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Lied to get RO

Started by Detter D, Oct 26, 2004, 06:30:58 AM

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Detter D

History:  divorced 1/04
Custody: shared eow and Tuesday night
Ex filed 209a 3 months ago...LIED in court and said I was in
her house at 1:00 in am...ABSOLUTELY A LIE..never ...never...
She was upset with me for filing for her to pay 1/2 of the taxes on
my 401K which was in the settlement agreement..She received
half of my 401K, and I am asking her to pay 1/2 of the taxes on
it because she received the 1/2 the money, and I feel she should
pay 1/2 the taxes....ANYWAY...this item will be addressed in Dec.
court date.

I have not violated in ANY way this unlawful RO (because it was
granted without any proof whatsoever,,,,just her word...LIE..LIE..LIE

I have just been employed with a new job and this 209a that was
filed in Probate Court in MA is harming my ability to be cleared in
some projects because of security rules...also is harming
me to coach my son in sports (which I have done for years).

Now the court hearing (a return hearing for this 209a) is to be this mo.
A very good suggestion by you a few months ago when I explained this
was to offer a "no contact" order, but was unable to do this because of the court it was filed in...this was filed in Probate and they do not have
"no contact" orders.

1. Without having to go through the appeals process, which I cannot afford, is there some other way of getting rid of the this "LIED to GET"
RO??

socrateaser

>1. Without having to go through the appeals process, which I
>cannot afford, is there some other way of getting rid of the
>this "LIED to GET"
>RO??

Offer to take a polygraph examination. Ordinarily, such a test is inadmissible to prove truthfulness without the consent of the other party, however, the fact that you OFFER to take the test is not inadmissible. This will give the judge something to think about -- only a true socio-psychopath can beat the machine. If you tell your story and then offer to submit to a polygraph by a court appointed examiner, on condition that the other party agree to its admission into evidence as proof of your truthfulness, and the other party refuses to accept your challenge, then the judge may suddenly find your opponent not a credible witness and dismiss the RO.

Yes, I know it feels like your guilty until proven innocent, but unless you have some other ironclad alibi and supporting witness, then the court will most likely leave the RO in place.