Jailed Father on Hunger Strike to
Protest Denial of His Parental and Other
Constitutional Rights
by Shane Flait (2009)
Dr. Amir
Sanjari, was divorce after a 17 year
marriage. No he’s destitute and in jail.
He’s a UK Citizen who was originally
invited to the United States to Stony
Brook University, New York for a
research position.
Initially,
Sanjari and his ex-wife shared equal
custody of their children and had
similar incomes. Nevertheless he was
ordered to pay $1,000 a month in child
support. Such a payment is the first
sign that something is seriously amiss.
But when he
lost his job and applied for a reduction
in ‘child support’, it was denied. This
denial is also not unusual – wrong, but
not unusual. His ability in the
recession to get a job to cover the
outrageous child support payment faded.
It brought on hardships for him.
Eventually his ex-wife won sole custody
of the children, he says, by lying about
him while he was out of the country on
vacation.
Sanjari, a
competent man, was not idle though. He
learned the law to fight for his
children and his rights to see them and
care for them on his own. He fought in
the Indiana family court, its district
court, and eventually in federal courts.
He had to go on the run to stay out of
jail for not paying what he couldn’t pay
– a common circumstance for fathers
under such ‘child extortion’ orders. He
spent time helping other parents with
their family court cases while he was on
the run.
Unfortunately,
though well-versed in constitutional and
federal legal processes, it became
apparent that he’d get no due process to
protect rights clearly denied to him.
For the child support he couldn’t pay,
he’s been sent to jail.
Amir is now on
a hunger strike to try to expose his
plight and that of other fathers under
this tyrannical anti-father system that
separates fathers from their children
and turn them into criminals.
Sanjari hasn't
had any solid food since March 26, the
day he was arrested. Once trim at 150
lbs, he’s now down to 115. He drinks
some nutritional supplements with
potassium and sodium to keep his brain
functioning normally.
I stress that the constitutional denials
Sanjari has had to face that set him up
for his tribulations are not unusual for
fit fathers under family court actions.
Yet Amir’s personal sacrifice to garner
some public notice is honorable.
His denials are unjustified. He knows it
now and many other decent fathers know
it. And his efforts will in large part
be suppressed by both the courts and all
those who profit by the present day
denial of fathers rights.
Fathers Rights means basic
constitutional rights for a fit father
to maintain physical and legal custody
of his children to the same extent of a
'fit' mother - and then, of course, all
other fundamental rights due a free
person.
The denial of a fit father's rights
begin in a state's county family court
where his children are essentially
kidnapped from him without the required
constitutional due process to prove
unfitness nor assigning him equal
physical and legal custody of his
children.
The family court simply usurps all his
rights by declaring that it will assign
custody to one parent and make the other
parent pay whatever it assigns as 'child
support'. And why? Because the court
claims it can deny fundamental rights
based on it ‘alleged’ right to determine
what’s in the 'best interests of
children’ who have fit parents.
It's an absurd claim when both parents
are fit and willing to parent fully or
at least equally to the other. It's
absurd because it's unconstitutional.
But since, collectively, a multibillion
dollar industry has grown up around the
denial of one parent’s rights because of
the enormous benefits that can then
accrue to them.
Benefits include child support,
collection fees, lawyers’ fees, GAL
fees, course fees, extracted directly
from fathers. But then there are
additional benefits from enormous
government money transfer to family
courts systems, state revenue agencies,
domestic violence agencies and
organizations, and federal revenue
collections too.
Who supports this extortion industry?
Just follow the money. And with all that
money comes plenty of propaganda to
justify what happens based on extraneous
reasons and vilifying men or fathers -
but always steering clear of the clear
constitutional rights violations that
this system depends upon.
Unfortunately even the federal courts
are afraid to over-rule the
unconstitutional family court procedures
and orders as is their duty when states’
procedures violate the U.S.
Constitution. There’s just too much
money and political push to make waves
against the ‘divorce and domestic
violence industry’.
That’s what Amir Sanjari found out – as
other have too. What will you do when
it’s your turn to go to court?
Shane Flait is a writer and educator