatherless
but happy" experience that Drexler pretends it was.
I'm sure his mother did her best but it wasn't until
there was intervention by some male father figures that
Armstrong changed from a antagonistic young man into
the man he is today.
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The Rise of America
According to author John D. Diamond, "We are
fighting a war in defense of our homes, our
families, and posterity. This war is being fought
in our courts and it is being fought in our
schools...It is a war of ideology and it is
war for the very future of this nation." To
order
The Rise of America click
here.
|
Our PBS Campaign, Parental Alienation Syndrome Discussed
in 300+ NewspapersSyndicated columnist Kathleen
Parker, whose columns appear in over 300 newspapers,
discusses our
Campaign
Against PBS's Father-Bashing Breaking the Silence
in her recent column on Parental Alienation Syndrome--Let's
not alienate parents in custody battles.
Parental Alienation Syndrome is when one parent--usually
the custodial parent--tries to poison his or her children's
minds and turn the children against the noncustodial
parent. Parker describes Parental Alienation Syndrome
as "agony for a noncustodial parent and emotional problems
for children alienated from one parent," and commends
a recent proclamation signed by Maine's Governor John
E. Baldacci that recognizes April 25 as "Parental Alienation
Awareness Day."
In my column
PBS Declares War on Dads (World Net Daily,
10/20/05) I described in detail numerous examples
of PAS. One of them, experienced by one of my readers,
is as follows:
"After Jim L.'s wife divorced him and moved his daughters
out of state, she sent the two girls fake or altered
e-mails purporting to be Jim. Afterwards, Jim's daughters
refused to see him, explaining only 'you know what you've
done, you know what you said, you know what you wrote.'
"Once when Jim flew to see his girls for his scheduled
weekend visit, his ex-wife decided at the last minute
to block the visit. Jim flew home on Sunday without
having seen his girls. When he arrived at the airport
back home he checked his messages and found a message
from his ex-wife. On the recording his girls could be
heard crying in the background. His ex-wife said:
"'Jim, the girls are here at the restaurant waiting
for you to come pick them up. You said you'd meet them
here for breakfast and spend the day with them, and
you didn't show up. The girls are very upset. Jim, where
are you?!?'"
Parker also wrote:
"Fathers who feel disenfranchised when courts award
custody of their children to the mother during divorce
have used PAS successfully to pressure judges to allow
greater access to their children. One can hardly blame
men for trying to be fathers.
"But critics claim that abusive fathers sometimes use
PAS to force access where none should be granted. Mothers
claim in such cases that they're trying to protect their
children, not alienate them.
"This latter argument became the centerpiece last
fall of a controversial PBS documentary about abused
women and children, 'Breaking the Silence,' that fathers'
groups attacked as unbalanced and unfair.
"No fathers were interviewed, and the cases reviewed
tended to be extreme and sensational.
"Several women interviewed, for instance, said that
they lost custody of their children to abusive fathers
(confirmed by the children themselves) when fathers
used PAS to 'prove' that the women were systematically
teaching their children to hate their fathers.
"Glenn Sacks, a radio show host and columnist, called
the film a 'direct assault on fatherhood,' and organized
a protest on his Web site. Others - many of whom I know
and respect as fellow toilers in trying to advance fatherhood
- joined in.
"Sacks' campaign had an effect, and PBS ombudsman Michael
Getler wrote a lengthy response agreeing that the show
was unbalanced."
As we've noted, in the end PBS agreed to commission
a new film to examine the issues raised by the film
and our campaign in a more balanced, detailed light.
To learn more, click
here. The
groups to which Parker refers when she writes "fellow
toilers in trying to advance fatherhood" include
Fathers and Families, the
American Coalition for Fathers & Children, and
Help Stop PAS Inc.
As for Parker's comment that "Several women interviewed,
for instance, said that they lost custody of their children
to abusive fathers (confirmed by the children themselves)"
this "confirmation" is dubious in several cases. We
revealed court findings, records and testimony show
that Sadia Loeliger--portrayed as a heroic mom in the
film--abused children under her care. In fact, a Tulare
County Juvenile Court concluded in August of 1998 that
Sadia Loeliger had committed multiple acts of abuse,
and adjudged both her daughters as dependents of the
Juvenile Court. To learn more, click
here.
Parker concludes:
"The biggest losers in such cases, of course, are
neither the mothers nor the fathers, but the children,
who deserve to have unfettered access to both parents,
assuming there's no abuse, without having to tote the
adults' emotional baggage.
"Whether parental alienation meets the scientific standards
of a 'syndrome' is a battle researchers can wage among
themselves. The underlying message, meanwhile, is that
there needs to be a presumption of shared custody following
divorce, again, assuming no abuse.
"Life is alienating enough without the help of one's
own parents."
Agreed.
Tree House Solutions
Tree House Solutions, LLC is a growing
and evolving resource designed to meet the emotional
and informational needs of parents who are going
through divorce and those already divorced.
Tree House activities are composed of live,
real time teleconferences on a weekly basis.
These sessions are conducted by two highly experienced
mental health practitioners, versed in high
conflict divorce. Drs. Bone and Evans offer
a wide spectrum of suggestions and education
regarding the divorce process and co-parenting
with difficult former spouses.
www.treehousesolutions.org |
ACFC Issues New Report: Family Violence in
America: The Truth about Domestic Violence and Child
Abuse
The American Coalition for Fathers and Children has
just issued a new report,
Family Violence in America: The Truth about Domestic
Violence and Child Abuse, which explains the
many ways the war on domestic violence has separated
children from the fathers they love and need, and has
led to "by far the most severe and alarming violation
of constitutional freedoms in the United States today."
The report, penned by ACFC President
Stephen Baskerville,
PhD., concludes that family dissolution is creating
child abuse, and that child custody disputes are a large
factor both in fabricated accusations of domestic violence
and actual incidents. According to the report:
"The public and policymakers have been seriously
misled [about domestic violence]. Gaping inconsistencies
separate what the scientific data demonstrate about
family violence from current public policy. When the
scientific knowledge of these problems is understood,
it becomes clear that current policy is not likely to
alleviate these problems. More disturbingly, by destabilizing
families it is likely to be contributing to them...
"To break this circle, we call for a radical departure
from existing programs and offer the following recommendations:
"Government must adhere to the Bill of Rights and other
constitutional protections.
"Reform constitutionally questionable programs, such
as the Violence Against Women Act, that politicize and
distort law enforcement and target individuals because
of their membership in groups or their political beliefs
rather than their deeds.
"Statutory protection for parental rights to ensure
that law enforcement programs are not commandeered to
create unaccountable police actions against innocent
parents, depriving them of their children without due
process of law.
"A legal presumption of equal and shared legal and physical
custody of children in cases of divorce, separation,
and unmarried parents. By strengthening families and
the bonds between parents and their children, we will
be addressing the roots of family violence, including
child abuse."
To read the 72 page report, click
here. To contact the ACFC about the report, write
to
info@acfc.org or call 800-978-DADS (3237).
Dr. Phil Trashes Dads--Again
Popular daytime TV host Dr. Phil is father-bashing
again. In the past I've criticized Dr. Phil for supporting
and whitewashing abusive mother Bridget Marks, who was
found by five separate judges to have coached her little
girls to believe that they had been sexually molested
by their father.
Marks became a cause celebre after (briefly)
losing custody of her twin girls to their father, against
whom she had waged a vicious parental alienation campaign.
Marks had appeared on Dr. Phil during the custody battle,
and Dr. Phil held a joyous reunion with her on the air
in May of last year to celebrate her victory in the
custody battle.
The father's side spoke for the first time publicly
on His Side with
Glenn Sacks--to listen or to read a transcript
of the that show, go to
Father's
Side in Bridget Marks Custody Case Speaks Publicly for
First Time, 4/5/05. Several New York newspapers
quoted from our show in their news articles.
To learn more about the Marks case, including Marks'
legal team taunting me over their court victory, Marks'
unkind comments for me, and my newspaper columns on
the Marks case, see
Bridget Marks Ruling: It's OK to Coach Little Girls
Into Saying They'd Been Molested (4/7/05)
Now Dr. Phil is again on the warpath against dads,
pushing the discredited "lazy husband" myth. The promo
for one of his shows this week is called
The Divorce
Experiment and reads:
"Are you married to a man who doesn't know how good
he has it? You do the cooking, the cleaning, take care
of the kids, and he still takes you for granted? After
seven years, Amy finds herself in a marriage where she
is expected to wait on her husband hand and foot, and
never voice her opinion. Her husband, Greg, is a self-proclaimed
male chauvinist pig and says his wife's job is to take
care of the family without questioning his role as 'king'
of the house. Amy says if Greg doesn't learn to treat
her like his equal and not his servant, she's going
to divorce him. Dr. Phil sends in a Relationship Rescue
team of strong women to teach Greg a lesson! While Amy
is sent off on a special trip to build her self-esteem,
Greg gets three new 'wives' who give him a dose of his
own medicine as they put him through all that he demands
of his wife on a daily basis. Will he finally see Amy
as his equal and become a better spouse in the process?"
While it's certainly possible to find lazy husbands
(and lazy wives), as I've noted in many columns and
on the radio, the idea that husbands don't do their
share or that "women work two jobs, men only work one"
is a complete myth. In my co-authored column
Are American Husbands Slackers? (Tallahassee
Democrat, 3/22/06) family law attorney Jeff Leving
and I wrote:
"Feminist critics compare the work men and women
do at home but fail to properly account for their disparate
obligations outside the home. Census data shows that
only 40% of married women with children under 18 work
full-time, and over a quarter do not hold a job outside
the home.
"According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' 2004
Time Use Survey, men spend one and a half times as many
hours working as women do, and full-time employed men
still work significantly more hours than full-time employed
women.
"When both work outside the home and inside the home
are properly considered, it is clear that men do at
least as much as women. A 2002 University of Michigan
Institute for Social Research survey found that women
do 11 more hours of housework a week than men but men
work 14 hours a week more than women. According to the
BLS, men's total time at leisure, sleeping, doing personal
care activities, or socializing is a statistically meaningless
1% higher than women's. The Families and Work Institute
in New York City found that fathers now provide three-fourths
as much child care as mothers do--50% more than 30 years
ago."
We also noted that men do the most dangerous and
demanding jobs, and that men are vastly more likely
than women to be killed or injured on the job. We wrote
of the "sacrifices made by men like Terry Helms,
one of the 12 miners killed in the Sago Mine disaster
[in January]...Terry's son Nick told the Associated
Press that his father 'had endured numerous injuries
in a 30-year career and hated mining because of the
dangers'..'[My father] is very selfless,' Nick said.
'[He] refused to quit because the job put food on the
table...He gave his life in there so I could go to the
movies.'"
Another Rich, High-Living Deadbeat Goes to Jail (aka
Another Low Income Dad Goes to Debtors' Prison)
From the Akron Beacon Journal article
Dad who escaped procreation ban jailed on child support
charges (make sure to check out the next to last
paragraph):
"A judge who was forced to lift his probation condition
that a deadbeat dad not father more children has sentenced
the man to six months in jail for continuing to fail
to pay child support.
"Sean Talty, 34, of Akron, pleaded guilty on Friday
to violating terms of his five-year probation by failing
to stay current on the payments.
"Medina County Common Pleas Judge James Kimbler, who
sentenced Talty to probation in 2002 and modified the
terms under Ohio Supreme Court order in 2004, said Talty
can reduce the sentence through community service.
"Talty has fathered seven children by five women and
also owes support in Butler, Summit and Wayne Counties.
The Medina County case involves $30,000 he owes for
three of the children by two of the women, including
a former wife.
"Court records show the probation violations involve
$3,600 owed for 2005 and this year and failure to get
a high school equivalency degree.
"In 2004, Kimbler lifted one of his probation conditions
imposed in 2002, that Talty not father any more children
while on probation. The Ohio Supreme Court had ruled
the sentence was overbroad because it didn't include
a method for lifting the ban if Talty caught up with
his payments."
A few thoughts:
1) Obviously Talty's no model citizen. However, you're
not supposed to be imprisoned for debt in this country--debtors
prisons were abolished a long time ago. Talty is being
jailed because of failure to pay child support, but
nobody questions whether his child support was commensurate
with his income. This is a guy who can't even get a
high school GED--it's doubtful he earns or could earn
enough to pay the obligation he's being imprisoned for.
2) Why are the five women who bore
Talty's children held blameless? All of these women
did exactly what Talty did‑‑they had children whom they
could not financially support. In fact, given the much
wider range of birth control and reproductive choices
that women have, these women had a much larger say in
the decision to have children than Oakley did. Low income
mothers get sympathy and assistance--fathers get blame
and jail.
3) I've checked the top 10 most
wanted deadbeat parents lists put out by the states
on many different occasions, usually in preparation
for an article on the war against so-called "deadbeat
dads." In my co-authored column
Federal Child Support Enforcement Cuts Will Hurt Bureaucrats,
not Children (Las Vegas Review-Journal, 12/17/05,
Riverside Press-Enterprise, 12/16/05) family
law attorney Jeff Leving and I wrote:
"In the past few months, 'deadbeat parents' have
been the targets of highly-publicized law enforcement
actions in Virginia, Texas, Kentucky, and Arizona. Yet
Virginia's 'Most Wanted Deadbeat Parents' list is topped
by a laborer, a carnival hired hand, and a construction
worker, who collectively somehow owe over a quarter
million dollars in child support. Of all the parents
on Texas' and Kentucky's lists, only one appears to
have an education, and the most common designation for
occupation is 'laborer.' Near the top of Arizona's list
is a maintenance man who owes $90,223, an unemployed
man of no known occupation who owes $54,298, and, best
of all, a roofer who owes $240,581.
"This week Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott boasted
that he had arrested one of the 'deadbeats' on his 'Most
Wanted' list--Charles Silva, who owes almost $40,000
in child support. Yet it's doubtful that Silva will
be writing a five figure check any time soon--Silva's
occupation is 'general laborer.' Far from being
lists of well-heeled businessmen, lawyers, and accountants,
the vast majority of the men on these lists do low wage
and often seasonal work, and owe large sums of money
which they could never hope to pay off.
"Child support enforcement agencies are notorious
for their abusive tactics towards such men..."
Speaking of the Boy Crisis in Education...
Just after the publication of my co-authored column
Resolving the Boy Crisis in Schools (Chicago
Sun-Times, 5/7/06) I was given another reminder
of it in my son's life. My son's Boy Scout troop had
planned to participate in a big, week long Boy Scout
campout in August. The trip sounded fantastic--a week
up in the mountains in Northern California with all
sorts of fun activities--hiking, archery, boating, etc.
Except it turns out that the troop won't be going. The
reason? Most of the boys couldn't sign up, because they
were all in danger of having to go to summer school.
Somehow I doubt that many Girl Scout summer trips are
being cancelled for that reason...
My daughter's school recently instituted a new after
school policy. Now instead of the kids going out to
the yard to play, all students who don't go home immediately
after school are corralled into the lunch area to do
homework under supervision for 30 minutes.
This is a perfect example of the problems inherent
in our almost all-female elementary school system. The
school means well, but any group of male teachers would
know that after being cooped up for almost eight hours
those boys need to go out and run around. Instead, after
being forced to sit all day--quite unnatural for little
boys--when the bell rings they must be forced marched
over to yet another half hour of sitting.
It also turns into a chore for the supervising teachers,
who must stand guard over the boys for a half hour.
No doubt many boys get punished because they can't sit
still and do their homework after school--as if they
don't already get punished enough during the day for
being unable to sit still. I prefer the school National
Review Washington Editor Kate O'Beirne describes
in
her latest book, where the students work hard and
achieve, but also "have recess twice a day, play in
the rain, wreck their good shoes, and...they like school."
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Legal Help for Fathers
If you live in Los Angeles, Riverside or Orange
counties and you're facing a divorce, separation,
or a child custody issue, the law firm of Oddenino
& Gaule can help.
Congressional Candidate Takes Strong Stand for
Noncustodial Parents' Rights
In 2004 Libertarian presidential candidate Michael
Badnarik had a strong noncustodial parents'
rights
platform. Badnarik is clearly aware
of and sensitive to the basic problems fathers
today face, particularly the sole custody norm
and the denigration of noncustodial parents
to "second class parent" status. Badnarik is
running for Congress in 2006--to learn more,
go to www.badnarik.org.
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Hero Dad Tells Story in Parents Magazine
Heroic father
Joe Seldner tells of his long, hard and ultimately
successful for his children in his Parents Magazine
article
"My Fight to Keep My Kids" (April, 2000). Joe's
trial by ordeal will sound familiar to many of you:
"The nightmare began with a knock on the door. On
that hot August afternoon in 1993, my wife was out shopping,
and the kids, Dan, 9, and Laura, 6, were at swimming
lessons with my parents, who had flown in from New Jersey.
The visitor identified herself as a caseworker for Child
Protective Services and told me that I had been accused
of physically abusing my son. I laughed. She didn't.
When I asked who would make such a ridiculous charge,
she said the information was confidential. 'I'd like
you to leave,' I said, barely containing my anger and
incredulity. Having dropped her bombshell, she complied.
"When my wife got home, she refused to discuss the matter
and referred me to her lawyer. It was clear that my
accuser was the woman I had been married to for ten
years. I had known our relationship was in trouble,
but I'd never imagined she would do anything like this.
It felt as if someone had hit me in the hack of the
head with a sledgehammer.
"Two days later the sheriff's office served me with
divorce papers. The following week, the caseworker came
back to interview both of the kids. When she came downstairs
afterward, looking a little annoyed, she declared there
was nothing to the allegations. I was momentarily relieved
-- but the war had just begun."
Read the full article
here. To contact Joe, click
here.
Canadian Court Nails Jell-O to a Wall
In my co-authored column
PBS Declares War on Dads (World Net Daily,
10/20/05) family law attorney Jeff Leving and I
discussed the hard struggle so many noncustodial parents
face to get courts to properly address Parental Alienation
Syndrome in their cases. We wrote:
"As a society we pretend that broken families are
all men's fault, pay lip service to the importance of
fathers, and close our eyes while millions of children
are separated from the fathers they love and need. Because
that's what mom wants. Because it's easier to blame
everything on dad than it is to confront mom on her
destructive behavior. Because trying to hold a divorcing
mother accountable for her behavior is like trying to
nail Jell-O to a wall. Because there's a high political
cost to be paid for crossing mothers and none to be
paid for crossing fathers." (emphasis added)
Well, last week a Canadian court nailed Jell-O to
a wall. According to the story
Mother loses kids after hindering father's access:
"A divorced woman who sabotaged her children's relationship
with their estranged father has been stripped of their
custody in a decision by Ontario's top court which sends
a message that 'parental alienation' harms children
and will not be tolerated.
"'We recognize, as did the trial judge, that the
remedy of granting custody to the father is a dramatic
one. However, that remedy was supported by the expert
evidence and by the mother's persistent, ingrained and
deep-rooted inability to support the children's relationship
with the father,' said three judges of the Ontario Court
of Appeal in a unanimous decision this week.
"The court dismissed the appeal of the Jarvis, Ontario
mother against a lower court decision last year which
ordered that the primary residence of her five-year-old
twin boys be switched from the mother -- who had sole
physical custody of them since their birth -- to her
ex-husband who resides in Hamilton.
"Calling that decision 'amply supported by the evidence,'
the Appeal Court said that although the mother was 'otherwise
a good parent,' her persistent 'troublesome conduct'
against the children's best interests included unilaterally
restricting the father to daytime visits and failing
to inform him about the children's medications, or to
give him their prescription drugs, so that they would
return home from visits with him sicker than when they
left.
"Obstructed access affects thousands of divorced
parents and their children across Canada, according
to a 1998 parliamentary report which urged the federal
government and the provinces and territories to devise
a nationwide co-coordinated response to failed parenting
orders...
"The appeal court was also critical of the mother's
unilateral decision -- without warning, just before
the custody case went to trial -- to uproot the boys
from their school and community to move to another town
further away from their father. 'Moreover, the mother
said that if the father moved to her new town, she would
move again,' the Court of Appeal noted.
"'This conduct, in addition to many other instances
of alienating conduct, was properly viewed by the trial
judge as evidence of the mother's inability to support
the father's relationship with the children and to consider
the best interests of the children.'
"By court order, the boys now reside with their father,
but live with their mother most weekends and see her
for mid-week evening visits."
The case is also another example of how move-aways
are used by alienating custodial parents to destroy
the relationships between children and their noncustodial
parents. This is one of the reasons our two defeats
of move-away legislation in the California legislature
(click
here and
here) are so important.
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Double-Standard in Reporting on Male DV Victims
Dr. Charles Corry, the leader of
the Equal Justice Foundation,
the American Coalition
for Fathers and Children affiliate in Colorado,
discusses the recent murder of
Clifford Evans, a Denver, Colorado male victim of
domestic violence. According to Corry:
"His wife, Debra, had stabbed him to death and if you
Google on Debra Evans you'll find a few brief notes,
e.g., the Denver Post gives it a few short paragraphs.
Typical when a woman kills a man.
"What isn't mentioned is that Debra Evans, aka Debrah
Wellington, had two prior domestic violence convictions,
one in 2001 and another as far back as 1990. Presumably
the 2001 conviction required her to take the standard
36-week DV treatment program. But perhaps she was one
of the 50% of convicted offenders who never complete
the program because it certainly didn't change her behavior.
"According to a Fox News reporter, the neighbors
in the apartment building had become inured to the couple
fighting, and that Clifford was always the victim. By
any definition, Debra Evans is a 'batterer' but you'll
never find that out from the press. It hasn't gone to
trial yet but my guess is she will be the 'battered
woman' then.
"But imagine if Clifford had a couple of prior DV
convictions and then killed Debra? Front page, above
the fold coverage would be the norm. But since Debra
is the killer the case can be buried by the press."
Best Wishes,
Glenn Sacks
GlennSacks.com
HisSide.com
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