Lesbian Mafia booby-traps family courts
by Stephen Baskerville
Trevor Gallahan’s father is going to jail. He has not been
charged with any crime. He is not behind in child support. He has
not battered anyone. Yet Ken Gallahan could conceivably remain in
jail for the rest of his life. What is his infraction? He does not
have $15,000 to pay a lawyer he never hired. He was already jailed
indefinitely when he could not pay a psychotherapist he also had not
hired and was released only when his mother paid the fees.
Debtors’ prisons were theoretically abolished long ago, but this
does not stop family court judges from using the bench to shake down
fathers who have done nothing wrong and funnel everything they have
into the pockets of the court’s cronies. In fact the looting and
criminalization of fathers like Ken Gallahan is now routine in
divorce courts.
Family courts are the arm of the state that routinely reaches
farthest into the private lives of individuals and families, yet
they are answerable to virtually no one. By their own assessment,
according to Robert W. Page of the New Jersey Family Court, “the
power of family court judges is almost unlimited.” Others have
commented on their vast and intrusive powers less charitably.
Malcolm X once called family courts “modern slavery,” and former
Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas termed them “kangaroo” courts. One
father was told by a judicial investigator in New Jersey, “The
provisions of the US Constitution do not apply in domestic relations
cases, since they are determined in a court of equity rather than a
court of law.”
The plunder of fathers invariably begins with the taking of their
children. Despite formal legal equality between parents, some
85-90% of custody awards go to mothers. This is despite the fact
that it is usually the mother who seeks the divorce, and most often
without grounds of wrongdoing by the father. In fact a mother can
have a half-dozen previous divorces, she can commit adultery, she
can level false charges, she can assault the father, in some cases
she can even abuse the children, and none of these (except in
extreme cases the last) has any bearing on a custody decision.
A mother who consults a divorce attorney today will be advised
that her best strategy is simply to take the children and their
effects and leave without warning. If she has no place to go, she
will be told that by accusing the father of sexual or physical abuse
(or even simply stating that she is “in fear”) she can obtain a
restraining order immediately forcing him out of the family home,
often without so much as a hearing. She will also learn that not
only can she not be punished for either of these actions, they
cannot even be used against her in a custody decision. In fact they
work so strongly in her favor that failure to apprise a female
client of these options may be considered legal malpractice.
Mothers who abduct children and keep them from their fathers are
routinely rewarded with immediate “temporary” custody. In fact this
is almost never temporary. Once she has custody it cannot be changed
without a lengthy and expensive court battle. The sooner and the
longer she can establish herself as the sole caretaker the more
difficult and costly it is to dislodge her. The more she cuts the
children off from the father, alienates them from the father, slings
false charges, and delays the proceedings, the more she makes the
path of least resistance (and highest earnings) to leave her with
sole custody. In short, the more belligerence she displays and the
more litigation she creates, the more grateful the courts will be
for the business she provides.
For a father the simple fact of his being a father is enough for
him to be summoned to court, stripped of all decision-making rights
over his children, ordered to stay away from them six days out of
seven, and ordered to make child support payments that may amount to
two-thirds or more of his income. Like Ken Gallahan, he can also be
forced to pay almost any amount to lawyers and psychotherapists and
summarily jailed if he is unwilling or unable.
What is happening to fathers in divorce courts is much more
serious than unfair gender bias. An iron triangle of lawyers,
judges, and women’s(womyn's) groups is finding it increasingly easy
- and lucrative - to simply throw fathers out of their families with
no show of wrongdoing whatever and seize control of their children
and everything they have. Family courts have in effect declared to
the mothers of America: If you file for divorce we can take
everything your husband has and divide it among ourselves, with the
bulk of it going to you. We can take his children, his home, his
income, his savings, and his inheritance and reduce him to beggary.
And if he raises any objection we can throw him in jail without
trial.
The astounding fact is that, with the exception of convicted
criminals, no group today has fewer rights than fathers. Even
accused criminals have the right to due process of law, to know the
charges against them, to face their accusers, to a lawyer, and to a
trial. A father can be deprived of his children, his home, his
savings, his livelihood, his privacy, and his freedom without any of
these constitutional protections. And not only a divorced father or
a unmarried father: Any father at any time can find himself in court
and in jail. Once a man has a child he forfeits his most important
constitutional rights.
The words “divorce” and “custody” have become deceptively
innocuous-sounding terms. We should remind ourselves that they
involve bringing the coercive apparatus of the state - police,
courts, and jails - into the home for use against family members.
When we recall that those family members may not even be charged
with any legal wrongdoing we can begin to grasp the full horror of
what is taking place and how far the divorce machinery has been
fashioned into an instrument of terror. As citizens of communist
Eastern Europe once did, it is now fathers who live in fear of the
“knock on the door.”
So what can a father do to escape the fate of Ken Gallahan and
millions like him? Very little, and divorce manuals encouraging
fathers with advice on how to win custody are not doing them any
favors. The latest wisdom informs fathers that the game is so rigged
that their best hope of keeping their children is not to wait for
their day in court but to adopt the techniques of mothers: If you
think she is about to snatch, snatch first. “If you do not take
action,” writes author Robert Seidenberg, “your wife will. If this
advice is sound, the custody industry has turned marriage into a
“race to the trigger,” to adopt the terms of nuclear deterrence
replete with the pre-emptive strike: Whoever snatches first
survives.
If you don’t have the stomach for this, then you probably should
not marry and not have children.
Stephen Baskerville is a professor of
Political Science at Howard University. The above article was first
published in DADMAG.com and reproduced with
permission of the author with revised title.
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