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Divorce Advice for Men | Fathers Rights Divorce | Child Custody

Providing men with essential divorce advice, fathers rights divorce information and child custody articles. Dads Divorce is a community for men facing divorce or fathers rights issues and run by Cordell and Cordell. Cordell & Cordell is a family law firm with a focus on men's divorce, child custody and fathers rights divorce.
Tags >> supervision
Nov 29, 1999

Question:

My wife had taken our 3 year old daughter earlier this year and was headed towards Mexico. She is a legal-alien of the United States and - I assume - also has Mexican citizenship. She has warned me of the difficulties I'd encounter in trying to find our daughter and, after much research, these statements proved to be true. Fortunately, the local police had issued a warrant for her arrest. About a week later both were found approximately 2 miles from the border; the mother was arrested and I'd flown down to pick up my daughter. Her charge of Parental Kidnapping is still being pursued by the Prosecutor, and the incriminating evidence I've since found leaves little doubt of her intentions. Even though we are going through divorce litigation, and the mother is only allowed 1-hour per-week supervised visitation with the girl, it will not last forever. My main concern is how to handle visitations after this method expires. The mother is an absolute 'flight risk', and my attorney is unsure of what to recommend. I do not wish to separate my daughter from her mother (even though that was her mother's intentions), yet I firmly believe that she cannot be trusted. This reasoning is reaffirmed from the approximately 20 times she has left with our daughter in the last 3 years. Any advice would be sincerely appreciated.

Answer:

If your wife is convicted and is in prison, that will pass some time. It is possible that the court will just enter an order for a supervised parenting plan. Your wife will be responsible for the procurement of an appropriate supervisor. The Division of Family Services has a program by which people can take a class to be approved supervisors. Some university students can also be hired as supervisors. Another possibility is that the court will enter a graduated schedule. For example the one hour supervised would continue for six months, then three hours supervised for a period of months and working toward unsupervised but non-overnight time and eventually a more traditional every other weekend schedule. In this situation that may take many years and should not occur until your child is of sufficient age to understand the situation and contact you if there is a problem. Further your wife should be required to provide her passport to the supervisor or you anytime that she has custody of your child. That may not be highly effective considering the Mexico border, but maybe some deterrent.

Nov 29, 1999

Question:

This regards my grandson. His mother left him when he was 6 months old with her parents. My son & her had just split -- they were not married. My son's name is on the birth certificate. Son/grandson came to live with me. Mother left the state & married someone else. During a time when her parents were helping us take care of him, she flew back to Texas & took my grandson out of state. Four months later, she was back in TX for a court hearing. During that time, she once again left the State to return to her husband leaving my grandson once again with her parents -- also left her other son who is not my grandson. After 2 wks they finally allowed us to pick up my grandson. We have had him since 12-09-04. For support purposes, my son has been designated as Custodial Parent through the Attorney Gen. of TX. She is the non-custodial parent. We are still paying legal fees from the 1st episode. She has not had any contact with my grandson since Thanksgiving 2004. She is now living back in TX. Does my son have any type of rights that would keep her from "snatch & running" with my grandson if she got the chance? My grandson is content, happy, well adjusted (as far as a 2 1/2 yr old can be). Is there any protection or recourse for us?

Answer:

Allow me to preface my answer to your question with the disclaimer that I am not licensed to practice law in the state of Texas. Does she have vistation rights? If not, then you can require she only visit at your home. If you have to go to Court over it, then you can plead the facts you have mentioned in your question and request that any visitation she have be at your home or supervised by an objective third party.

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