Family Courts Tyrannically Deny Fit
Fathers Their Constitutional Right to
Parent Their Children
by Shane Flait (2010)
Family
courts routinely deny one fit parent –
overwhelming the father- his parental
right to raise his child. They
tyrannically allege a right to deny
father’s fundamental rights since they
do so for ‘the best interest of the
child’.
Such
family court claims are tyrannical and
directly conflict with constitutional
rights and protections – as this article
shows.
Fundamental or
‘Constitutional’ rights are enumerated
in the Bill of Rights, the further
Amendments, and rights raised to that
level by Supreme Court Case law. Supreme
Court case law overrides all lower
jurisdictional laws including family
courts procedures.
The Fourteenth
Amendment prohibits the state from
depriving any person of "life, liberty,
or property (i.e. any fundamental
right), without due process of law." Due
Process Clause "guarantees more than [a]
fair process."Washington v.Glucksberg,
521 U.S. 702, 719 (1997). It includes a
substantive component to the process
that "provides heightened protection
against government interference with
certain fundamental rights and liberty
interests." Id., at 720; see also Reno
v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 301302 (1993).
The Supreme Court consistently upholds
parental right as a fundamental
constitutional right. And that’s the
right to determine what the best
interest of the child shall be.
The Supreme Court
asserted that the ‘liberty’ protected by
the Due Process Clause includes the
right of parents to "establish a home
and bring up children" and "to control
the education of their own." Meyer v.
Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 399, 401 (1923).
So parenting includes both legal and
physical custody of your children.
To deny a parental
right requires constitutional due
process that proves he’s either unfit or
a clear danger to his children - proven
with ‘clear and convincing’ evidence. As
such, Santosky v. Kramer 455 U.S. 745
(1982) emphasized to restrict a
fundamental right of a parent to any
extent, requires a showing of clear and
convincing evidence that serious harm
will come to the child.
Family courts
ignore all constitutional due process
when they daily deny a fit father his
right to physical and legal custody of
his child – a right that every other fit
parent has.
Family Court claims to determining ‘best
interests of children’ over fit fathers’
rights are illegal in a presumably free
republic. Only if there are no fit
parents can the court invoke the ‘best
interest of the child’ doctrine to
assign custody.
In Parham v. J.R. et al 442 U.S. 584
(1979), the Supreme Court declared the
‘best interest of the child’ resides in
the fit parent – not in the state: “Our
constitutional system long ago rejected
any notion that a child is a “the mere
creature of the State” and, on the
contrary, asserted that parents
generally “have the right, coupled with
the high duty, to recognize and prepare
[their children] for additional
obligations.”
In the 1978 case of
Quillon v Walcott, the Supreme
Court ruled: “If a state were to attempt
to force the breakup of a natural
family, over the objection of the
parents and their children, without some
showing of unfitness and for the sole
reason that to do so was thought to be
in the children’s best interest,”
the Due Process Clause would clearly be
violated.
In 2000, the United States Supreme Court
ruled in Troxel v. Granville 530
U.S. 2000: “[S]o long as a parent
adequately cares for his or her children
(i.e. is fit), there will normally be no
reason for the State to inject itself
into the private realm of the family to
further question the ability of that
parent to make the best decisions
concerning the rearing of that parent's
children.”
Under divorce and paternity actions, the
‘equal protection clause’ of the 14th
Amendment, requires that one fit parent
must necessarily retain all of his
fundamental rights to the extent that
the other does. But two disputing
parents can’t both exercise a few
decisions – such as where a child goes
to school simultaneously – but these are
few.
Now the level of
scrutiny required for a family court to
infringe upon fundamental rights of
either parent is "strict scrutiny",
which requires the court to show that
the infringement serves a "compelling
state interest" and that there is no
constitutionally less offensiveway
for the state to satisfy this compelling
interest.
The constitutionally least offensive way
– by far – is an equal partition of time
parenting their child. So, during one’s
parenting time, that parent can control
all decisions about the child which
parenting implies, i.e. education,
religion, medical, etc, as well as the
typical day to day decisions.
The family courts
deny fathers’ fundamental rights to
extort money from him and support a
billion dollar industry based on such
denials. They provably work to the
‘worst interests of the children’