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- From: jsw@cray.com (Jon S. Wood)
- Newsgroups: alt.dads-rights
- Subject: Family Courts
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.174142.6432@walter.cray.com>
- Date: 27 Jan 93 23:41:41 GMT
- Reply-To: jsw@cray.com
- Organization: Cray Research, Inc.
- Lines: 38
- Nntp-Posting-Host: lonesome.cray.com
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- Violence Spreads in Family Courts
-
- NY Times, Sunday Jan. 24th 1993 page 4 E
-
-
- Domest violence turned another courthouse into a high crime zone
- in Dallas last week when a man shot his wife, himself and a bystander-
- rather than face a judge. That brought the body count to at least eight
- dead and seven wounded in incidents of court-house violence involving
- family disputes since Jan. 7, 1992, when a man killed his wife and
- brother-in-law in Cleveland.
-
- The stat judges in Dallas were so angry at local officials for not
- providing adequate security measures that, as a protest, they stopped
- holding hearings. The family court judges were the first to go out, and
- the rest followed.
-
- "The problem with family courts is you don't know when the problems
- will pop up," said Judge Pat McDowell of Dallas. "They are the most
- volatile of all courts because the cases are so emotional.
-
- In criminal courts, guidelines define the kind fo cases that require
- extra security arrange-ments, like a homicide trial involving ethnic
- conflict. But no such protocols exist in family law cases. While
- improving security is important, some experts argue that recent develop-
- ments in family law make the cases even more volatile than before.
- Husbands now battle wives for custody of the children - which used to
- be considered mother's prerogative. And wives have become more aggressive
- in demanding that ex-spouses pay their child support.
-
- "The fights go on longer, and they are more bitter because there are
- more things to fight over," said Kevin Burke, chief judge in Minnesota's
- Hennepin County. "You ask for trouble by taking people at a moment of
- extreme psychological vulnerability and subjecting them to intense
- frustration over a long period of time."
-
- Roberto Suro
-