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Ex continues to play games Need help!

Started by dad1985, Oct 24, 2009, 08:08:04 PM

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dad1985

My soon to be ex continues to play games. I had custody of my kids more than half the time, then she made a false accusation to the family court. It was proved in court that they were false but the judge had me go for an evaluation and supervised visits and my lawyer doesnt seem to be doing anything about it.On top of that, the ex and her attorney won't return any calls to my attorney or talk about any co-parenting schedule. Any suggestions?

MixedBag

patience....sometimes the system moves slowly.

are you getting time with the kids still?

dad1985

i do get a couple days a week but my ex doesnt stick to the schedule and there has been times when i havent seen them because shes doing her own thing and runs so late that  i get no time with my kids

ocean

Is this schedule court ordered? If it is, file a police report each time you dont get them and file contempt charges in court. Send her the denial letter from this website.....only facts that you missed a court ordered visit of XX hours and want to know when you can make it up. When you get a few, file....

Do you have another court date scheduled? If not, have your lawyer file for supervised to be changed. Was there a plan on when the supervised would be changed? Get your lawyer to get a court date and that will force her lawyer to make a deal with you or deal with you in court. Could be your ex didnt pay him and he dropped her....

Davy

I don't know and maybe it's just me but I suspect both lawyers are maintaining the court's bias status quo.

Poster may find things will change drastically if he and the children are represented by someone from outside the good-ole-boy system.  Worked for my children.   

MrCustodyCoach

Show up at your attorney's office and stay there until you get a meeting.

It is critical, in the face of your innocence, that your parental rights are restored to what they were, lest the family court decide to change things just because they can.

I don't agree with "wait the system moves slowly."  This isn't about the system, it's about your unresponsive attorney.

Squeaky wheel... meet the grease.

Consider filing the motion yourself, with emergent status, and perhaps add to it a contempt-of-court charge for the false allegations.
Mr. Custody Coach - Win Child Custody "Better Prepared, Better Outcome"

*The opinions in this post are solely my own and do not represent the only way to address any particular issue.

snowrose

Quote from: dad1985 on Oct 24, 2009, 08:08:04 PM
It was proved in court that they were false but the judge had me go for an evaluation and supervised visits and my lawyer doesnt seem to be doing anything about it.

Get another lawyer.  If the allegations are proven false then you want any hint of impropriety on your part to be corrected in the eyes of the court.  That means that you need to ask for things to be changed back to normal.  "Your Honor, these allegations were proven to be false.  I therefore ask that we return to the original access schedule."

When BM's attorney wasn't responding to DH's attorney, DH's attorney actually faxed her attorney a letter stating that he'd tried time and again to get in touch and that he was requesting the attorney contact him. 

If you can't really make them move, then at least have it documented in writing so that you can bring it up in court.

MixedBag

You know he didn't say how long it had been since he was found innocent and stuff...

Sometimes folks expect the court system to hop on board and make things happen quickly and the definition of quickly or slowly is really in the eyes of the beholder.

I too felt like "geez, when am I gonna hear from the GAL" when the judge said she was going to appoint one in early July, and I didn't hear from the GAL until -- what was it -- early September.


SuperDad52

Am I reading this right?  If you go pick up your kids on your scheduled weekend and their not there you can file a police report? Do you need to carry around the divorce decree to prove such?  How would the police know who's weekend it is if the papers state every other weekend (who has which weekend)?  And what is this denial letter?  Where can I find it (okay, I will go searching for it, I haven't looked yet)?

Thanks!

ocean

Yes, each time you are denied access you call police and get a report. Most will just give you a slip of paper that says you were there to pick up child and child is not there. Once in a blue moon you will get an officer that will try and see where child is and talk to the mother. We always keep the custody papers in the car but they never asked to see them.

Once you have that police report, you file contempt charges. Most times you need a few of them for the courts to do anything but if you keep going back , they will not be happy.

The denial letter is on this site. It is a form letter that you can use to send your ex the facts that just happened and that you want make-up time. It is good to use that since there is no emotion and facts only.