It is essential to take immediate action in your child custody case as soon as you recognize any form of parental alienation, even the mildest forms. The difficulties in remedying a parental alienation case dramatically increase as the behavior of the obsessed parent escalates. From a legal standpoint, your actions should be swift and direct:
1. It is essential to have a very detailed Parenting Plan approved by the Court so that you have every possible event anticipated, with penalties in place for violations. For the Ultimate Parenting Plan. See related links for the ultimate parenting plan.
2. Document everything:
3. Take your documentation to your family law attorney and tell him or her that you want immediately relief from the court. Often attorneys will want you to wait for 60 to 90 days or longer before they file any documents seeking relief. This could be too late for your children to recover from the acts of parental alienation.
4. Ask for very specific child custody court orders to eliminate wrongful behavior, such as:
5. Make certain the aforementioned court orders have "teeth." You want swift and specific remedies if the order is violated, for example:
6. If the court has the facilities for a "case coordinator" or "case management" ask that this procedure be implemented. Ask that the coordinator have the power to:
7. Continue to return to court with each violation of a court order by the opposing parent. You need to establish right from the beginning, that you are not going to sit back and passively allow this type of behavior to continue. Unless you are consistent in your attach on the inappropriate behavior of the other parent, you will not be taken seriously.
8. Ask for primary custody in each instance in which you return to court. Discuss the fact that the more time the children spend with the obsessive parent, the more likely the parental alienation will worsen to the point that it will be irremediable.
April 25th
Dr- Phil - 2002 Parental Alienation Who's to Blame was released on: USA: 1 November 2013
A child can recover from parental alienation syndrome through therapy and being provided a stable environment. The stable environment should be with people that love the child and will not abandon the child.
Abused children are likely to feel alienated from their parents, but alienation is not itself a form of abuse, it is just a consequence of abuse.
You need to learn about parental alienation syndromesee links
There are lots of things you can do personally to help stop parental alienation, including documenting every instance of alienation and asking for very specific child custody court orders to eliminate wrongful behavior. A sample of the orders to ask for are: · Neither parent will make or allow others to make negative or disparaging comments about the other parent, or the other parent's past or present relationships, family, or friends within hearing distance of the children. · Each parent shall encourage and see that the children exercise their time with the other parent. Children shall exercise their time with each parent regardless of the circumstances, unless the children are ill and have a Doctor's Note to that effect. · Therapy shall commence immediately for the children and the parents to assist in understanding parental alienation and its detrimental impact upon children. It is important to take action right away. Read what you can about parental alienation so that you can be prepared to stop it. Check the internet for sources of information.
You petition the court to modify the custody order.
No, and a motion for contempt and possible change of custody for Parental Alienation should be filed. see links
No as that would be showing disrespect for the court, which is a learned behavior and a condition of parental alienation.
Talk to the guardian ad litem, but it is often evidence of parental alienation syndrome.
yes mr.beaver was
Go To: http://www.flsenate.gov/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=Ch0039/ch0039.htm