Supportive Dad Jailed for Debt to State, Mother and Child on the Street

Yet another example of child support laws run amuk.  Becareful out there. Republished with permission from Fathers and Families.  Originally written by Robert Franklin, Esq. on September 20th 2012.

I don’t think a single case could exemplify the full nuttiness and dsyfunction of the child support system; that’s too big a job for any single cast of characters, but this one sure hits some of the low points (Marshall Tribune, 9/19/12).

It seems that Adrian Hill had a child with April Haley.  They live in Tennessee.  At some point, Haley applied for and received welfare benefits under a program called TennCare which is part of the state’s Medicaid program designed to address the medical needs of the poor and disabled.  Just what services Haley received, the article doesn’t say, but it’s likely they were for her and Hill’s child.  And, in the strange world of family law, that means Hill had to reimburse the state for its expenditures for his child.  Why Haley didn’t have to do so remains a mystery, but whatever the case, Hill didn’t pay.

Equally strange, the law treats that situation as if Hill had failed to pay child support, and that’s particularly strange in Hill’s case because he and Haley were living together and he seems to have been their sole support.  But under the law, the mere fact that he was doing his part to support his child and its mother, made no difference.  He was obligated to reimburse the state, she wasn’t and that was that.  How Haley was able to qualify for Medicaid also goes unmentioned in the article, which itself is strange since she was getting Hill’s support.  Did she report that as income to her?

So Hill owed Tennessee money for whatever medical care his child had received, and, since he was unable to pay it, the state asked a court to find him in contempt for failure to pay child support.  After a trial by Judge Lee Russell, Hill was found guilty and incarcerated.  But the state had erred in its proceedings against Hill.

Russell found Hill guilty under a law punishing nonsupport with incarceration, but Judge Jeffrey Bivins wrote for the Appeals Court that Russell “erred in construing this statute as a contempt statute,” since it doesn’t include the word contempt…

There was a procedural defect, [Attorney Robert] Dalton said. Hill was charged under a general criminal statute, not the law punishing people for nonsupport.

“As a result, the regular judicial proceedings apply,” including grand jury consideration and a jury trial. “Contempt is a separate issue.”

In other words, the DA charged Hill under the wrong law.  He charged him under a regular criminal statute that requires, well, due process of law.  Since there was no grand jury indictment and no jury trial, Hill was released by order of an appellate court after 183 days in prison.  Had he been charged under the correct law, I suppose he’d still be behind bars.

“It’s time I can’t get back,” said Adrian Bennielle Hill, who spent nearly six months in jail. “It’s not a win for me. It’s a win for anybody who might find themselves in this situation.”

The evil genius behind child support enforcement via incarceration is that it does nothing to get support to the child and in fact makes it harder or even impossible.  That people in prison don’t have jobs is a concept everyone except state legislatures understand.  Of course the threat of prison sometimes makes non-custodial parents pay up, thereby helping to support their children.  But in this case, the child had already received whatever medical treatment was required.  Adrian Hill went to prison, not for failure to support his child – he was doing that.  He went to prison for failure to pay the state, and that resulted in the final Dickensian outrage – Haley and her child went homeless.

Yes, the State of Tennessee, in its zeal to ensure child well-being, tossed a child and its mother onto the street.  If that makes sense to you, explain it to me, because I can’t figure it out.  In fact, I’ll bet that’s one reason Haley begged Judge Russell not to incarcerate Hill.  I suspect she knew what the consequences to her and their child would be if Hill went inside, and she was right.

Although Hill has been released by the appellate court, he can still be retried.  There’s no double jeopardy because he was tried under the wrong law and because his offense continues.  He still hasn’t paid the state and my guess is the amount has increased due to interest, penalties and fees.  The District Attorney is required by law to seek the incarceration of anyone in Hill’s situation who hasn’t paid his debt, so I wouldn’t be surprised to find the man back in prison now that the prosecutor and the judge have been instructed by the appellate court how to do their jobs.

Whatever happens with Hill, his case reminds us of just how verging-on-insanity these laws can be.  To pretend, as the law does, that failure to reimburse the state for services already received by a child is the same as refusing to pay to support one’s child  is nonsense.  Throwing in prison the sole support of a mother and child is truly crazy.  And, needless to say, it has nothing to do with the “best interests of the child.”

Our enthusiasm for punishing fathers for faults real or imagined, outweighs our desire to do what’s best for children.  We prove and re-prove it every day.

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The dishonor of Judge Lori B. Jackson

This article, written by Paul Elam, was originally posted on AVoiceforMen and is republished here with permission.

Dear men and women of the men’s movement,

We have arrived at a moment that will define this website and, I dare to say, this movement for years to come.

As you recently learned from Dr. Tara Palmatier, a family tragedy has unfolded in the state of West Virginia.  It is a story so dark, so utterly unjust, that it is hard to describe without the use of metaphors that would seem hyperbolic. Those metaphors would, in reality, be inadequate. Lt. Col. Joel Kirk of the United States Air Force, a decorated combat pilot, and his two children have been trapped in a legal nightmare so twisted and so inhumane that it defies description. The facts in this case reveal a presiding family court judge bereft of not only sound judgment and reason, but of human decency.

Judge Lori B. Jackson, of the Eighteenth Family Court Circuit for Harrison County, West Virginia has used her gavel, her authority under the law, to sadistically bludgeon Lt. Col. Kirk, and has sentenced his two children to being placed in the custody of their mother, Tina Taylor Kirk, a proven and even more sadistic abuser.

As Dr. Palmatier pointed out in her article, Judge Jackson had a mountain of evidence before her, including reports from psychologists and the court appointed guardian ad litem, that concluded beyond any doubt that Tina Taylor Kirk is a severely emotionally disturbed woman, who, especially when abusing alcohol, was given to repeated episodes of extreme rage that frequently resulted in the severe psychological and physical abuse of her children.

The evidence, clearly at Judge Jackson’s disposal during the divorce, also demonstrated a mother who regularly endangered the lives of those children, driving while intoxicated with them in the car.

Despite the staggering amount of evidence that the children were unsafe with their mother, and being routinely abused by her, Judge Jackson reversed an earlier judge’s order awarding the father custody, and with full knowledge returned the children directly into the hands of their abuser, along with the bulk of Lt. Col Kirk’s assets.

It was a judgment from hell, and hell it has been, for those two innocent children and their father.

It is very important here to make the attempt to impart to you the real magnitude of what these children have had to live with. Dr. Palmatier brought you, directly from the mouth of Lt. Col Kirk, one particular incident involving a drunken, raging Tina Taylor Kirk, who after frightening her son into fleeing the home, threw herself onto the back of an SUV in which Lt. Col. Kirk and his daughter were also attempting to escape.

Now I want you to hear the story as it was conveyed in the voices of Tina Kirk and her daughter in a recording of that incident. The incident was recorded on a video camera. While the video content of the recording was placed under a gag order by Judge Jackson, we are free to bring you the audio portion. For the sake of brevity it has been edited to remove distortions, unintelligible audio and prolonged periods of silence. For the sake of accuracy, we will also provide you the unedited recording.

Please be warned in advance. This audio is very disturbing. Listen at your own discretion.

Here is the edited version.

Here is the complete recording.

And why did all this start? Because Tina Taylor Kirk could not find her cell phone.

This incident, which was also a part of the guardian ad litem report to the court reveals a misquote from the article by Dr. Palmatier. When questioned about this incident, and asked to rate the severity of what happened on a scale of 1 to 10, the son, as reported by Dr. Palmatier, answered:

“The night mom got arrested on a scale of 1-10 was a 10, but we have 9s a lot.”

That is not an entirely accurate quote. What the boy actually said was:

“That night was probably an 11, but Mom gets to 10 a lot.”

In the interest of full disclosure, you can read that for yourself in the guardian ad litem report, which we provide for you here. The document has been redacted to conceal the names of the children for obvious reasons.

Ad litem report

This report, page after page, documents the chronically abusive behavior of Tina Taylor Kirk toward not only her husband, but her children; of them being choked and hit and slapped and berated till they crawled under their beds for safety; of being abused to the point of living their lives in fear, listening for the sound of their fathers car pulling into the driveway, because that sound meant for a time they would be protected from the monster in their home.

The report documents Tina Taylor Kirk’s attempts to intimidate and threaten personnel charged with investigating the well-being of her children, her attempted coercion of her children into lying on her behalf, trying to force them to mold their reality to cover her lies and to fit her embittered and malicious agenda. It is all laid out in clear, heartbreakingly painful detail.

It is a horrifying document, but it did at least hold the promise of a way out for those battered children. In its pages it contains the justification, indeed the moral imperative to ensure that those children are not abused in this way again.

But the real value of that document hinged entirely on the competence and moral capacity  of whatever authority was entrusted to take action on it. In this case, that responsibility was unfortunately placed in the hands of Judge Lori B. Jackson, who reviewed the same evidence you just did, and then, for whatever reason suited her at the time, dropped both of those children directly in the grease.

Then she ordered that the video, which because it is visual proof and, therefore, particularly damning, be forever withheld from the public. Make of that decision what you will.

The facts in this case are evident. The worst of them is that an abusive, mentally unstable parent has found a friend and enabler in a state functionary who has reversed her sacrosanct obligation to act in those two children’s best interest, and instead condemned them, wantonly, to continued violation at the hands of their abuser. It is unconscionable. The only question that remains takes us back to what I said at the start of this letter.

What are we going to do about it?

We sure as hell have to do something. Knowing what we know and doing nothing would demonstrate near as much depraved indifference as the family court in Harrison County, West Virginia.

To be clear, I know this is an uphill battle. The hubris that leads to these kinds of decisions is born of a sense of impunity that is neither irrational, nor unwarranted.  As we have seen in case after case, officials in family courts across this country and beyond are accustomed to absolute control and complete immunity from public scrutiny and forced accountability for their misdeeds. They operate in a system that sustains its corruption and egregious conduct by its own unfettered authority, leaving them all but impervious to the desire for justice and the mandates of the Constitution.

But we also know another reality. Whenever enough people speak truth to power, and are unyielding, even the mighty can feel the impact.

In the case of Vladek Filler, a man falsely accused of rape during a bitter custody dispute, and prosecuted by viciously unjust prosecutor Mary Kellett, we made a difference. After AVfM secured over a thousand signatures on a petition demanding Kellett’s disbarment; after we inundated politicians and news media with letters, emails and phone calls; even after Mary Kellett sought to have a gag order put on this website because of our activism, she now prepares herself to face a disciplinary hearing at the bar for her misconduct. Her license to practice law is now rightly on the line.

The other case we took up was that of Gordon Smith, a Delaware man arrested 8 times on 13 false allegations from his former wife, Tiffany Marie Smith. At the time we met Gordon he was still being thrown in jail regularly on bogus charges and was still facing time in prison for crimes he did not commit. We went to work for Mr. Smith in much the same way we did for Mr. Filler. As of today, Gordon Smith has been cleared of all charges. Tiffany Marie Smith has been arrested and is facing felony prosecution for her misdeeds.

I do not claim that AVfM was the only reason that these cases improved for these two men. But anyone following the cases knows that we played a very significant role in the outcome. We made a difference, maybe the difference, and we can do it again.

So, on behalf of the entire editorial staff of AVfM, I am calling on our supporters again. It is time to put the A in MRA again, and to do it now. After all, what advocate for men could possibly remain silent in the face of this opportunity to right a wrong and to strike a blow directly at the heart of the most pervasive source of discrimination against men…the family courts?

And, I ask you with no reservation at all, who deserves this more than Lt. Col. Kirk and his children?

Here is who you contact, and remember, courteous but firm:

(note: please be sure when linking to send to Dr. T’s article, not this one)

Judge Lori B. Jackson
Harrison County Courthouse
306 Washington Avenue
Clarksburg, WV 26301
304-627-2100
Fax: 304-627-2149

List of media contacts

Charleston Gazette

gazette@wvgazette.com

Charleston Daily Mail
1001 Virginia St. E.
Charleston, WV 25301

News Editor: Philip Maramba
304-348-4815
philip@dailymail.com

WOWK-TV (CBS)
P.O. Box 11848
Charleston, WV 25339-1848

News Director
Elisabeth F. Shaffer
eshaffer@wowktv.com

Main  304-343-1313
Fax 304-343-6138

WCHS-TV8 (ABC)

1301 Piedmont Rd.
Charleston, WV 25301

Eyewitness Newsroom:  304-345-4115
news@wchstv.com

Stars and Stripes, Electronic Edition

529 14th Street NW, Suite 350,
Washington, D.C. 20045-1301

Terry Leonard, Editorial Director

(202) 761-0535, DSN  312-763-0535
leonardt@stripes.osd.mil

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Parenting Rights Blog – What is it about?

What it’s all about?

This blog is about showing, and proving, that what is in the best interest of children and parents of broken families is ensuring that, not only parenting rights and times be shared equally, but also that each parent treat the other with fairness and respect.

Articles in this blog will explore the “system,” otherwise known as the family court system, the facts of actual research,  and strategies for securing equal parent rights and times for your children.

It will include actual published stories from real people who want to share their experiences and help others learn from them.  Parenting Rights will also have an ongoing list of resources for you to find more information,  and support your needs in a system that is in so badly need of repair.  Lastly, it will help you understand the “system,” why it is the way it is, and how it got from there to here.

I hope you will find this site a generous resource over the next months and years.  If you are at all interested in writing for this site, or to tell your story, please feel free to leave a comment.

Thank you for visiting.  Hopefully, this site will help start a revolution in family law – one that will bring families back together again  —  instead of tearing them apart.

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