What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? New Jersey
It has been years since my husband and I posted on this site. I appreciate your help in the past, and look for a little advice now. I am the stepmom, writing on Dad's request, as in the past.
Mom and Dad have been divorced for approximately 10 years. Child is now 16. Original parenting plan called for joint legal (although it is worded as joint custody) with mom being parent of primary residence. Original visitation was EOW, Wednesday evening visitation, and two weeks in summer. The post divorce relationship was never cordial. Mom claimed in divorce, and since, that Dad was mentally abusive to her in the marriage, prompting her departure after 6 years of marriage.
Mom filed in 2004 for supervised visitation, due to alleged mental abuse by Dad and me (SM). Alleged abuse was things such as forcing child to ride a bicycle even though she was nervous about it. A court appointed risk assessor spoke with all parties and stated that child enjoyed doing things with her dad, but that he tended to treat her as older than she was (she was 10 at the time). Assessor stated that Mom tended to increase any fear that the child might have of Dad. After a year of interrupted, and then graduated visitation, and a conversation between the judge and the child, the judge immediately returned visitation to the initial schedule.
In 2007, the child, then 12, came independently to Dad and said that she wanted to live with Dad, due to her discomfort with her mother's home, and the way that her mom and her new stepfather treated her. He emailed mom about these issues, and attempted to voluntarily increase visitation time. Mom refused. Dad then filed for a change of custody, and in absence of that change, to increase visitation to something resembling a fifty/fifty split. Almost immediately, mom filed an ex parte requesting dad's visitation be suspended. She took child to a crisis counselor who saw child only in Mom's presence. Counselor did not meet with Dad, and Dad did not know that this meeting occurred. Counselor reported to the court that Dad "plays a perverted chess game of power" with the child, and recommended visitation be suspended. At the show cause hearing, judge upheld the ex parte ordering suspending visitation and sent Dad for a psychological eval. Psych eval showed leanings toward Narcissistic Personality Disorder and psych recommended continuing the suspension of parenting time until both child and dad got counseling separately, and child's psych decides it is the right time to reintroduce. Judge made the recommendation an order, and in it, decreed that no motions would be heard from Dad until the child's psych made her move.
As I said, this all started three years ago. Dad met with the child's psych in April 2009, before the child started counseling with her. The presumption is that the child started soon after that. Dad began counseling in August 2009, before the psych eval was made. Dad's psych does not agree with the psychological evaluation, and seems to indicate to both of us that Dad is a psychologically healthy man who is justly ticked off at the situation. She has contacted the child's psych several times, as a friendly colleague, to see how the counseling is proceeding. Each time, the child psych has said it is not time yet. The last time contact was made was back in January 2010.
Dad sent a letter to the child's psych requesting to know the status at the middle of July, with no response. Mom provides no information regarding the daughter unless specifically asked, and not always even then. Dad sends regular emails and greeting cards to daughter, with no response. He is not one hundred percent sure child receives this correspondence.
Sorry so long, but the point is, what should Dad do? It seems that there is no recourse for him, since the psych won't communicate, Mom won't communicate, and the court has stated that it won't hear his motions. It's been over three years since this particular saga began, with no end in sight, and dad misses his daughter terribly. Additionally, he now has two new children she has never met, plus the one that was only a year old when she went away, and he hopes that his children can have a relationship.
What to do, what to do?
Thanks...
It has been years since my husband and I posted on this site. I appreciate your help in the past, and look for a little advice now. I am the stepmom, writing on Dad's request, as in the past.
Mom and Dad have been divorced for approximately 10 years. Child is now 16. Original parenting plan called for joint legal (although it is worded as joint custody) with mom being parent of primary residence. Original visitation was EOW, Wednesday evening visitation, and two weeks in summer. The post divorce relationship was never cordial. Mom claimed in divorce, and since, that Dad was mentally abusive to her in the marriage, prompting her departure after 6 years of marriage.
Mom filed in 2004 for supervised visitation, due to alleged mental abuse by Dad and me (SM). Alleged abuse was things such as forcing child to ride a bicycle even though she was nervous about it. A court appointed risk assessor spoke with all parties and stated that child enjoyed doing things with her dad, but that he tended to treat her as older than she was (she was 10 at the time). Assessor stated that Mom tended to increase any fear that the child might have of Dad. After a year of interrupted, and then graduated visitation, and a conversation between the judge and the child, the judge immediately returned visitation to the initial schedule.
In 2007, the child, then 12, came independently to Dad and said that she wanted to live with Dad, due to her discomfort with her mother's home, and the way that her mom and her new stepfather treated her. He emailed mom about these issues, and attempted to voluntarily increase visitation time. Mom refused. Dad then filed for a change of custody, and in absence of that change, to increase visitation to something resembling a fifty/fifty split. Almost immediately, mom filed an ex parte requesting dad's visitation be suspended. She took child to a crisis counselor who saw child only in Mom's presence. Counselor did not meet with Dad, and Dad did not know that this meeting occurred. Counselor reported to the court that Dad "plays a perverted chess game of power" with the child, and recommended visitation be suspended. At the show cause hearing, judge upheld the ex parte ordering suspending visitation and sent Dad for a psychological eval. Psych eval showed leanings toward Narcissistic Personality Disorder and psych recommended continuing the suspension of parenting time until both child and dad got counseling separately, and child's psych decides it is the right time to reintroduce. Judge made the recommendation an order, and in it, decreed that no motions would be heard from Dad until the child's psych made her move.
As I said, this all started three years ago. Dad met with the child's psych in April 2009, before the child started counseling with her. The presumption is that the child started soon after that. Dad began counseling in August 2009, before the psych eval was made. Dad's psych does not agree with the psychological evaluation, and seems to indicate to both of us that Dad is a psychologically healthy man who is justly ticked off at the situation. She has contacted the child's psych several times, as a friendly colleague, to see how the counseling is proceeding. Each time, the child psych has said it is not time yet. The last time contact was made was back in January 2010.
Dad sent a letter to the child's psych requesting to know the status at the middle of July, with no response. Mom provides no information regarding the daughter unless specifically asked, and not always even then. Dad sends regular emails and greeting cards to daughter, with no response. He is not one hundred percent sure child receives this correspondence.
Sorry so long, but the point is, what should Dad do? It seems that there is no recourse for him, since the psych won't communicate, Mom won't communicate, and the court has stated that it won't hear his motions. It's been over three years since this particular saga began, with no end in sight, and dad misses his daughter terribly. Additionally, he now has two new children she has never met, plus the one that was only a year old when she went away, and he hopes that his children can have a relationship.
What to do, what to do?
Thanks...