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Mom loses custody for alienating dad



 
 
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Old February 4th 09, 09:45 PM posted to alt.child-support
Dusty
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Default Mom loses custody for alienating dad


http://www.thestar.com/News/article/576619

Mom loses custody for alienating dad

Ruling a 'wake-up call' for parents who use kids to punish ex-partners

Jan 24, 2009
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Tracey Tyler
LEGAL AFFAIRS REPORTER
In a stunning and unusual family law decision, a Toronto judge has stripped
a mother of custody of her three children after the woman spent more than a
decade trying to alienate them from their father.
The mother's "consistent and overwhelming" campaign to brainwash the
children into thinking their father was a bad person was nothing short of
emotional abuse, Justice Faye McWatt of the Superior Court of Justice wrote
in her decision.

The three girls, ages 9 to 14, were brought to a downtown courthouse last
Friday and turned over to their father, a vascular surgeon identified only
as A.L.

Their mother, a chiropodist identified as K.D., was ordered to stay away
from the building during the transfer and to have her daughters' clothing
and possessions sent to their father's house.

McWatt stipulated that K.D. is to have no access to the children except in
conjunction with counselling, including a special intensive therapy program
for children affected by "parental alienation syndrome." The mother must
bear the costs.

Harold Niman, the father's lawyer, said the decision serves as a wake-up
call to parents who, "for bitterness, anger or whatever reason," decide to
use their children to punish their former partners.

"Maybe if they realize the courts will actually step in and do something and
there is a risk of not only losing custody, but having no contact with their
children, they'll think twice about it," Niman said in an interview.

McWatt's judgment was released Jan. 16 and published on legal databases this
week. By yesterday, it was a hot topic within the family law bar.

The judge said awarding A.L. sole custody was the children's only hope for
having a relationship with their father, given their mother's long-running
transgressions.

These include ignoring court orders, shutting the door in A.L.'s face when
he came to collect the children and refusing to answer the phone when he
called to say goodnight. (He was granted telephone access to say good night
on Monday, Wednesday and Friday). At times, she also arranged for police to
show up when her daughters had overnight visits with their father.

Eventually, K.D. cut off contact altogether, refusing to allow A.L. to see
or speak with his daughters. He was reduced to shouting goodnight to them
through the door of their home, often not knowing whether they were there.

"It is remarkable that A.L. has not given in to the respondent's persistence
in keeping his children from him over the last fourteen years and simply
gone on with his life without the children as, no doubt many other parents
in the same situation would have and, indeed, have done," McWatt said.

The mother squandered several chances to change her behaviour and is unable
to accept it is in her children's best interests to have a relationship with
their father, the judge said.

Nicholas Bala, a Queen's University law professor who specializes in family
law, said "badmouthing" or negative attitudes by one parent toward another
is quite common among separated couples. But in recent years, the justice
system has begun to understand the harmful effects of the worst form of this
behaviour.

In most cases, the problem is resolved through counselling, where parents
are encouraged to accept they'll both always be in their children's lives,
said Bala. "I tell them, `... if you're the survivor, you'll be going to the
other's funeral, not because you love that person, but to support your
children.'

"Having said that, there are some people - and I think some of them are
suffering from personality disorders - who will not respond to therapy and
will not respond to directions from judges."

Transferring custody is a last resort, because "it can be quite dramatic and
traumatic" - yet sometimes better than the alternative, said Bala.

"We often talk about the best interests of the child, but often it's the
least detrimental alternative, really."

Bala said courts are unlikely to take such a drastic step without hearing
expert testimony about what's happening in the family. A child may be
avoiding a parent for legitimate reasons such as physical or emotional
abuse.

McWatt heard testimony from Barbara Fidler, a Toronto mediator and clinical
psychologist who predicted eight years ago the three girls were at risk of
becoming alienated from their father.

The Office of the Children's Lawyer argued the family dynamics could not
continue.

Fidler said research points to long-term damage in people alienated from a
parent in childhood.

Children are more susceptible at about age 10 or 11, after their brains have
developed to the point where they can hold positive and negative information
about a parent.

If what one parent is saying about the other doesn't accord with their own
perceptions, they can become confused.

In some cases, the only way out of the emotional conflict is to take one
parent's side. The child can even begin inventing his or her own reasons for
hating the other parent, the court was told.

Early intervention is best, Niman said."Really, parental alienation is a
process. If you can nip it in the bud, that's the best advice I can give to
clients.

"Because the longer it goes on, the more difficult it can be to undo."

 




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