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Child support enforcement programs are supported by all sides of
the political spectrum, from women’s advocates on the left to
traditionalists on the right. While this popularity
is sometimes understandable, it has also allowed glaring and inexcusable
abuses to fester and grow. Of these, none is more egregious than
when men are forced to pay 18 years of child support for
children who are not theirs, and who in many cases they’ve never
even met.
In “The Innocent Third Party:
Victims of Paternity Fraud,” a new article in the American Bar
Association's Family Law Quarterly, Washington DC
attorney Ronald K. Henry details how this problem developed, and
proposes some common sense solutions. The problem is relatively
new, and stems in large part from the federal Personal
Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act of 1996, which
restructured the welfare system.
The Act mandates that a mother
seeking welfare benefits for her child must provide the name of
the child’s father so the state can recoup its costs by securing
a child support order.
According to an Urban Institute
study, most of the men targeted are low-income and uneducated,
and the court pleadings in these child support cases are
unnecessarily complex. Many men are left confused or doubtful
about the seriousness of the proceedings. Moreover, substitute
service, where the court summons is often left at an erroneous
last known address, is frequently used instead of personal
service. When the putative father does not appear at his
hearing, a default paternity judgment is entered against him.
A federal report shows that in many
child support enforcement offices, half or more of the paternity
judgments are entered by default. Of the 250,000 paternity
judgments ordered in California each year, more than two-thirds
are entered by default. Even when men obtain DNA tests clearing
them of paternity, most courts rarely set aside these
judgments.
The men who do receive the
summonses and appear in court still face a stacked deck. Henry
explains:
“The paternity fraud victim is
hustled through the formality, often in less than five minutes,
and may not even realize what has happened until the first
garnishment of his paycheck. The State’s direct financial
incentive is to establish paternity regardless of actual
paternity facts. In welfare cases, there is almost always only
one attorney in the courtroom and that attorney is not
representing the paternity target.”
State child support collection
efforts are heavily subsidized by federal dollars. Therefore,
Henry asserts, the federal government could greatly reduce the
problem of false paternity establishments by reimbursing states
only for establishments which are confirmed by DNA tests. States
could purchase bulk DNA tests at a cost per unit considerably
less than even one month of child support.
States should also act to reduce
default judgments by improving service of process and by making
the procedure more understandable for litigants, few of
whom have legal representation. In default judgment cases, DNA
testing should be required as soon as the child support
enforcement agency locates the putative father. And states
should pass laws or institute policies which allow fallacious
paternity judgments to be retroactively challenged.
Because of the indifference of both
the states’ child support enforcement systems and their federal
funders, no firm figures exist on how many men have
been mistakenly defaulted into fatherhood. Henry estimates that
the number could exceed one million.
Child support debtors receive
little public sympathy, at times with reason. Yet the victims of
false paternity judgments aren’t men trying to evade their
legitimate responsibilities, nor are they Nicholas Barthas
determined to ensure that their exes will never get a penny.
They are instead victims of one of the most indefensible civil
rights violations in America today--an injustice which cries out
for redress.
This article first appeared in
the Baltimore Sun (8/20/06).
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 the largest
newspapers in the United States. His website is
www.GlennSacks.com. He and Ronald K. Henry are the
co-founders of the
Default Paternity Judgment Innocence Project, an
organization dedicated to ending the above-described injustices.
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