Daniel Cooper
Junior Member
Im in Wyoming
Long story short. Children complained to mother that non-custody parent was drinking heavily around them. Non-custodial parent has failed to comply with past custody papers that require him to submit to her clean drug and alcohol screenings before each year before visitation. Out of protection for the kids she hired a good lawyer and petitioned for modification of his visitation rights. In the interim, whilst she awaits a trial date she haven't let the father see the kids out of protection of the kids until he at least shows her those screenings required of him. Father denies he has a drinking problem. Trial date still hasn't happened. Father hasn't really asked for visitation. And then his lawyer ordered emergency hearing demanding immediate visitation.
And then...
The father shows up at his own emergency hearing DRUNK and is promptly kicked out of the court house. Kinda crazy thing to do, I know, but he's a bit deranged, very sociopathic person. Anyhow, his lawyer canceled the hearing, for obvious reasons. The judge remarked that "Well, if he shows up drunk for his own hearing then maybe the mother has a point with supervised visits."
My question:
A) How does this sorta thing affect HIS future in this case? Is this sorta thing as radioactive as it looks?
B) Does this sorta thing drastically improve the chances for a modication from his original visitation to having to go through supervised visits if he wants to see his kids? Again, the mother is complaining that this is exactly the sorta thing she has been fighting against since he's dishonestly trying to see the children while NOT addressing his problem or respecting the original custody papers requiring him to keep up with his problems. And he's shown up drunk at one child's daycare and at the other child's school with at least a police report to establish this behavior at one of those locations. The mother is trying to protect her children and this is the only way she feels like they can since he can get drunk anytime, anywhere.
Curious to see how this kind of thing plays out in the theater of civil courts. Is it really as bad as it sounds? Showing up drunk at your own hearing, I mean. etc.
Long story short. Children complained to mother that non-custody parent was drinking heavily around them. Non-custodial parent has failed to comply with past custody papers that require him to submit to her clean drug and alcohol screenings before each year before visitation. Out of protection for the kids she hired a good lawyer and petitioned for modification of his visitation rights. In the interim, whilst she awaits a trial date she haven't let the father see the kids out of protection of the kids until he at least shows her those screenings required of him. Father denies he has a drinking problem. Trial date still hasn't happened. Father hasn't really asked for visitation. And then his lawyer ordered emergency hearing demanding immediate visitation.
And then...
The father shows up at his own emergency hearing DRUNK and is promptly kicked out of the court house. Kinda crazy thing to do, I know, but he's a bit deranged, very sociopathic person. Anyhow, his lawyer canceled the hearing, for obvious reasons. The judge remarked that "Well, if he shows up drunk for his own hearing then maybe the mother has a point with supervised visits."
My question:
A) How does this sorta thing affect HIS future in this case? Is this sorta thing as radioactive as it looks?
B) Does this sorta thing drastically improve the chances for a modication from his original visitation to having to go through supervised visits if he wants to see his kids? Again, the mother is complaining that this is exactly the sorta thing she has been fighting against since he's dishonestly trying to see the children while NOT addressing his problem or respecting the original custody papers requiring him to keep up with his problems. And he's shown up drunk at one child's daycare and at the other child's school with at least a police report to establish this behavior at one of those locations. The mother is trying to protect her children and this is the only way she feels like they can since he can get drunk anytime, anywhere.
Curious to see how this kind of thing plays out in the theater of civil courts. Is it really as bad as it sounds? Showing up drunk at your own hearing, I mean. etc.
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