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The Family Abduction Prevention
Act recently passed by the Senate is designed to combat what California Senator
Diane Feinstein calls a “growing epidemic” of child abductions committed by
noncustodial parents. The bill, co-sponsored by Feinstein and Texas Senator Kay
Bailey Hutchison, provides funding to help local law enforcement investigate and
prosecute parental abduction cases. FAPA passed by unanimous consent, and will
soon be considered by the House of Representatives.
Feinstein and Hutchison are
correct that parental abductions are a problem--each year 200,000 children are
kidnapped by a family member, usually a noncustodial parent. This represents
over three-quarters of all child abductions. Yet while FAPA may do some good,
its utility will be limited because it fails to consider why so many
noncustodial parents abduct their children.
According to the US Department of
Justice's Office of Juvenile Justice, children in sole custody settings are at a
far greater risk of being abducted by a parent than children in joint physical
custody settings. The driving force behind parental abductions is the win-lose
child custody system.
Under this system, when a couple
divorces or separates, one and only one parent is awarded true custody of the
child, and many noncustodial parents are allowed little or no role in their
children’s lives. Courts enforce visitation and parenting time
lackadaisically--according to the Children's Rights Council, a Washington,
DC-based children's advocacy group, more than five million American children
each year have their access to their noncustodial parents interfered with or
blocked by custodial parents. This sets up a situation where disenfranchised
parents may go outside the law to regain their relationships with their
children.
This is not to say that parental abductions are justified or are in children’s
best interests—they rarely are. And in some cases parents have lost custody
because they are unfit. Yet current divorce policies set up incentives to
abduct.
Feinstein and Hutchison portray
FAPA as a protection against abducting noncustodial fathers. However, according
to the US Department of Justice, mothers and fathers abduct their children in
equal numbers. Since noncustodial fathers outnumber noncustodial mothers four to
one, noncustodial mothers are far more likely to abduct their children than
noncustodial fathers. This is partly because mothers who lose custody often bear
the terrible stigma of "unfit mother." Fathers who lose custody don’t bear the
same stigma. For men, losing custody is Standard Operating Procedure (or, more
appropriately, Standard Operating Punishment) in family court. Yet losing
custody can be devastating emotionally for any parent.
There will always be some parents
who abduct because they are narcissistic, power-hungry, or bent on revenge
against their former spouses. However, the parental abduction problem could be
reduced by instituting a rebuttable presumption of shared custody after a
divorce or separation. Under this presumption--which does exist to varying
degrees in some states--as long as both parents are fit, they will both have the
right to share equally in raising their children. The fitness requirement
excludes parents who have been physically abusive, who abuse drugs or alcohol,
or who have significant mental disorders.
FAPA is at best a Band-Aid on a
bleeding wound. Only shared parenting can truly reduce the anger and fear
endemic to custody battles--emotions which can often lead to child abductions.
This
article first appeared in
The Hill
(1/8/07).
Mike
McCormick is the Executive Director of the American Coalition for Fathers and
Children, the world’s largest shared parenting organization.
Their
website
is
www.acfc.org.
Glenn
Sacks' columns on men's and fathers' issues have appeared in dozens of America's
largest newspapers. Glenn can be reached via his website at
www.GlennSacks.com or
via email at Glenn@GlennSacks.com.
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