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Preparing for a custody hearing

Started by bloom6372, Sep 19, 2011, 07:16:43 PM

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bloom6372

I'm curious--what do YOU do to prepare for a custody hearing? How do you organize records? What do you document? Do you make copies for your attorney? What about witness statements--do you have them typed and notarize or do you record their statements for your records? Do you have letters of recommendation? etc etc etc. Anything and everything would be good to hear :)

MixedBag

I tried to keep everything by category and then date.

Witness statements -- and letters of recommendation -- in many senses, "not relevant" to get STATEMENTS in writing.

Just like a police report -- you can (well, your attorney can) submit it as evidence, BUT then the police officer has to appear and testify that the police officer WROTE that report.

So any witness or letter of recommendation must be supported by THAT person appearing in court.

In my stuff with EX#2......the judge frowned upon his notion that he had 10 witnesses that needed to appear.....and when my number was smaller, that was better.

In the end, it was all threats that never materialized, meant to scare me off.

If you have any document to submit, the person who WROTE the document has to testify that they wrote what is on it and then you go from there.

I once submitted a letter from DHR here, because Dad opened a complaint against me about something that happened.  Now mind you, Dad is in WV, me in AL.....incident happened in AL.....so the first question was "WHO has jurisdiction to investigate?"  In the end, AL took the lead -- but even then, they didn't talk to dad.  Dad talked to someone in WV, who sent the complaint to AL.  AL wrote a letter saying "Nothing found" -- and I could NOT submit that as evidence that his complaint was not valide because someone from DHR did not travel to the WV court.   In the end, the judge believed me because dad's testimony was second hand coming from our son and I was the ONLY one present when the incident happened.   The judge knew the letter existed because I could testify that it existed, but he handed it back to me quickly in court and said that he couldn't accept the letter because no one was there to swear they wrote it.

I hope that makes sense....

Mom1Step2

I have a question for you Mixed:

What if you have school records and such that you are presenting as evidence? What if you cant find the teachers that wrote those letters and notes home?

Same with old police reports. What if the officer doesnt work for the department anymore?

Lord you just got me worried :(

ocean

We used certified police reports. You can go to the station and order them.
Subpena anyone that you want info too, the school district, old teacher, boss, whoever. Letters really are not used. We had them and never brought them into evidence. Much better having a person testify to it all.

Binder was color coded and marked. As long as it is organized in a way that you can pull it when needed. I made two binders, one for lawyer, one for me.

bloom6372

Medical and school records, would you need to subpeona the doctors and teachers? Or would the records be enough? One thing we do plan to use, among others, is medical and educational records...

Right now, we have binders, divided into sections, and each section has a subsection. I was thinking of scanning everything and putting it on a thumb drive for an attorney, so that they have all the information without all the papers, because we have a LOT.

Mom1Step2

So really, you dont think report cards and school records will be enough? We will have to have school officials there to back them up?

ocean

How will you get it into evidence? IF ex takes stand you can ask her questions like "look at exhibit #1, can you tell me how many days xx was absent from school under your care? or "can you read the grades XX received while in your care last semester?". But what if she does not take stand? Are you taking stand? You can be asked this questions to get them in.

You can not just hand them into the judge, they need to be entered somehow...and used. Otherwise they will just sit in a folder somewhere.

Mom1Step2

Is it possible to take the stand if you are representing yourself?

She is trying to get the kids to testify... so I guess we could ask them. I really have no idea. At least we have awhile to go yet. Still learning.

ocean

The judge probably will squash the kids testifying. Ours did, and at the end he said IF he allowed them in, it would be just him and lawyers. If you are representing yourself, you are allowed another person in there to help you (as long as they are not a witness or have them take the stand first) then they can ask your questions and help you with getting things out of the binder when things come up.

Do you qualify for legal aid? If not, you can see if you have a law school near you and get a senior student to "help" you. They are not lawyers but can help set up questions and they know most of the laws. You can also go sit in the waiting area of family court and observe. Look for lawyers, ask questions of other people around about other lawyers, judges. See how yours works.

Spaceman1982

In nevada for pro se, you go up and make a statement of sorts. Then opposing party can cross exam you on stand. After their exm, you may make another statement to reiterate or counter.