Tuesday, March 31, 2009

CALL TO ACTION - "Duncan and Jack Law" PLEASE FORWARD

 

LinkedIn

Myra Spearman has sent you a message.

Date: 3/31/2009

Subject: CALL TO ACTION - PLEASE FORWARD

Hello Everyone:
Today, I spoke with Illinois State Representative, Robert Pritchard. He is a long time proponent of abating domestic and family abuse. He needs to hear from everyone. I asked him to author legislation called, "Duncan and Jack Law" which would only allow "Supervised Visits" to non-custodial parents who have either
1). Violated Orders of Protection and/or
2). Received a Guilty Conviction stemming from domestic and or family violence.
Before ordering visitation, a judge needs to make sure that there was no abuse in the home. If abuse is determined, the non-custodial parent should either be granted Supervised Visitation or No Visitation Privileges at all. Please email him and let him know that you're in support of this legislation or similar legislation.
bob@pritchardstaterep.com

 
If you have something better to add please feel free... anything helps...
Duncan and Jack are the 2 little children that lost their lives this week at the hand of their father. You can read the story at:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/ news/local/chi-missing-boys-dead-31-mar31, 0,3316104.story

View/reply to this message

Don't want to receive e-mail notifications? Adjust your message settings.

© 2009, LinkedIn Corporation

Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

The Jana Mackey Distinguished Lecture Series - Press Release

For Immediate Release March 6, 2009
For More Information: Kathy Rose-Mockry (785) 864-3552

 

KU establishes Jana Mackey Distinguished Lecture Series
President of NOW- Kim Gandy, to give first lecture

www.1100torches.org

 updatebanner

 

  violence-diamond
LAWRENCE—The University of Kansas announces the creation of the annual Jana Mackey Distinguished Lecture Series, in memory of late women’s rights activist and KU student Jana Lynne Mackey. Kim Gandy, president of the National Organization for Women, will give the inaugural lecture for the series on Wednesday, April 15 at 7:30 p.m. at the Dole Institute of Politics on the University of Kansas campus.


"Jana dedicated her life to pursuing social justice and equality for women," said Kathy Rose-Mockry, Program Director of the Emily Taylor Women’s Resource Center at KU.  "There is no better way to honor Jana’s life’s work than by continuing to raise awareness and encourage others to ‘carry the torch’ related to those issues Jana was most passionate about. We are delighted to have Kim Gandy serve as our inaugural speaker since she shares a commitment to the success of women and their belief in the power of action to bring about social justice."


Gandy is currently serving her second term as President of the National Organization for Women (NOW), first elected in 2001 and re-elected in 2005. She has served as a national member of NOW since 1987 and in state and local positions since 1973. As president, Gandy serves as spokeswoman for the causes of NOW including advancing reproductive freedom, promoting diversity, ending violence against women, ensuring economic justice, and achieving equality for women.


MackDIANE GASPER-O'BRIEN / Hays Daily News
Curt Brungardt, stepfather of Jana Mackey, talks about carrying on Mackey's torch at her memorial service last July in Lawrence. 
ey, 25, was found dead in her ex-boyfriend’s home on July 3, 2008. At KU, Mackey was a second year law student and an active member of the Commission on the Status of Women. Dedicated to promoting a pro-women’s agenda, Mackey volunteered for GaDuGi SafeCenter, as a lobbyist in Kansas for NOW, and on several political campaigns. She received a bachelor’s degree in women’s studies from KU in the spring of 2004.  

 
The Jana Mackey Distinguished Lecture Series is sponsored by the following KU entities: the Emily Taylor Women’s Resource Center; School of Law; Department of Political Science; Dole Institute of Politics; Student Bar Association; Student Involvement and Leadership Center; Commission on the Status of Women; Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies; and the Sabatini Multicultural Resource Center.

The Lecture Series also receives the generous support of the following community entities: the Jana Mackey family; GaDuGi SafeCenter; Women’s Transitional Care Services; and the Kansas chapter of the National Organization for Women.
The program is free and open to the public. Seating is available on a first-come, first-served basis. The Dole Institute is located on KU’s west campus, next to the Lied Center.

Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,

,,,,,,,,,,,,

,,,,,,,,,,,,,

,,,,,,,,,,,

,,,,,,,,,,

,,,,,

Illinois Family Court Failure Leads to Deaths of Two More Children

Illinois Family Court Failure Leads to Deaths of Two More Children

Yesterday, March 30, 2009, 9:22:54 PM | batteredmomslosecustody

The mother of two young boys found dead over the weekend said she feels the judicial system failed to protect her and her children.

Amy Leichtenberg’s worst fears came true when her two boys, Jack and Duncan, were found dead from an apparent double murder-suicide committed by her ex-husband, Michael Connelly. Amy had desperately tried to protect her boys, but the judicial system would NOT LISTEN to her and sent her children to their deaths. The judge, the father’s lawyer, and all others who failed to protect these children need to be made accountable for yet another tragedy that should have been easily prevented had the mother’s warnings been heeded.

Mom and Town React To Tragic Ending

There is frustration and shock to this tragic ending with the deaths of Jack and Duncan Connolly. But, the boys’ mom did believe the worst could happen when she spoke to us two days after her boys went missing. That’s why she’s saying the judicial system failed her.

Watch Video

This tragedy had all the familiar red flags with a history of violence, on-going litigation, threats and, of course, the demands for UNSUPERVISED VISITATION and MORE TIME with the children.

Any mother who has been in this situation where the marriage ended due to domestic violence, and there are children from the marriage should know that this is not uncommon. These tragedies have happened before, and there were warning signs in those cases too. In fact, there is a definite pattern of Maternal Deprivation as a continuation of domestic abuse, where the kids are either taken away from the mom in a custody battle, usually with claims by the abuser of “parental alienation”, or either the kids or the mother are killed - either way the mother/child bonds are severed as a continuation of domestic abuse.

In a recent tragedy in Australia, Darcey Freeman was thrown off a bridge by her father after the courts failed to listen to the warnings of her mother. For more on this see: Dad Throws Daughter, Darcey Freeman, Off Bridge

The Castillo case in Maryland was similar in that the mother’s warnings were not heeded, she was not even granted a permanent restraining order. The mom in that case, Amy Castill0, had been punished for not sending her children to visitation. Then she was forced to send her children to unsupervised visitation and their father drowned all three children in a bathtub. In that case, he made similar warnings to that it would be the worst thing he could do to kill her kids and have her live without them. Two evaluators in that case declared that the father was not dangerous. For more on this see this post: In battles for custody, children often pawns

In the Camacho case in Florida, a psychologist ignored warnings signs of domestic violence and death threats when protection could and should have been given. The mother had a protective order. The children had unsupervised visitation with their father. The father stabbed the daughter in the back, and then burned the house down, killing himself and the children. After the fact the doctor claimed he saw paranoia. See post: Doctor Saw Paranoia Before Fire

Why isn’t there any domestic violence protocol being implemented? (Could it be because backwards parental alienation theories of Richard Gardner’s are being used to blame mothers who try to protect their chidren?) How about lethality assessments in these cases? Why isn’t the information from studies on murder-suicides being used to prevent these tragedies? Certain characteristics of domestic abuse/violence, dependency, and depression have been shown to be common in these cases where the father who was a batterer kills either the mother, the children, or both, frequently followed by suicide. For more on this see: Will He Kill?

Hopefully, this will be used to stop the judicial system from allowing fraudulent theories that bash mothers, blame the victims from being used in the courts, and ban any and all ways that domestic violence victims are re-victimized. How many more will die before this terrible treatment of women and children in the courts finally ends?

The failure to help protect the children, and to help the mother protect the children didn’t end with the courts. The Leroy police failed to issue an Amber Alert for more than a day. Finally the sheriff’s department issued the alert. This is similar to the failure of the Colorado police department to help Jessica Gonzales when her children failed to be returned, and were killed by her ex-husband. She filed a complaint with the IACHR and had hearings on it in October of 2008. Unfortunatley, it seems that there have been no improvements for the human rights of women and children since her testimony. For more on this see: Jessica Gonzales v. USA 

Dead Boys’ Mom: My Heart is Broken Missing brothers, father found dead

By PEGGY CASSIDY and ZACH CHRISTMAN

Updated 5:47 PM CDT, Mon, Mar 30, 2009

The mother of two young boys found dead over the weekend said she feels the judicial system failed to protect her and her children.

Connolly Boys’ Mother: I Don’t Know What He’ll Do

Watch Video

The two boys were reported missing in an Amber Alert earlier this month.

The bodies of the 9-year-old Duncan G. Connolly and his 7-year-old brother Jack D. Connolly, were found in the back seat of their father’s car in a secluded, remote area of Putman County, police said.  The body of their father, Michael Connolly, was found about 60 yards away.  At a news conference Monday afternoon, the Putnam County sheriff said they were found off Taylor Road, between Hennepin and Henry, Ill.

Authorities said the father apparently killed the boys in a double murder-suicide.

Michael Connolly was said to have been depressed, despondent and “unstable” when he disappeared with the boys following a custodial visit.

The boys’ mother and Michael Connolly’s ex-wife, Amy Leichtenberg, had said Connolly was scheduled to drop the boys off at the LeRoy Police Department on Sunday, March 8, but never showed up.  She had an order of protection against Michael Connolly because he had been abusive, she said.  Leichtenberg issued a statement that a friend read at the news conference, while choking back tears:

“My heart is broken and there are no words that express my pain. No parent should have to bury their babies. Duncan and Jack, Mommy loves you to the heavens and back. I feel that the judicial system failed me. I pray that the courts listen to the warnings from other parents like me. Thank you everyone for your prayers and support. The family respectfully requests that we have privacy as we cope with this horrible tragedy. Please keep our family and friends in your hearts and prayers.”

Leichtenberg had made numerous attempts to try to stop her ex-husband from having unsupervised visits with their children. And over the past several weeks, she told anyone who would listen that she felt her children’s lives were in jeopardy, and that her ex-husband was suicidal.

McLean County Sheriff Mike Emery was himself nearly overcome with emotion during the news conference Monday, pausing several times while he described the scene where the boys’ bodies were found.

“Today, Amy, her family, friends and many people are overwhelmed by sadness and pain,” Emery said. “That’s such a horrible crime that has been committed.”

After the Amber Alert was issued, a wave of support spread out over the Internet, with a lot of sites for missing children posting the Connolly story.  A Facebook group was created for the Connolly boys, where photos of them with their father and his car were posted.  On Monday, the Facebook group was filling up with comments of sympathy for the boys’ mother.

Related Stories

The cause of death has not been released.  The McLean County Coroner’s Office was performing an autopsy Monday afternoon.

—end of article—

Sheriffs: Ill. boys, father died in murder-suicide

By DAVID MERCER – 3 hours ago

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP) — Two young boys missing for three weeks were found dead in the back seat of their father’s car, apparently killed by their dad before he took his own life, authorities said Monday.

A 911 call led authorities in Putnam County to a remote spot Sunday night where they found 9-year-old Duncan Connolly and his 7-year-old brother, Jack. They discovered the body of 40-year-old Michael Connolly about 60 yards away.

The boys, from the small town of Leroy, were the subject of a national search after their father failed to return them to their mother on March 8 following a weekend custody visit. The couple divorced in 2006 and Connolly only recently had been allowed to keep his sons overnight.

Autopsies were being conducted Monday, but McLean County Sheriff Mike Emery, whose department investigated the boys’ disappearance, and Putnam County Sheriff Kevin Doyle said the case was being treated as a double homicide-suicide.

Neither would discuss details of the case at a news conference Monday, including how the boys and their father died, how long they had been dead or why they ended up in a rural location about 60 miles north of where they lived. The sheriffs said they would respect the family’s wishes in withholding details.

“Our hearts and prayers now are with Jack, Duncan and (their mother) Amy Leichtenberg,” Emery said, his voice wavering.

Leichtenberg issued a statement expressing her own heartbreak.

“No parent should have to bury their babies,” she said. “Duncan and Jack, Mommy loves you to the heavens and back.”

Leichtenberg also blamed the courts for her sons’ deaths.

“I feel that the judicial system failed me,” she said, without elaborating. “I pray that the courts listen to the warnings from other parents like me.”

McLean County State’s Attorney Bill Yoder said he was unsure exactly what Leichtenberg was referring to, but that his office had recently filed four “criminal actions” against Connolly and his visitation rights had been under discussion.

Connolly was to have dropped the boys off at the police department in Leroy after picking them up there on March 6, Emery said.

A court order had barred Connolly from contact with Leichtenberg, according to her attorney, Helen Ogar. The order also initially prevented Connolly from seeing his sons.

Connolly was allowed to start keeping his children overnight without supervision in December, Ogar said.

Connolly never hurt Leichtenberg or their sons but scared her because he called often, sometimes threatening suicide and other times trying to intimidate her or persuade her to come back to him, Ogar said.

Police investigating the boys’ disappearance said Connolly had a history of gambling problems and had been treated for depression. He worked as a pharmaceutical sales representative, making a “good living,” Ogar said.

Before the weekend during which the boys disappeared, Leichtenberg did not want to turn them over to their father, her lawyer said.

She was contacted by the Leroy police and told that she had to send them, that it was an arrestable offense (if she did not),” Ogar said.

She said she told Leichtenberg that failure to give the boys to their father was a civil matter, not criminal, and advised her not to turn them over if she didn’t want to.

Authorities did not issue an Amber Alert in the case until the evening of March 8, roughly a day after they were due back to their mother. Leroy police did not issue the alert — eventually issued by the McLean County Sheriff’s Department — because they did not believe the boys were in danger, Ogar said.

An officer who answered the phone at the Leroy Police Department on Monday directed questions to Chief Gordon Beck, who he said was out of town.

Attorney Todd Roseberry, who represented Connolly over violations of the court order barring contact with Leichtenberg, said he was stunned by the three deaths.

“The Michael Connolly I knew was very affectionate and loved his kids,” Roseberry said, adding that he hadn’t spoken with Connolly since last summer.

A spokesman for Leichtenberg said Monday that if she ever doubted her sons would come home, she didn’t show it.

“I spoke to her last evening. She was in downtown Davenport, Iowa, handing out fliers and putting up posters,” family friend Brad MacAfee said. “Every interaction I had with her, she had all the hope in the world she was going to see those boys.”

—end of article—

Anonymums: Message to The Family Courts and Father Lobby Groups

Hello Family Courts and father lobby groups. We have been monitoring your alliances, your views promoting pedophilia within your laws, the destruction of motherhood, the suppression of children and their mothers. We are aware of the children and women that are killed because you ordered it. We are aware of the parents who are treated like criminals because you were negligent in protecting them. We know of the lies you spout everytime the media catches a child killed by a court order. With the help of your underpaid court staff, we have been able to monitor your actions closely. We know of the innocent mothers laying in jail cells because they were against child abuse. Your malevolent actions for the sake of profit will not go unnoticed. Anonymums has decided that your organization must be destroyed. For the best interests of the children, for the good of mothers, fathers and grandparents and for the rest of the community. We shall expel you from funding and systematically dismantle your powers until your organization ceases to function. We acknowledge you as a serious opponent. Your methods, hypocrisy and exploitation will be circulated widely. You cannot hide as we are everywhere internally and externally. Like that of anonymous, we are indestructible but we are of our own origin, ideas and directions. No doubt you will attempt to suppress and distort our intentions, but the evidence we hold is beyond your power. We are above your law and adhere to human rights of which you are violating. We hold you in contempt for every life you order as cheap. The lives of women and children are not yours to own, nor control. Silence is control Control is for the unintelligent. That is why we are beyond you... We are anonymums




more about "Anonymums: Message to The Family Cour...", posted with vodpod

Judges Accused of Jailing Kids for Cash

Judges Accused of Jailing Kids for Cash

With Corrupt Judges, Kids' Lives Hang in the Balance

By FRANK MASTROPOLO
March 27, 2009


12-Year-Old Spent Two Years in Jail watch video here: http://www.abcnews.go.com/2020/story?id=7178686&page=1

Luzerne County sits in the heart of northeastern Pennsylvania; Wilkes-Barre is the county seat, a hardscrabble, blue-collar city struggling in this latest recession.

Young kids sent away for minor offenses by corrupt Pa. judge.

People there were shocked in January when federal prosecutors announced that respected county judges Mark Ciavarella and Michael Conahan had pleaded guilty to tax evasion and honest services fraud, the result of a lengthy investigation by the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI. Yesterday the Pa. State Supreme Court overturned hundreds of convictions of low-level offenders, ruling that all juveniles who had appeared in Ciavarella's courtroom without lawyers between 2003 and 2008 had not been adequately informed when they waived their right to counsel.

It's not over, however, for all of the other kids Ciavarella sent to jail. Chief Justice Ronald Castille said in a statement that Thursday's decision wasn't intended to be "a quick fix."

"It's going to take some time, but the Supreme Court is committed to righting whatever wrong was perpetrated on Luzerne's juveniles and their families," he said

Related

WATCH: Kids Jailed for Cash?

WATCH: Kids Jailed for Cash?

Caught on Tape: Bribes, Public Corruption

"They sold their oath of offices to the highest bidders and engaged in ongoing schemes to defraud the public of honest services that were expected from them," Deron Roberts, chief of the FBI's Scranton office, said at a late January news conference announcing the charges.

The arrests shed light on a mystery in Luzerne County: Why were so many kids getting sent directly to juvenile detention after seeing Judge Ciavarella in his Wilkes-Barre juvenile court? And why were those kids sent away in such a rush?

'I Had No Clue What to Say'

Eric Stefanski had never been in trouble before he found himself in front of Ciavarella, who took office in 1996.

"I was 12 years old when I got locked up. I had no clue what to say when he asked me how do I plead," Eric told "20/20" correspondent Jim Avila.

"I was 12 years old. I didn't know too much about the court system."

His offense? He went joyriding with his mom's car and ran over a barrier, smashing the undercarriage. No one was hurt, not even Eric, but in order get her insurance to pay for the damage, his mom, Linda Donovan, had to file a police report. Donovan even thought an appearance before a judge would be good for her son, give him a little scare. She wasn't prepared for what happened when Eric came before Ciavarella.

"He read me my charges and said, 'How do you plead?' And I didn't know what to say, so I looked at my mom, and I guess she didn't know I was looking, and I said, 'Guilty,'" Eric said.

"That's when I turned around, I looked at my mom and she started crying."

Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

“Special Report: Riggs Explains Why She Took Her Kids.” Kansas City

The Case of Shirley Riggs

They jailed mom for protecting her children from abuse.

The children, all four of them, are currently in Foster homes-

 

“We Love you Mom”

http://www.onemothersvoice.org/Links.html

[vodpod id=ExternalVideo.803124&w=425&h=350&fv=%26rel%3D0%26border%3D0%26]

 


Special Report: http://www.kctv5.com/news/18288843/detail.html 

MORE COVERAGE

  • IMAGES: Shirley Riggs Shares Family Pictures
  • VIDEO: Mother Agrees To No Contact With Kids In Guilty Plea
  • VIDEO: Shirley Riggs Speaks From Jail
  • PDF: Independence Police Statement
  • LINK: Operationmorningstar.org

    By Carrie K. Hutchens on February 2nd, 2009

    Shirley Riggs

    Shirley Riggs

    Shirley Riggs is accused of unlawfully taking her children and leaving the state triggering an Amber Alert, which is detailed in KCTV5’s “Special Report: Riggs Explains Why She Took Her Kids.

    The report says in part, “On Sept. 20, during an unsupervised visit with her children at her mother’s house, Riggs piled her four children into a van and took off in the middle of the night. They drove to Washington state and spent two weeks in hiding.”

    According to the report, Riggs alleges she originally left her husband in 2004 due to abusive behavior and does believe her husband acted inappropriately in the presence of the children. It appears she also believes there was inappropriate behavior between husband and child(ren). Whether this is true or not — the allegations have neither been confirmed nor have they been dismissed as unsubstantiated — why is the father accused and the mother in jail?

    KCTV5 reports, “On April 24, 2007, Jackson County Judge Stephen Nixon ordered Shirley Riggs to appear in court in person to discuss her husband’s divorce filing.

    “But I was in Oregon. I had no way to get to Missouri,” Riggs said.

    Not only didn’t Riggs show up, but her attorney quit that same day, so she had no representation. At that meeting, Nixon ordered the children be placed in the temporary custody of their paternal grandparents.”

    It appears that Nixon also continued to allow the husband unsupervised visitation.

    What is wrong with this picture?

    It is easy for a court to order a person to appear, but it isn’t always reasonable to expect the person to be able to do so, especially when that person is in an entirely different state. Is that what happened here?

    Did the judge put Riggs in a no-win situation? Did he tell her, or make it clear, that the hearing was in regard to custody? Did he take into consideration that her attorney quit and she had no representation, before he turned custody of her children over to others and permitted unsupervised visits with someone accused of acting inappropriately with, and around, the children?

    KCTV5 further reports, “Despite the sexual misconduct allegations against Raymond Riggs, Nixon continued to allow him unsupervised overnight visits with his kids, which is why Shirley said she took them this summer.

    “‘It seemed like all the abuse was being covered up and ignored,’ Riggs said.”

    Was it? Is it? Is this still another case of the system not working? Another case where there are little or no “fail-safes” in place to prevent injustice in the name of justice?

    “I didn’t really have an exact plan. I just thought someone would listen to me outside the state of Missouri,” Riggs said to KCTV5.

    Any action being taken by law enforcement authorities with regards to the allegations against Raymond are unclear.  The Independence Police Department did release this statement to KCTV5. 

    Perhaps Riggs wasn’t right to take the law into her own hands, but she does deserve to be listened to and her concerns earnestly investigated and addressed. The system must perform to the highest degree of standards and be held to even higher standards of accountability. This is, after all, a family at risk of injustice.

    This is the case of Shirley Riggs, but more importantly — this is the case of the children she took flight with. May justice be theirs.

    Carrie Hutchens is a former law enforcement officer and a freelance writer who is active in fighting against the death culture movement and the injustices within the judicial and law enforcement systems.

    Subscribe to this feedDiscuss on NewsvineAdd to Mixx!Email thisTwit This!CrossFeed ThisSphere: Related ContentTechnorati LinksSave to del.icio.usDigg This!Share on FacebookStumble It!1 comment on this itemAdd to Windows Live FavoritesSubmit to RedditGoogle Bookmark ThisFark ItAdd to Yahoo MyWeb2Buzz Up!

    Shirley Riggs Shares Family Pictures - Photos - KCTV Kansas City

     

    http://www.kctv5.com/news/18288843/detail.html

    JACKSON COUNTY, Mo. -- A mother accused of kidnapping her children and sparking an Amber Alert spoke with KCTV5's Matt Stewart from jail.

    Shirley Riggs said she had a good reason for kidnapping her four children. She said she wanted to protect them from her husband, their father, amid allegations of abuse.

    Riggs said she feels the justice system was wrong to take her children away from her. "I feel like I did what any other mother would have done," she said.

    Clad in an orange jumpsuit, Riggs sat in the Jackson County Jail with a stack of court documents that detail her story. She claims she is misunderstood, that the legal system is against her and that the proof is in those documents.

     

    "I was kind of at the end of my rope, not knowing what to do, where to go, where to find help for my kids," Riggs said.

    On Sept. 20, during an unsupervised visit with her children at her mother's house, Riggs piled her four children into a van and took off in the middle of the night. They drove to Washington state and spent two weeks in hiding.

    "I didn't really have an exact plan. I just thought someone would listen to me outside the state of Missouri," Riggs said.

    Independence police issued an Amber Alert and the media splashed their faces on television sets across the nation.

    When an employee at a motel in Olympia recognized Riggs' face, she called police, who arrested Riggs and sent the kids back to Missouri.

    "After I was in jail for a couple days, I kind of thought, 'It's time to start fighting again,'" Riggs said.

    Riggs said she has been fighting for her children for the past four years, beginning in the summer of 2004, when she left her husband, Raymond, claiming he was abusive toward her.

    She moved with the kids from Missouri to New Mexico and then to Oregon.

    Riggs also alleged that Ray Riggs acted sexually inappropriately around their children. She said three separate therapists who interviewed the children believe it to be true. The children, she said, told the therapists their father watched porn in front of them and walked around naked. Riggs said that's why she kept taking the kids, to protect them.

    "It was quite obvious, not just me to me but also to the therapist, that my children wanted no contact with their father," Riggs said.

    Raymond Riggs filed for divorce in November 2006 and shortly after that, a custody battle began. Raymond Riggs declined an interview request, but his attorney spoke on his behalf.

    Attorney Philip Zuspan said, "A lot of what Shirley Riggs has alleged is not true."

    Zuspan said Raymond has always complied with investigators and has never been charged with any sex crimes against his children. He said Raymond Riggs loves his kids and wants to be a part of their lives.

    "It is consuming to him. Every waking moment for the last couple of years, the thing on Raymond Riggs' mind is getting his children back," Zuspan said.

    On April 24, 2007, Jackson County Judge Stephen Nixon ordered Shirley Riggs to appear in court in person to discuss her husband's divorce filing.

    "But I was in Oregon. I had no way to get to Missouri," Riggs said.

    Not only didn't Riggs show up, but her attorney quit that same day, so she had no representation. At that meeting, Nixon ordered the children be placed in the temporary custody of their paternal grandparents.

    "There was no notice that custody was going to be discussed that day," Riggs said.

    KCTV5 News reporter Matt Stewart had retired Johnson County Judge Larry McClain look over the paperwork in the case. Judge McClain presided over domestic law cases for 19 years.

    "It seemed like kind of a drastic measure to me," McClain said.

    While McClain did not say Nixon made the wrong decision, he did admit he would have handled it differently.

    "Perhaps if I were in his shoes, I would have sent her a notice that I'm rescheduling that case management order, and she had 30 days to contact the court and if she did not do so, custody would be changed," McClain said.

    When Stewart asked Nixon why he gave away custody that day, an aide from his office wrote, "Judge Nixon cannot comply with your request because to do so would clearly violate his obligation not to discuss any pending case."

    Despite the sexual misconduct allegations against Raymond Riggs, Nixon continued to allow him unsupervised overnight visits with his kids, which is why Shirley said she took them this summer.

    "It seemed like all the abuse was being covered up and ignored," Riggs said.

    As Riggs awaits her February trial, she said she knows she may never see her children again, but she remains hopeful she will one day regain custody of them.

    "I know they need me. They need me now, they'll need me when this is over," Riggs said.

    Riggs' children are currently in foster care.

    Riggs and her kids are part Cherokee Indian. The Cherokee Nation is in the process of trying to get involved in the case to see if they can reunite Riggs and her kids through federal law.

    Independence police told KCTV5 News they are no longer investigating Raymond Riggs. They released a statement Monday saying they have closed the case.

    Copyright 2008 by KCTV5.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

  • Sunday, March 29, 2009

    One Mothers Voice

    This is my daughter. At the time she was filming this I was being arrested for fleeing the state to protect my children. An amber alert had been issued out of the state of Missouri because an attorney I had fired (who was angry at me for firing her) called the police and told them my children might be in danger with me. There is no evidence AT ALL to suggest I would ever hurt my children.
    There is so much more to this story than what people realize. I wish I could tell my childrens story and my story but there is a gag order on this case and I am afraid I risk going to jail if I say too much.
    I wish I could get my side of the story in front of the judge, but even that seems to be nearly impossible.
    Please rate this video and pass it on to others.
    Thank you.




    more about "One Mothers Voice", posted with vodpod

    Want to find a crooked Judge? Just call the Courthouse~!~

    How do you find a crooked Judge in Canada or the US?

    You just call the courthouse

    civilliberties

    The stupidity that runs amok within the circles of FR groups never cease to amaze me (or my blog stats!)

    batteredmomslosecustody

    An upcoming symposium is planned in March of 2009 to train 2000 more psychologists and lawyers to commit this fraud in court. To check out the website google Canadian Symposium on Parental Alienation - don’t want to give free publicity by linking. You can check out the video below to see how seriously this fraudulent theory is being propagandized. It has been appalling how the “Cottage Industry” of family law has culminated in this horrible scam which is really a profiteering fraud that is being pushed as some legitimate legal tactic. Sorry, but Parental Alienation Syndrome (PAS) is not a valid, medically accepted disease. It is the sick philosophy of one man, the Pro-Pedophilia Dr. Richard Gardner. Every person using this hypothetical theory is supporting the fraudulent perverse theories of a pedophile supporter. Everyone who has morals and actually cares about the well-being of children needs to be aware that PAS is a shield for child abusers.

    It is very lucrative for lawyers and therapists because the money to be made is in defense of criminals. Victims only cost the state money trying to defend them and protect the public, but defending child abusers - hey - there is real money to be made in that. What is totally disregarded in these cases is that there is a spouse and child/ren who apparently don’t like the way they were treated by the person they don’t want to associate with. Since batterers who abuse their spouse are more than twice as likely to abuse their children, when these so-called professionals claim the child has not been abused, they have NO RIGHT to discount what the child is saying whatsoever. So the whole theory of PAS is based on the person named as the abuser by a child and/or by a protective parent claiming that the people who say they are victims are lying. This is total crap. Why? Because if they weren’t abusive it would just be easier to stay together? This is just one of many reasons this theory is faulty. The reactions of an abused child are claimed to be the result of the protective parent’s actions rather than a reaction to the person they name as the abuser. It is Orwell’s 1984 coming true.

    The symposium claims to have the leading authorities on PAS. One of these so-called leading authorities is J. Michael Bone - the UNLICENSED mental health professional from Florida. What happened to his license? He had multiple ethics complaints against him for using this fraudulent and biased theory to perpetrate custody change fraud. These horrible evaluations that children are subjected to are with the sole intent of discrediting whatever the child and custodial parent say. It is similar to what a rape victim has to go through when testifying against there abuser, only these poor children cannot get away from these unethical people. They have infiltrated the courts and have cross referral relationships all over calling it collaborative law. It really should be called corruption, collusion, and cronyism.

    Another couple of speakers at the symposium are Pamela Stuart-Mills Hoch, and M.A., Bob Hoch, M.A. of the Rachel Foundation, which is currently the subject of a lawsuit for the following:

    The Children were mentally and emotionally abused by Pamela Stuart-Mills Hoch, Robert Hoch and Dr. Jack Ferrell.

    The Children were also threatened on more than one occasion. Specifically, the Children were told that they would not be able to leave Texas nor would they be able to see their mother unless they cooperated with the Rachel Foundation’s “reunification” program.The Rachel Foundation, Pamela Stuart-Mills Hoch, Robert Hoch and Dr. Jack Ferrell applied numerous circumspect methodologies in their evaluation and “treatment” of the Children and have used their influence to purposefully harm Plaintiff, acting outside the scope of any implicit or explicit permission granted Defendants by Plaintiff or any court or other agency.

    As a result of Defendants’ misconduct, Plaintiff has suffered considerable emotional distress.

    Additionally, The Rachel Foundation employed people of dubious character, with Jack Ferrell who has two arrests, and Dr. Barry Bricklin who was charged by the FTC for fraudulent claims. There are also Ethics complaints against therapists at the Rachel Foundation with the psychology board.

    Anyone having information on any of the other speakers, please post a comment…

    Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

    MO. Stacey Lannert –freed after 20 years for-killing her sexually abusive father







    http://abcnews.go.com/2020

    VIDEO: Woman's Life Sentence Commuted

    Woman's Life Sentence Commuted
    Stacey Lannert shot her father, then spent 18 years in prison.

     

     

    12:15 AM CST on Friday, January 16, 2009

    Supporters of the release of Stacey Lannert will welcome the news, after a meeting of the Missouri Parole and Probation Board earlier this week, Stacey is due to walk free from the W.E.R.R.D.C. in Vandalia at approx. 9:00am this morning.
    On Monday Stacey will be a guest of Good Morning America.
    Stacey will be promoting a new doll designed by herself and close friend Christine Peanick.
    In Stacey's words "I am very excited about getting this doll out there. The doll is very unique in that allows young children the opportunity to express themselves without judgment. Children are often intimidated or afraid to talk to adults about their problems and/or fears. Talking about something is the first step in the healing process. That is how I overcame my fears. I wasn’t offered an outlet for my feelings, but I want to ensure that other children are given that opportunity, even if it is through a doll. At least they will voice it, which in turn, may give them the courage needed to talk to someone else about it."
    Any persons interested in purchasing a doll may do so by either visiting their website, soon to be available online, or expressing their interest by emailing Christine Peanick.
    Any persons wishing to assist Stacey with financial suppport upon her release are welcome to forward donations to :
    Stacey Lannert Fund
    P.O. Box 142767
    St Louis, MO. 63114

    10:05 PM CST on Saturday, January 10, 2009

    JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) -- Gov. Matt Blunt has commuted the prison sentences of two women who killed the men who had abused them.
    "After an exhaustive review of the facts in both cases, I am commuting the sentences of Stacey Lannert and Charity Carey, who suffered extensive abuse before they took action against the men who raped them and subjected them to other horrible physical and emotional abuse," Blunt said in a statement.
    Lannert has been in custody for 18 years after killing her father in 1990 when she was 18. Blunt says Lannert was sexually abused by her father for about nine years, from the time she was 8 until his death.
    While the abuse issue was raised during her trial, the jury was told not to consider that as a mitigating factor. She was convicted of first-degree murder and armed criminal action and sentenced to life without parole.
    Four jurors signed affidavits saying they thought the sentence was too harsh, and Lt. Tom Schulte, the first officer to question Lannert after the slaying, told the governor's office that he strongly supported the commutation.
    "The night this happened, she was 18, alone, and I told her I'd be three for her," Schulte said. "It is 18 years later and I'm still there for her."
    The commutation reduces her sentence to 20 years, making her eligible for immediate conditional release. Blunt says he supports that release being granted.
    Lannert initially was offered a 15-year sentence as part of a plea bargain, but she refused to sign it because she would have had to say that she killed her dad for his money.
    Her case was brought to the attention of former Gov. Bob Holden at the end of his tenure in 2005 when people carried posters and pictures at the Capitol asking him to show her mercy, but Holden took no action.

    Outgoing Governor Matt Blunt is to be congratulated for his courage and integrity in making the decision. His decision not only paves the way for Stacey to enjoy a productful life after years of abuse and incarceration, but also reflects his genuine belief in the plight of all victims of abuse.

    Woman's Life Sentence Commuted

    Stacey Lannert shot her father, then spent 18 years in prison.

    More 20/20 Stories

    Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

    Louisiana: Lawyer Brutally Murdered by her Husband

     

    http://www.thecelebritycafe.com/features/26105.html

    Lawyer Brutally Murdered
    28-Mar-2009
    Written by: Laura Anderson


    Attorney Chiquita Tate was stabbed 38 times, allegedly by her husband.
    The attorney was brutally slain, allegedly at the hands of her husband, according to CNN. The couple lived in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and had been married for 14½ months when the murder occurred.


    Tate was considered dedicated to justice and an impassioned defense attorney who failed to defend herself. A college friend of Tale, T. J. Crawford, reflected on her memory in an interview with CNN reporter Craig Johnson.


    “She just had an attachment to justice and doing what’s right by people. She was always very serious about that,” said Crawford.
    Greg Harris, 37, is being charged with second-degree murder and illegal use of a dangerous weapon. His bond was set at $500,000. According to Harris’s attorney, Lewis Unglesby, Harris is innocent.


    “Greg Harris by all accounts . . . is innocent. I don’t know anybody that thinks he did it, except the police. There’s nothing in his background. He has cooperated completely with the police; he’s signed everything they’ve asked him to sign. He’s let them search his house, his car,” said Unglesby.
    The murder took place on Feb. 20. The police soon after discovered that there was a warrant out for Harris’s arrest due to a battery-domestic violence case that was brought against him more than a year earlier.
    The couple's history of violence is what led the police to suspect Harris.

    Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

    ,,,,,,,,,

    Saturday, March 28, 2009

    The Low Road

     

    The Low Road

     

    What can they do to you?

    Whatever they want.

    They can set you up,

    they can bust you,

    they can break your fingers,

    they can burn your brain with electricity,

    blur you with drugs till you can’t walk, can’t remember,

    they can take your child,

    wall up your lover.

    They can do anything

    you can’t stop them from doing.

    How can you stop them?

    Alone, you can fight,

    you can refuse,

    you can take what revenge you can

    but they roll over you.

    But two people fighting back to back can cut through a mob,

    a snake-dancing file can break a cordon,

    an army can meet an army.

    Two people can keep each other sane,

    can give support, conviction, love, massage, hope, sex.

    Three people are a delegation, a committee, a wedge.

    With four you can play bridge and start an organization.

    With six you can rent a whole house,

    eat pie for dinner with no seconds,

    and hold a fund raising party.

    A dozen make a demonstration.

    A hundred fill a hall.

    A thousand have solidarity and your own newsletter;

    ten thousand, power and your own paper;

    a hundred thousand, your own media;

    ten million, your own country.

    It goes on one at a time.

    It starts when you care to act.

    It starts when you do it again,

    after they said no,

    it starts when you say We

    and know who you mean, and each day,

    you mean one more.

    -Marge Piercy

    Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

    Wednesday, March 25, 2009

    Misfire in Maryland: Guns accounted for more than half the deaths resulting from domestic violence

    Misfire in Maryland

    Arming abuse victims is the wrong way to curb domestic violence.

    Tuesday, March 24, 2009; Page A12

    THE PROBLEM: Guns accounted for more than half of the deaths resulting from domestic violence in Maryland from June 2007 to July 2008. The solution, according to some lawmakers: more guns. The Maryland Senate may vote as early as today on an amendment that would make it easier for victims of domestic violence to obtain guns. In theory, empowering victims could discourage potential abusers. In practice, adding guns to an already combustible situation is likely to lead to more violence. The Senate should reject the amendment.

    The provision undermines two potentially life-saving bills that would make it more difficult for suspected abusers to carry firearms. One bill would allow judges to strip abuse suspects who were subject to temporary restraining orders of the right to carry firearms. The other bill would bar abuse suspects who were subject to final restraining orders from possessing guns. In past years, similar legislation passed the Senate but died in the House Judiciary Committee. When the House passed the bills last week, free of amendments that would mar their effectiveness, it seemed that there were few obstacles left.

     

    Enter Sens. C. Anthony Muse (D-Prince George's) and Alex X. Mooney (R-Frederick). The two lawmakers, members of the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee, proposed an amendment that would expedite the process by which domestic abuse victims could obtain firearms. The committee approved the provision, which was tacked on to the bill that deals with final protective orders, by a 6 to 5 vote.

     

    Victims' advocates and law enforcement officers have serious concerns about the amendment. They worry that an abuser could discover a firearm hidden by a victim or wrestle away a gun during a dispute. It takes considerable training, police officials note, to be able to effectively wield a gun in self-defense. There's another wrinkle: An abuser could misleadingly claim to be a victim of domestic violence and file for a protective order. This would rush a gun into the hands of someone capable of violence. And police officers called to domestic disputes could find themselves in greater danger.

    Maybe backers of the amendment have seen one Jodie Foster film too many, but, in the real world, victims don't usually resolve dangerous situations with gunfire. Strong legislation to keep guns away from abusers, not easy-to-obtain guns, is the best protection for victims.

    Technorati Tags: ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,