Mothers Abducting Children

Hidden Girls’ Great-Grandmother Ready For Jail




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italiangirls_400_17r6170-17r6172The great-grandmother of four sisters at the centre of a bitter international custody dispute says she would rather end up in jail than reveal their whereabouts.

A Brisbane judge on Wednesday ordered the girls’ grandmother, great-grandmother and aunt to attend court on Friday to answer questions under oath about where the girls are hiding.

The girls disappeared earlier this week to avoid being returned to Italy to live with their father.

Their great-grandmother, who is hiding them, says no-one knows where she and the children are and she would not front court on Friday.

“If the judge throws me in jail, I’ll live with it,” she told the Seven Network.

“I have no respect whatsoever for the justice system.


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Abusive Father or Parental Alienation?




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Editor: Please treat the below article with a grain of salt. In my opinion this is a clear case of parental alienation, vilifying the father in the children’s eyes just so the mother can secure full custody. I find it extraordinary that the Family Court and the Department of Communities and Child Safety would force children into the custody of a genuinely abusive father. It would have been great for the Courier Mail to have exercised balanced reporting rather than falling for the same old tired stigma of the bad father wanted contact with his children just so he can abuse them. This is another example of the entrenched anti-father bias in the mainstream media in this country. This story below is so unbalanced and in my opinion, deceitful, that it would leave the likes of Caroline Overington and Adele Horin utterly green with envy.

FOUR Sunshine Coast sisters in hiding with their 70-year-old great-grandmother to avoid flying to Italy with an abusive and mentally unstable father have written emotional letters begging their dad to leave them alone.

But the father, his lawyers, the Family Court, and the state Department of Communities and Child Safety show no signs of backing down and are using police to hunt the girls.


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FREE legal assistance for parents of abducted children




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internation-child-abduction-assistanceFREE legal assistance will be available to parents who are dealing with the abduction of a child from Australia.

The federal government has reached an agreement for new funding with the International Social Services (ISS) to provide the new service.

ISS already provides counselling and mediation services which are funded by the Attorney-General’s Department.

Federal Attorney-General Nicola Roxon said the service is designed to provide practical support to parents in distressing circumstances.

“We want to make it as straightforward as possible for parents to get the assistance they need when dealing with the abduction of their children from Australia,” Ms Roxon said in a statement.


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Three-year journey ends after abducted boy and his mother caught and sent home




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internation-child-abduction-by-womenA BRITISH mother abducted her six-year-old son and spent three years country-hopping through Asia before settling in Melbourne, where she was finally taken to court and ordered to return home.

According to a Family Court judgment published this month, the mother and father of the boy were in the midst of a custody dispute when the mother said she was taking their son on a two-week trip to the Philippines to visit his sick grandmother. They never returned.

A court order seeking information about the trip went unanswered and, several months later, an English judge found that the child – referred to in court documents as ”B” – had been unlawfully removed.


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Mum pleads guilty in boy-behind-wall case




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Shannon Wilfong, Boy Behind Wall, Walks Free, Double standardsA US woman who authorities say hid her young son, often in a crawl space, for nearly two years as part of a custody dispute has been ordered to spend two years on probation without more jail time.

Shannon Wilfong, 32, pleaded guilty yesterday to five misdemeanours, including obstructing a police officer.

Wilfong was sentenced to $US1500 ($1470) in fines and 30 days in jail – a judge credited her with time served – on that count and fines of $US100 on each of four counts of unlawful interference with child visitation.

Wilfong’s mother, Diane Dobbs, also pleaded guilty to obstruction and escaped additional jail time when the judge credited her with the 12 days she’d already been behind bars. Dobbs, 53, was fined $US1000.

A prosecutor said the case-closing plea deals came with the blessing of the boy’s father, Michael Chekevdia, Wilfong’s one-time boyfriend.


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Child Abductions a Nightmare for left-behind Parents




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TWO fathers who experienced the “nightmare” of having their sons taken from Australia by former partners have urged the federal government to make the act a crime.

Lauchlan Leishman and Ken Thompson fronted a Senate committee in Canberra today, arguing that the system surrounding international child abductions needs a desperate overhaul.

Mr Leishman, whose son was taken out of the country in 2008 and has not been returned, labelled it a “long, painful and exhaustive process” that had come at great financial cost.


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Father sick of waiting for ‘child abduction’ action




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Transcript

Lauchlan-Leishman-international-child-abductionALI MOORE, PRESENTER: Unlike the US and the UK, Australia has no criminal law against parental child abduction. Instead, Australia relies on international co-operation to try to get children back.

But that hasn’t helped Lauchlan Leishman. Almost three years ago, his son was removed from Australia by his former wife without his consent. Lauchlan Leishman hasn’t seen his son since. He says it’s proof the system is broken.

A Senate inquiry is currently considering whether more can be done to return abducted children. It’s due to report back to the Government at the end of October, but Lauchlan Leishman says he’s tired of waiting.

Michael Atkin reports.

MICHAEL ATKIN, REPORTER: Lauchlan Leishman fell hard for Gina Fargnoli, a beautiful classical pianist. After a whirlwind romance, they married in June 2003.

LAUCHLAN LEISHMAN, FATHER: We both liked travelling, talking and reading books and we thought we could have a good, solid relationship based on an intellectual thing, I suppose.

MICHAEL ATKIN: Gina became pregnant. They named their baby boy Cameron. But while they were celebrating the birth, according to Lauchlan, cracks began to appear in his relationship and his two other children became an issue.

LAUCHLAN LEISHMAN: She started saying things to me like, ‘You can’t see your other two children. Forget all your friends that you’ve made up to point in your life. It’s now just you, Cameron and I’.

At International Missing Children’s Day he confronted the Attorney-General, Robert McClelland. “His words to me in front of my friend and the Minister for Home Affairs, Brendan O’Connor, was, ‘I will get your file out and get back to you’. I never heard from him again.”

MICHAEL ATKIN: In 2006 they divorced. Young Cameron lived with his mother and Lauchlan visited regularly. Then Gina moved from Noosa to Sydney. But despite the distance, Lauchlan Leishman continued to visit Cameron once a month.

But that all changed in September 2008 when he called to plan a weekend outing.

LAUCHLAN LEISHMAN: The phone was disconnected. The mobile wasn’t answering. So I rang the agent that she was letting from and he said, yeah, she broke the lease last week and she’s gone.

MICHAEL ATKIN: Gina had mentioned plans to take their son to Italy and Lauchlan had raised concerns. But he never thought Gina would take Cameron overseas and vanish without a trace.

It violated a Family Court order requiring one month’s written notice of any intention to travel with Cameron and a copy of a return plane ticket.

LAUCHLAN LEISHMAN: There was never any domestic violence. There has been nothing that she’s – could put up to say that she took him out of Australia because I’m an evil person or something wrong with me.

MICHAEL ATKIN: The Family Court has now granted him full custody. His estranged wife and son are on an international airport watch list and an Interpol yellow notice for missing children has been issued.

He’s also engaged the help of the Australian Federal Police and the Attorney-General’s Department.

In 2009, a private detective tracked Gina to her birthplace, Zimbabwe. But just when investigators were getting close, a major roadblock loomed.

LAUCHLAN LEISHMAN: When I first met Gina, she was working for the then opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, who is the current prime minister of Zimbabwe. When the private detective was trying to track Gina down in Zimbabwe, Mugabe’s heavies – that’s the only word to use – came round to their office and said, ‘Why are you harassing this woman?’

MICHAEL ATKIN: Lauchlan Leishman believes Gina Fargnoli is being protected by powerful interests in Zimbabwe. She has multiple passports and has been able to travel extensively. Now Lauchlan Leishman wants the Australian Government to do more.

At International Missing Children’s Day last year, he confronted the Attorney-General, Robert McClelland.

LAUCHLAN LEISHMAN: His words to me in front of my friend and the Minister for Home Affairs, Brendan O’Connor, was, ‘I will get your file out and get back to you’. I never heard from him again.

MICHAEL ATKIN: Robert McClelland says he asked his department to look into Lauchlan Leishman’s case.

ROBERT MCLELLAND, ATTORNEY-GENERAL: I’m satisfied that my department is taking all effective action that they possibly can.

MICHAEL ATKIN: This included contacting Zimbabwean authorities and offering to ignore alleged breaches of the Family Law Act by Gina Fargnoli if she immediately returned Cameron to Australia.

The Attorney-General said this was one of the few options available to the Government.

ROBERT MCLELLAND: We don’t have any international law enforcement authority. We cannot send a team of AFP officers into another country to remove a child or another person. We just simply cannot do that.

She started saying things to me like, ‘You can’t see your other two children.

MICHAEL ATKIN: Lauchlan Leishman’s case is not a one-off. Last year, 125 children were wrongly removed from Australia. 74 have been returned.

Michael Nicholls is an expert in international child abduction law. He says The Hague Convention is effective in most cases.

MICHAEL NICHOLLS, CHILD ABDUCTION LEGAL EXPERT: The 1980 Hague Abduction Convention is widely regarded as being one of the successful international instruments for preventing and deterring international child abduction.

MICHAEL ATKIN: Both Australia and Zimbabwe are signatories, but Zimbabwe struggles to enforce it.

MICHAEL NICHOLLS: There are 85 contracting states to this convention and almost inevitably they vary in their ability to apply it.

MICHAEL ATKIN: International child abduction is not currently a criminal offence in Australia, but is in the US and UK.

MICHAEL NICHOLLS: The advantage of criminalising the abduction is that you can engage international assistance through Interpol and you can seek the recovery of the child through the mechanism of extradition.

MICHAEL ATKIN: At the Attorney-General’s request, the Family Law Council recently considered whether international child abduction should be made a criminal offence. However, while it did recommend some changes to the law, it advised against criminalisation.

ROBERT MCLELLAND: We need to be careful in sending a message which, yes, potentially has some power as a disincentive, that we don’t actually make it more difficult to have children returned, and in particular to cause a situation which is likely to drive the parent who has removed the child further underground.

MICHAEL ATKIN: But Lauchlan Leishman says the law should change.

LAUCHLAN LEISHMAN: It might make people think twice about actually doing the act if it’s illegal. At the moment, it’s not even a slap on the wrist.

MICHAEL ATKIN: At his Cairns house, Lauchlan Leishman waits. It’s almost three years since he last saw Cameron.

LAUCHLAN LEISHMAN: That heart-wrenching: it’s impossible to describe. It’s – you know, what could I say to Cameron if I can see him? You know, I mean, just that I love him.

ALI MOORE: Michael Atkin reporting. And Lateline contacted Gina Fargnoli by phone, email and social media to request an interview. Ms Fargnoli has not taken up the offer.

Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Broadcast: 13/06/2011

Reporter: Michael Atkin

http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/content/2011/s3242880.htm

 

Mother arrested for savagely bashing her 16 month old child



www.f4e.com.au

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toddler-in-hospital-after-being-bashed-by-motherA MOTHER was arrested yesterday after allegedly savagely bashing her 16-month-old son.

The child’s frantic father telephoned police to report the sustained assault.

Police said the 23-year-old woman disappeared with the injured boy for more than a day.

The child was in care last night after being treated in hospital.

The mother beat up the infant at her home in Van Senden Ave, Alice Springs, on Monday evening.

The child’s frantic father telephoned police to report the sustained assault.

The 31-year-old father called police just after 5.30pm to say the attack was under way.

He told police the mother had hit the boy over the head several times with a full can of soft drink before pulling him out of his pram by his shoulder.

She then allegedly picked up the toddler by one of his legs and slammed him onto the ground three times.

The woman then again held him upside down by the leg and slammed him into a metal fence before holding his head under her arm and punching him in the head.

The woman had fled with the boy by the time officers arrived at the home.

She then picked up the toddler by one of his legs and slammed him onto the ground three times.

Police searched intensively for the mother and son throughout Alice Springs on Tuesday and eventually found them back at the Van Senden Ave property just after 4am yesterday.

The mother was arrested and the child taken to Alice Springs Hospital.

The woman was expected to be charged late last night.

http://www.ntnews.com.au/article/2011/06/16/240881_ntnews.html

 

Abducted Children – another form of child abuse?



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Is it simply a co-incidence that 7 out of 8 (possibly 8 out of 8 ) of those who have abducted their children as reported on this website are the mothers?

Is this not just another form of child abuse that is all too often ignored by child abuse authorities, statistics and reports? I think so.


Under the Family Law Act the Family Court of Australia can, when a child is missing, lift restrictions that otherwise stop the names of people involved in family law proceedings from being published. This is done specifically to locate a child.

For missing children to be listed on this site a judicial officer must have made an order permitting names and photographs to be released to the public in an effort to help find the child.
 

If a child is missing you should seek urgent legal advice.

List of missing children

http://www.familylawcourts.gov.au/wps/wcm/connect/FLC/Home/Missing+Children/Family+Court+of+Australia+Missing+Children/

Dad, son reunite after Europe cycle search



www.f4e.com.au

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ken-andrew-thompson Six-year-old Andrew Thompson is set to return home to Australia almost three years after his mother ran away with him, prompting his father’s desperate search.

Former NSW deputy fire chief Ken Thompson retired from his job to cycle 6500km across Europe in a bid to find Andrew, who was taken overseas in April 2008.

Andrew and his mum, Melinda Stratton, were finally found living in Amsterdam more than two years later, following a tip-off, and sparking a protracted legal battle.

This week, the Netherlands Hague Court granted Mr Thompson the right to take his son home.

"Under this order, Ken and Andrew recently left the Netherlands and went to another location, where they await further travel arrangements to be finalised," reads a statement issued on Mr Thompson’s behalf.

"No further information will be provided by Ken until he has brought his son safely home."

Mr Thompson gave an undertaking to the Dutch court that he would not speak to the press in the lead-up to the issuing of the court order, and hopes to continue to keep the media at a distance, especially from his son.

He hopes the Australian media will respect Andrew’s privacy and let him "merge quietly back into the life that he lost and to move forward", the statement says.

Mr Thompson, who labelled the whole process "exhausting" for both himself and his son, is expected to be back in the country before the start of the school term.

Ms Stratton, currently in custody, has been fighting an extradition order to Australia since late December.

She argued that she took Andrew overseas to protect him from his father, who she says abused their son.

Mr Thompson has repeatedly denied the claim and has expressed concerns about his estranged wife’s mental health.

Despite what charges she faces over abducting her son, it is understood she will continue to fight for custody, having sacked her Australian lawyers last week to engage new council.

Mr Thompson last year said he did not want his wife to go to jail and even raised the possibility of reconciling with her.

"Throughout this whole ordeal I have never said: `I hate my wife’," he told ABC Television.

"What I’ve said is: `The woman I married and had a child with has done something wrong’.
"Whether we can get back together, I don’t know."

 

http://au.news.yahoo.com/latest/a/-/latest/8695190/dad-son-reunite-after-europe-cycle-search/

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