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Opinion
Debtor's
Prison is Alive and Well
More
Should Go to Jail in Protest
December
21, 2001
By Mark Charalambous
Those concerned with the civil liberty implications
of war tribunals should refocus their attention to matters judicial
closer to home. New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis decries the
potential for panels of as few as three jurists who have been empowered
to determine life and death.
But
in our family courts, a single justice acts as judge, jury, and
executioner in matters that, while not usually as final, can often
be perceived as worse than death for those on the losing side.
John
Flaherty, citizen, father and law-abiding physics professor, presently
receives his mail at the Plymouth County House of Correction where
he is serving a five-month sentence for contempt of court.
Middlesex
Probate & Family Court Judge Beverly Boorstein sentenced him
for refusing to pay an alleged child support arrearage, which supposedly
goes back six years but was manufactured at a hearing just several
months ago.
Apparently
we have become desensitized to incarcerating men in what should
rightfully be called "debtor's prison." Indeed, the ending
of debtor's prison can be considered a milestone on humanity's path
to the free society. But debtor's prison is alive and well,
functioning on a daily basis in our nation's divorce courts, which
have become virtual feminist tribunals prosecuting fathers for crimes
of "the patriarchy."
Jailed
Without Trial
John Flaherty was sentenced to jail October 1 without a trial.
Judge Boorstein didn't even bother to write a Finding of Fact. But
Flaherty is not your average non-custodial father. Since the legal
travails ensuing from the breakdown of his marriage began, he has
made a second career out of
learning the law and teaching other non-custodial fathers how to
defend themselves. Without the “Finding,” he was able to forestall
the jail sentence for several weeks until Boorstein complied with
an Appeals court order to produce "detailed findings."
Such
is the brazen attitude of judges who don't even bother to provide
the appearance of due process in their prosecution of fathers, until
forced to do so.
The
Flaherty case docket is not for the timid. It has more twists and
turns than a David Mamet thriller. Though he is confident that his
appeal of the sentence will succeed, that trial won't come before
the expiration of his sentence. Unlike defendants for other crimes
who are typically freed on
probation before the full sentence is completed, Flaherty expects
to serve the full five months. Non-payment of child support, like
the absurd "no-contact" violations of domestic abuse protection
orders, is a gender crime.
Because
of the feminization of the courts, such "crimes" are treated
more seriously than conventional ones.
For
robbery, aggravated assault, homicide, and perhaps even flying airplanes
into buildings, defendants are assumed innocent until proven guilty,
provided legal counsel at taxpayer expense, and given every consideration
to guarantee that their civil rights aren't violated in the process
of ascertaining their guilt. Non-custodial fathers should be so
lucky.
Worse
Than Racial Profiling
Before September 11, the hottest issue for the self-appointed social-justice
watchdogs was racial profiling. Completely ignored is the far more
pervasive and institutionalized gender-profiling in the application
of domestic relations law. But those of the chattering class only
recognize injustice
where it's politically correct to do so.
Parents
who fail to comply with a court order are held to two different
standards based solely on their sex. Women are not jailed for domestic
transgressions -- men are.
In
identical situations, justice takes a predictably different course
for female defendants. Can anyone conceive of a father who murdered
his five children being afforded sympathy from any quarter, as has
Andrea Yates from the National Organization of Women?
Three
decades of feminization have so warped our expectations that no
one blinks an eye when judges turn to female plaintiffs in child
support cases and actually ask them if they want their ex-husbands
jailed.
But
regardless of the corruption of justice in divorce courts, what
about the ethical questions of non-payment of child support? Is
it appropriate to jail non-custodial parents for willful failure
to pay?
Perhaps
reasonable people can disagree on what to do with fathers who intentionally
abandon their children. But when we are considering involved, loving
fathers who raised and provided for their children when the family
was intact and wish to continue having a meaningful parental relationship
with their children, we need a reality check.
The
idea that such fathers should have their children forcibly taken
away from them, often with access to them severely restricted or
terminated, as well as being criminalized in the process, and that
they should then be forced to pay exorbitant amounts of so-called
"child support" to the mother, is simply perverse.
The
Massachusetts Child Support Guideline provides for the highest awards
in the nation. Under the Guideline, child support has become an
entitlement for women -- an incentive for single motherhood. The
Guideline provides for up to 40% of the non-custodial father's gross
income to be transferred to the mother with not a shred of accountability,
not from the mother nor from the Department of Revenue, which now
attaches wages by default.
More
Fathers Should Go to Jail
Everyone knows some poor guy who is paying a ridiculous amount
of money each week to some woman who doesn't even let him see his
children. The child support regime in Massachusetts is responsible
for much injustice and suffering, all done in "the best interests
of the children."
Whose
best interests are really served when women turn their children
against their fathers, while bleeding them for every penny they
can milk out of them? Do the children benefit? And what message
is being delivered to these children?
Girls
are being taught that men can be easily manipulated with the complicity
of the government.
And
what's the message for boys? Considering their reeducation by feminists
(of both sexes) in the classroom to disdain their own masculinity,
it should come as no surprise that what they see happening to their
fathers serves as a powerful lesson in their emasculation.
Fathers
who believe that they are doing the right thing by abiding by their
outrageous child support orders are not helping their children.
They are validating the government bean-counters' definition of
"fatherhood," which promotes single-parent maternal households
-- the most dangerous environment for children. It causes the destruction
of the father-child relationship and ultimately undermines the biological
nuclear family itself. This harms not only their own children, but
also all children and by extension society.
It is not only acceptable for non-custodial fathers
to follow Flaherty's example and resist the child support regime even
at the expense of their own freedom, it is their true child support
obligation.
Mark Charalambous
is one of the founders of the Fatherhood Coalition.
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