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My cousin's ex wife is currently out of jail on bond. She is in a lot of
trouble and is expected to go to prison for a long time. Her parents are suing him for visitation rights. We are afraid that the mother will
be there during the visitation. This is not in the best interest of the child because the mother has already burned her head with a cigarette once. We are afraid she may go so far as to kidnap the little girl and sell her just to get back at her ex husband. The judge in this matter has been on the mother's side all along. The only reason my cousin has custody in the first place is because his ex wife failed 6 court appointed drug tests. It looks to me like the first one should have caused her to lose custody of the child. Do you think the judge will be fair in this matter? Her parents have lied many times to my cousin about their relationship with their daughter. I think it will be dangerous for the child to be around them.

2006-12-07 23:16:13 · 5 answers · asked by Spacey 2 in Family & Relationships Marriage & Divorce

5 answers

the grandparents should only be allowed supervised visitation, especially if the child's mother is living with her parents or spends a large quantity of time there. Is ACS involved? they seem to be stricter on parents, and after 6 failed drug tests the mother really shouldn't have contact with the child until she can committ to sobriety. you should appeal to the courts and communicate your concerns, ultimately they are also looking for what is best for the child and if you can somehow prove that the childs' mother may have access to the child, or even worse harm her during a grandparent visit then you should stipulate you would only allow such a thing to occur with court supervision. depending on the age range of the grandparents you can also say you are worried they would not have the ability to fight off the daughter should she come around and want to take her child with her. have you attempted to get a restraining order on the mother since the cigarette incident? go to legal aid office and see what they can do for you. in most cases they choose to represent the child so if you can prove you have a more loving and healthy home for the child they may help you in court. good luck to you.

2006-12-07 23:23:05 · answer #1 · answered by cami 4 · 0 0

The grandparents do have visitation rights..
Offer them supervised visitation while the mother is out of jail once a month and when she is in jail, offer them an overnight weekend once a month.
Try to keep it out of the courts as much as possible.

2006-12-07 23:20:29 · answer #2 · answered by evil_nykki 3 · 0 0

My cousin went via a matching concern. checklist the telephone calls whenever you talk to them or call them to objective to establish a visitation. which will coach which you have been making an attempt, and once you're a physically powerful father and have not have been given something to cover, you will no longer have a topic

2016-10-14 06:27:48 · answer #3 · answered by juart 4 · 0 0

You can make them have supervised visitation. Where the grandparents could come over to your house to visit the kids for a couple hours.

2006-12-07 23:19:53 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you can request a differant judge..

2006-12-07 23:21:34 · answer #5 · answered by LokoLobo 6 · 0 0

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