Source: http://www.corruptct.com/corrupt/title-4-and-5-funding-destroying-our-families/
Timestamp: 2015-07-06 00:52:52
Document Index: 616893271

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 1912', '§ 1912', '§ 1912', '§ 1912', '§ 1912', '§ 1912']

Title 4 and 5 Funding Destroying Our Families - Corrupt CT
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Title IIII and title IV funding destroying families Title 4 and 5 Funding Destroying Our Families
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Archive for the â€˜Title Iv-Dâ€™ Category
The Federal Scheme to Destroy Father-ChildÂ Relationships
Wednesday, February 13, 2008Congress would feign admit its own dubious contribution to the suffering of Americaâ€™s children. Rather, these politicians promulgate the myth that they are helping children through federal and state welfare entitlement programs. It is, in fact, these very programs which are responsible for the out of control rampage against children. Here is how the scam works.
The federal government levies taxes against citizens to redistribute as welfare entitlements among needy applicants. Congress created the Social Security Act, a section of which is called Title IV. Title IV describes how tax dollars will be distributed among the States to subsidize their individual welfare programs. In order forÂ States to tap into theÂ federal treasure chest, containing billions of dollars, theyÂ must demonstrate that they are complying with Title IV mandates to collect child support revenues. In other words, to get money from the federal government, each State must become a child support collection and reporting agency.
Every unwed or single mother seeking welfare assistance must disclose on her application the identities of the fathers of her childrenÂ and how much child support the fathers have been ordered by a family court to pay. She must also commit to continuously reporting the fatherâ€™s payments so that the State can count the money as â€œcollectedâ€ to the federal governmentâ€™s Office of Child Support Enforcement. As with all bureaucracies, this process has developed into a monstrosity that chews up and spits out the very people it was designed to help.
States have huge financial incentives to increase the amount of child support it can report to the federal government as â€œcollectedâ€. To increase collection efforts, States engage in the immoral practice of dividing children from their fathers in family courts. Have you ever wondered why family courts award custody to mothers in 80%-90% of all custody cases, even when the father is determined to be just as suitable a parent? It is because the amount of child support ordered by the State is largely determined by how much time the child spends with each parent. This means that the State â€œcollectsâ€ less child support if parents share equal custody. By prohibiting fathers from having equal custody andÂ time with their children, the Stateâ€™s child support coffers are increased and federal dollars are received.
Opponents try to paint loving fathers as â€œdeadbeat dadsâ€ for daring to challenge the mother-take-all system of family law.Â This is nothing more than diversionary propaganda.Â The concern of fathers is not that they are unwilling to support their children financially. This is not an argument against paying child support. Any father that cares about his child will do everything in his power to provide for the child. The concern is, rather, that children are being separated from their fathers byÂ family courts because the State stands to reap huge financial rewards as a result of the fatherâ€™s loss of custody. The higher the order of child support, the more money the State can collect â€“ even if the amount ordered by the court far exceeds the reasonable needs of the child or if the father is required to take second and third jobs to keep up with outrageous support orders and escapeÂ certain incarceration. The truth is that most fathers donâ€™t care about the financial aspects of these family court verdicts nearly as much as they care about having their time with their children eliminated for nefarious government purposes.
Unconstitutional federal bureaucracy creates many of the societal ills it claims to be trying to solve.Â There areÂ several steps incremental steps that could be taken to restore a childâ€™s right to the companionship of both parents. For example,Â citizens should insist that States abide by the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. No father should be automatically deprived of his fundamental right to the custody of his children without due process of law. Being a male is not a crime. Absent a finding of true danger from a parent, family courts should order shared parenting rights and equal time sharing for divorcing parents.Â These rights are fundamental and should not be abridged.Â The automatic presumption of custody-to-the-mother is unconstitutional.
The history of America is brim with examples of the federal government denyingÂ basic rights to its citizens. Women were denied the right to vote until the womenâ€™s suffrage movement secured the 19th Amendment to the Constitution. Black Americans also were denied the right to vote and suffered myriad other cruel and humiliating indignities under the law until the civil rights movement brought about desegregation, put an end to Jim Crow legislation and compelled the enactment of the 15th and 24th Amendments to the Constitution. In each of these examples, society was slow to recognize that a problem even existed or that some of our laws were unjust. It took considerable time, concerted effort, self-sacrifice and perhaps even divine providence to realign concurrent societal paradigms with the principles of liberty and justice for all.
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Jake Morphonios is a civil rights advocate andÂ North Carolina State Coordinator forÂ Fathers 4 Justice â€“ US.Â The politicalÂ opinions of Mr. Morphonios do not represent those of Fathers 4 Justice.Â Neither Mr. Morphonios nor F4J-US provide legal advice or assistance with individual cases.
Fathers seeking support or information, or other parties interested in becoming involved in the fatherâ€™s rights movement may contact Mr. Morphonios at: jake.morphonios@nc.f4j.us
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MICHIGAN: State Supreme Court OKs Removing Child From Native American MotherÂ (2009-07-15)
In Alienation of Affection, Best Interest of the Child, Child Custody, Child Support, child trafficking, children legal status, children’s behaviour, Civil Rights, cps fraud, custody, deadbeat dads, Divorce, Domestic Relations, due process rights, family court, Family Court Reform, Family Rights, fatherlessness, fathers rights, federal crimes, Foster CAre Abuse, Freedom, Indians, kidnapped children, Marriage, motherlessness, mothers rights, Non-custodial fathers, Non-custodial mothers, Parental Alienation Syndrome, Parental Kidnapping, Parental Relocation, parental rights, Parental Rights Amendment, Parents rights, Restraining Orders, state crimes, Title Iv-D on July 20, 2009 at 7:41 pm
Idiot state court workers followed the rules, but the rules broke the ICWA which protect Indian Children. To terminate an Indian child parent relationship takes evidence â€œbeyond a reasonable doubtâ€Â not clear and convincing evidence. The Michican Supreme Court justices apparently cannot read or understand federal law is the supreme law of the land.Â â€“ Parental Rights
25 U.S.C. Â§ 1912 (d), (e), (f).
Â Section 1912(f), supra, specifies a beyond a reasonable doubt standard of proof for termination of parental rights proceedings. A number of other jurisdictions use a dual standard of proof in ICWA cases in which a clear and convincing standard is applied to the state law requirements for termination of parental rights and the reasonable doubt standard is applied only to the requirement in 25 U.S.C. Â§ 1912(f) that continued custody by the parent is likely to result in serious emotional or physical damage to the child. E.g., In re H.A.M., 961 P.2d 716, 719 (Kan. App. 1998). The prevailing practice in Oklahoma trial courts has been to use the reasonable doubt standard for both the state law requirements for termination of parental rights and the requirements in 25 U.S.C. Â§ 1912(f), however. In addition, in In the Matter of T.L., 2003 OK CIV APP 49, Â¶ 15, 71 P.3d 43, the Oklahoma Court of Civil Appeals applied the reasonable doubt standard to both the requirements in 25 U.S.C. Â§ 1912(f) and the Oklahoma state law requirements that the parent failed to correct conditions leading to adjudication and that the child had been in foster care for 15 of the 22 months preceding the filing of the termination proceedings. Using the reasonable doubt standard for both the state law requirements and the requirements in 25 U.S.C. Â§ 1912(f) avoids the difficulty of explaining different standards of proof to the jury, and is therefore less confusing to the jury. Applying the higher reasonable doubt standard also gives greatest effect to the ICWA, and it is therefore less likely to result in reversal of a termination of parental rights decision than applying the lower clear and convincing evidence standard. Accordingly, the reasonable doubt standard is used in these instructions for both the state law requirements and the requirements in 25 U.S.C. Â§ 1912(f).
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Â LANSING, MI (MPRN) â€“
The Michigan Supreme Court says state welfare workers followed the rules when they removed an American Indian child from her motherâ€™s home, and asked a court to terminate her parental rights.
Two justices dissented. Justices Michael Cavanagh and Marilyn Kelly said child welfare workers should have done more to show how the motherâ€™s current circumstances, and not just her history, required authorities to remove the child. Â© Copyright 2009, MPRN
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Kids recant abuse claims after dad jailed 20Â years
In Alienation of Affection, Best Interest of the Child, Child Custody, Child Support, children legal status, children’s behaviour, Civil Rights, CPS, custody, Divorce, Domestic Relations, Domestic Violence, family court, Family Court Reform, Family Rights, fatherlessness, fathers rights, federal crimes, Freedom, kidnapped children, Marriage, motherlessness, mothers rights, Sociopath, Title Iv-D on July 12, 2009 at 5:22 pm
VANCOUVER, Wash. â€” Former Vancouver police officer Clyde Ray Spencer spent nearly 20 years in prison after he was convicted of sexually molesting his son and daughter. Now, the children say it never happened.
Matthew Spencer and Kathryn Tetz, who live in Sacramento, Calif., each took the stand Friday in Clark County Superior Court to clear their fatherâ€™s name, The Columbian newspaper reported.
Matthew, now 33, was 9 years old at the time. He told a judge he made the allegation after months of insistent questioning by now-retired Clark County sheriffâ€™s detective Sharon Krause just so she would leave him alone.
Tetz, 30, said she doesnâ€™t remember what she told Krause back in 1985, but she remembers Krause buying her ice cream. She said that when she finally read the police reports she was â€œabsolutely sureâ€ the abuse never happened.
â€œI would have remembered something that graphic, that violent,â€ Tetz said.
Spencerâ€™s sentence was commuted by then-Gov. Gary Locke in 2004 after questions arose about his conviction. Among other problems, prosecutors withheld medical exams that showed no evidence of abuse, even though Krause claimed the abuse was repeated and violent.
Prosecutors arenâ€™t yet conceding that Spencer was wrongly convicted. Senior deputy prosecutor Kim Farr grilled the children about why they are so certain they werenâ€™t abused, and chief criminal deputy prosecutor Dennis Hunter said that if the convictions are tossed, his office might appeal to the state Supreme Court.
Matthew Spencer said his father had ruined the relationship with his mother and he had faults, â€œbut none of them were molesting children.â€
Fridayâ€™s hearing paved the way for the state Court of Appeals to allow Spencer to withdraw the no-contest pleas he entered in 1985 and have his convictions vacated. Both children had previously filed statements with the appeals court, but the judges required the hearing to ensure their new testimony held up under cross-examination.
â€œFor so many years, nothing went right,â€ he said. â€œWhen things keep going right, I keep waiting for the other shoe to drop.â€
â€œThey were my life, and they were taken away from me,â€ he said. â€œI could serve in prison. â€¦â€
Divorce: The Impact on ourÂ Children
In Alienation of Affection, Best Interest of the Child, Child Custody, Child Support, child trafficking, children legal status, children’s behaviour, Childrens Rights, Civil Rights, CPS, cps fraud, custody, deadbeat dads, Department of Social Servies, Divorce, Domestic Relations, Domestic Violence, due process rights, family court, Family Court Reform, Family Rights, fatherlessness, federal crimes, Freedom, Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress, Liberty, Marriage, motherlessness, mothers rights, National Parents Day, Non-custodial fathers, Non-custodial mothers, parental alienation, Parental Alienation Syndrome, Parental Kidnapping, Parental Relocation, state crimes, Title Iv-D, Torts on July 8, 2009 at 12:30 am
and â€” compared to children who are in the care of two biological, married parents â€” children who are in the care of single mothers are:
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Parental Alienation Syndrome â€“ Posts from the Canadian Childrenâ€™s RightsÂ Council
In adoption abuse, Alienation of Affection, Best Interest of the Child, California Parental Rights Amendment, Child Custody, Child Support, child trafficking, children criminals, children legal status, children’s behaviour, Childrens Rights, Civil Rights, CPS, cps fraud, custody, deadbeat dads, Department of Social Servies, Divorce, Domestic Relations, Domestic Violence, due process rights, family court, Family Court Reform, Family Rights, fatherlessness, fathers rights, federal crimes, Feminism, Freedom, Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress, Marriage, motherlessness, mothers rights, National Parents Day, Non-custodial fathers, Non-custodial mothers, Parental Alienation Syndrome, Parental Kidnapping, Parental Relocation, parental rights, Parental Rights Amendment, Parentectomy, Parents rights, Restraining Orders, Rooker-Feldman Doctrine, Sociopath, state crimes, Title Iv-D on July 4, 2009 at 12:12 am
Parental Alienation â€“ Brainwashing a child to hate a parent
The parental alienation is a disorder that arises primarily in the context of child-custody disputes. Its primary manifestation is the childâ€™s campaign of denigration against a parent, a campaign that has no justification. It results from the combination of a programming (brainwashing) parents indoctrinations and the childâ€™s own contributions to the vilification of the target parent. The alienation usually extends to the non-custodial parentâ€™s family and friends as well.
What happens when children are denied access to a parent and are victims of Parental Alienation?Indian Journal of Psychiatry, 1988
<!â€“An Irish Equal-Parenting Parenting Equality has collection of , t http://homepages.iol.ie/~pe/ for other interesting information.â€“>
Canadian Childrenâ€™s Rights Council â€“ See our whole section regarding fatherlessness and single parent families for increased rates of teen pregnancy, increased suicide rates and more. According to STATSCAN, the Government of Canada statistics agency, single parent families headed by men were 20% of single parent households in October 2007. Our position is that this growing trend will produce similar negative results for motherless children. More..
In 1985, the Academy Forum published my article, â€œRecent Trends in Divorce and Custody Litigation.â€ This was the first article in which I described the parental alienation syndrome (PAS), a disorder that I began seeing in the early 1980s. The Forum article is generally considered to be the seminal publication on the PAS, parent to at least 100 peer-reviewed articles. Although this is certainly a source of gratification for me, the sixteen years that have ensued cannot be viewed as a straight path to glory, especially because of controversies that have swirled around the diagnosis. I address here the reasons for the controversies and provide suggested solutions. More..
â€œAccess problems and alienation cases â€“ especially those which are more severe â€“ take up a disproportionate amount of judicial time and energy,â€ said the study, conducted by Queenâ€™s University law professor Nicholas Bala, a respected family law expert.
â€œOne can ask whether the courts should even be trying to deal with these very challenging cases.â€ More..