What is the name of your state? NC
I posted relating to my daughter's visitation situation with her father about a month ago
(https://forum.freeadvice.com/showthread.php?t=367288) This is related but different, so please forgive me if I should have posted this question in that thread.
We go for visitation review next week and I'd like some advice on the best way to present my case as an effective advocate for my daughter without angering the judge. I spoke with the attorney who was to be handling the TPR/Adoption for me, but I can't afford his fee to represent me so I'm going Pro-se. Here are how things stand:
*In 1994 I was given sole physical and legal custody with supervised visitation at my discretion due to the judge deeiming NCP emotionally unstable because of his testimony.
1. Visitation was ordered in Feb. '07 after no contact since 1995. NCP was to make arrangements with minor to meet for dinner on the 1st and 3rd Friday of each month for dinner at her choice of restaurants. Cell phone numbers were exchanged so that the time and place of dinner could be arranged by NCP in advance.
2. Out of a possible 9 visits, 4 have happened.
A. She has cancelled once due to a sinus infection with a fever.
B. He cancelled once due to being sent to the hospital.
C. Once when he called her and told her he'd be evicted from his home if he took her out to dinner.
D. On 2 occasions he did not call to see her until the night they were supposed to have dinner after she had already eaten and made other arrangements for her evening. One of those times he left a message on my phone saying he had forgotten about her.
The other time I answered the phone and he said he had not noticed what day it was. When she called him back a bit later (she wasn't there when he called) he got angry with her, saying that when he doesn't call her it is her responsibility to call him to see if he plans on seeing her, and that she had no right to make other plans even though she had not heard from him.
3. He has only spoken with her about 10 times in the time between Feb and today.
4. He expressed an interest in terminating his rights and having my husband adopt her, and she agreed, but now he is making excuses about not believing that I'll file the papers if he signs them.
5. The night she and I met with him to give him the TPR papers he told her that his children are going without because she had to have braces (in front of the notary).
6. Just after visitation was ordered minor began having nightmares, outbursts of crying and temper, her grades took a nosedive, and she began ripping off her fingernails and toenails. I was advised to take her to a therapist and have done so. The therapist will not (and can not) go into details with me, but has said that she will be happy writing a letter to the judge giving her professional opinion.
7. Minors outbursts seem to be mostly limited to time frames between the Thursday night when her father calls and the day after her dinner with him. Not to say she doesn't have a temper otherwise, most 15 yr old girls do, but it seems to get worse during those times.
8. Minor maintains to me, her father, the judge, and anyone else who asks, that she wishes no contact with her father at this time.
9. She has never been denied access to him by me or anyone in my family, she has always known who he is through pictures, and until visitations were ordered, she would go out of her way to avoid him if she saw him in public anywhere. Since the visits, she doesn't want to speak with him when he calls and will not call him until threatened with punishment.
10. Other than these recent dinners, he is a stranger to her.
I know that whether visitation continues or not is not her choice (even though I think it should be at her age). What I'd like to try and convey is that I think that communication should be left open, but that she should be allowed to choose whether or not to contact him. If we had just split I think I'd feel differently, but he has never been in her life by his own choice, now he walks back in and expects the father of the year award.
Does anyone have any advice on how I can present all of this at the review without seeming petty to a judge I don't have a great track record with?
I know many of you may not agree with my opinion that she should be given some say so
(and it just is my opinion) but please don't flame me. I am truly trying to act in the best interest of my daughter.
Thank you.
I posted relating to my daughter's visitation situation with her father about a month ago
(https://forum.freeadvice.com/showthread.php?t=367288) This is related but different, so please forgive me if I should have posted this question in that thread.
We go for visitation review next week and I'd like some advice on the best way to present my case as an effective advocate for my daughter without angering the judge. I spoke with the attorney who was to be handling the TPR/Adoption for me, but I can't afford his fee to represent me so I'm going Pro-se. Here are how things stand:
*In 1994 I was given sole physical and legal custody with supervised visitation at my discretion due to the judge deeiming NCP emotionally unstable because of his testimony.
1. Visitation was ordered in Feb. '07 after no contact since 1995. NCP was to make arrangements with minor to meet for dinner on the 1st and 3rd Friday of each month for dinner at her choice of restaurants. Cell phone numbers were exchanged so that the time and place of dinner could be arranged by NCP in advance.
2. Out of a possible 9 visits, 4 have happened.
A. She has cancelled once due to a sinus infection with a fever.
B. He cancelled once due to being sent to the hospital.
C. Once when he called her and told her he'd be evicted from his home if he took her out to dinner.
D. On 2 occasions he did not call to see her until the night they were supposed to have dinner after she had already eaten and made other arrangements for her evening. One of those times he left a message on my phone saying he had forgotten about her.
The other time I answered the phone and he said he had not noticed what day it was. When she called him back a bit later (she wasn't there when he called) he got angry with her, saying that when he doesn't call her it is her responsibility to call him to see if he plans on seeing her, and that she had no right to make other plans even though she had not heard from him.
3. He has only spoken with her about 10 times in the time between Feb and today.
4. He expressed an interest in terminating his rights and having my husband adopt her, and she agreed, but now he is making excuses about not believing that I'll file the papers if he signs them.
5. The night she and I met with him to give him the TPR papers he told her that his children are going without because she had to have braces (in front of the notary).
6. Just after visitation was ordered minor began having nightmares, outbursts of crying and temper, her grades took a nosedive, and she began ripping off her fingernails and toenails. I was advised to take her to a therapist and have done so. The therapist will not (and can not) go into details with me, but has said that she will be happy writing a letter to the judge giving her professional opinion.
7. Minors outbursts seem to be mostly limited to time frames between the Thursday night when her father calls and the day after her dinner with him. Not to say she doesn't have a temper otherwise, most 15 yr old girls do, but it seems to get worse during those times.
8. Minor maintains to me, her father, the judge, and anyone else who asks, that she wishes no contact with her father at this time.
9. She has never been denied access to him by me or anyone in my family, she has always known who he is through pictures, and until visitations were ordered, she would go out of her way to avoid him if she saw him in public anywhere. Since the visits, she doesn't want to speak with him when he calls and will not call him until threatened with punishment.
10. Other than these recent dinners, he is a stranger to her.
I know that whether visitation continues or not is not her choice (even though I think it should be at her age). What I'd like to try and convey is that I think that communication should be left open, but that she should be allowed to choose whether or not to contact him. If we had just split I think I'd feel differently, but he has never been in her life by his own choice, now he walks back in and expects the father of the year award.
Does anyone have any advice on how I can present all of this at the review without seeming petty to a judge I don't have a great track record with?
I know many of you may not agree with my opinion that she should be given some say so
(and it just is my opinion) but please don't flame me. I am truly trying to act in the best interest of my daughter.
Thank you.