
Newark protesters rally against family court system for alleged
bias against battered women
by
Paul Brubaker/The Star-Ledger
Monday April 27, 2009, 6:55 PM
More than 50 people
rallied in Newark for reform in the family court system with
chants, protest signs and speeches alleging there is a national
crisis of judges awarding child custody to violent, even
sexually abusive, fathers.
But Essex County's top judge defended the local family courts as
a meticulously careful system that acts in the best interests of
children, even if it means terminating someone's parental
rights. Protesters today demonstrated in front of the
Wilentz Justice Complex against judges awarding child custody to
violent and/or sexually abusive fathers.
In front of the Wilentz Justice Complex on Washington Street,
which houses Essex County's family courts, speakers targeted the
system as being biased against battered women and holding
archaic attitudes that domestic violence and sexual abuse were
private problems.
"A mother's basic instinct is to protect her children. She
should not be punished for it," said Maretta Short of East
Orange, president of the state's chapter of the National
Organization for Women.
"In the last 30 years, every institution in this society has
changed its views toward domestic violence," said Evan Stark, a
professor at Rutgers University's School of Public Affairs and
Administration. "Only in the family court do the obsolete
beliefs that were discredited everywhere else in society still
prevail."
Stark said part of the problem is that state laws require judges
to detail their decisions for not awarding child custody to an
abusive parent. The result is that judges avoid the issue
by not admitting evidence of domestic abuse into the hearings,
Stark said.
Later, Superior Court Assignment Judge Patricia Costello
disputed Stark's assessment of family court judges.
"They don't punt on the tough issues to avoid tough decisions,"
Costello said. "They make tough decisions. When the
parents can't decide who raises the children, the judge makes
the call."
All judges are bound by the rules of evidence and their rulings
must be based on careful consideration and backed by detailed
documentation, the judge said. All the while, the family
court judge must remain dispassionate during proceedings that
are often highly emotional, she added.
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