Not the Era of the Deadbeat
Dad
but the Era of the Hero Father
By Jeffery M. Leving and Glenn Sacks
Fatherhood has
changed dramatically in the era of divorce and
out of wedlock births, and much attention has
been paid to two unfortunate products of this
era—the absent father and the deadbeat dad.
However, there is another type of father this
era has produced, one which has received very
little attention—the hero father.
According to the Children's Rights Council, a
Washington-based advocacy group, more than five
million American children each year have their
access to their noncustodial parents interfered
with or blocked by custodial parents. Behind
that statistic are legions of heroic divorced or
separated fathers who fight a long, hard but
generally unrecognized battle to remain a
meaningful part of the lives of the children who
love them and need them.
Some hero
fathers move repeatedly to be near their
children. In the controversial case of DeBrenes
v. Traub, Eric
Traub had already moved to new cities twice in
order to be near his daughter when he was forced
to conduct a lengthy and expensive legal
struggle to prevent her from being moved to
Costa Rica. As is typical, the court allowed
the move.
Traub’s determination paid off, however, as the
now teenaged girl became so set against the move
that her mother, to her credit, dropped the
request.
Most fathers are not so fortunate. In a recent
California Supreme Court
case,
Gary LaMusga, who operates a business in
Northern California, fought for eight years to
prevent his two young sons from being moved to
Ohio, 2,000 miles away. He eventually won, but
his victory was a pyrrhic one because his
children had already been moved out of state in
violation of court orders. In the strange world
of modern family law, even with the new decision
his children will not be moved back.
While divorced
dads are unfairly stigmatized as stingy, some
noncustodial fathers raise their children in
their homes but still pay child support to the
children’s mothers. Many others never ask for
child support. In the face of a family court
system which usually grants mothers a monopoly
of power over children, these fathers must buy
or rent their children back. When mothers allow
their children to live with their fathers—or
send them there because they’ve become unruly or
inconvenient—fathers often won’t challenge
custodial and financial arrangements because
they fear doing so will mean they’ll be pushed
out of their children’s lives.
Other fathers
endure physical abuse at the hands of their
wives but remain in the relationships because
they know that divorce will leave their children
alone in the custody—usually sole custody—of an
abuser. Decades of research show that women are
as likely to abuse their male partners as vice
versa, and that heterosexual men make up a
significant minority of those suffering injuries
in domestic assaults. However, gender politics
has kept this research from influencing
government and law enforcement policies. Many
men know that revealing their wives’ violence
usually means the wife will claim that she was
abused, and the system will side with her.
Fathers are commonly arrested, punished or
slapped with custody sanctions for their wives’
violence.
In one highly
publicized case, Dr. Xavier Caro, a Northridge,
California rheumatologist, endured years of
physical abuse at the hands of his wife Socorro,
who once assaulted him so badly he had to have
surgery to regain his sight in one eye. Xavier
stayed in the relationship for the sake of his
kids but his efforts failed, as Socorro later
shot and killed three of their four children.
Some fathers
face false charges of domestic violence or
sexual abuse, which are commonly used as custody
maneuvers in divorce. Those most vulnerable to
these charges are dads who are their children’s
primary caregivers. Such charges are often made
to separate these dads from their children so a
new custody precedent can be set with mothers as
the primary caregivers.
Falsely accused
men often bankrupt themselves fighting to regain
access to their children. Meanwhile, many can
only see their children in nightmarish
visitation centers where fathers are treated
like criminals.
Over the past
several decades the love and devotion of
millions of fathers has been tested in ways few
in previous generations experienced. This
Father’s Day, let’s honor the hero father.
This column was
first published in the Ft. Worth
Star-Telegram (6/19/05).
Jeffery M. Leving
is one of America's most prominent family law
attorneys. He is the author of the book
Fathers' Rights: Hard-hitting and Fair Advice
for Every Father Involved in a Custody Dispute.
His website is
www.dadsrights.com.
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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