Canadese rechter maakt korte metten met moedwillige oudervervreemding door moeder.
Judge fines
mother $10,000 for 'alienation'
Kept daughters away from 'good
and loving father'
Cristin Schmitz
CanWest News Service
National Post
Thursday,
January 20, 2005
OTTAWA - An
Ontario woman who poisoned her children's minds against their "good and loving
father" has been fined $10,000 -- and threatened with further fines and imprisonment
-- in what is believed to be the harshest penalty yet imposed by a Canadian court for
"parental alienation." Superior Court Justice Lorna-Lee Snowie of Brampton,
Ont., recently found Nancy Cooper, 52, in civil contempt of court for repeatedly flouting
court orders over the past seven years that required her to facilitate contact between her
three daughters and their father, David Cooper, of Point Clark, Ont. The 53-year-old Air
Canada pilot has not seen or spoken with the two youngest children since 1998, when his
former wife told him to vacate the family home. The girls send occasional e-mails
requesting money. Ms. Cooper, an unemployed registered nurse whose former husband
financially supports her, must immediately pay $10,000 to the Treasurer of Ontario and
faces a further $15,000 fine and 30 days in jail if she fails to encourage and assist her
youngest child, 16, to take part in family counselling aimed at "reintegrating the
father back into his daughter's life," says the decision reported in the next edition
of Lawyers Weekly. "This counselling will provide a safe place for [the teenager] to
work out her feelings and for the [father] to work out his feelings about their
estrangement -- their estrangement is through no fault of either one of them," Judge
Snowie observed. The judge called the mother's behaviour "a travesty" that
deeply wounded her children. The father's lawyer, Paula Bateman of Mississauga, Ont., said
the decision sends a powerful warning to custodial parents who deny or obstruct their
children's right to see their other parent. "You will be dealt with harshly, and
possibly jailed," Ms. Bateman cautioned. "You have a proactive obligation to
facilitate contact when you are the custodial parent." Obstructed access is a problem
affecting thousands of divorced parents -- mostly men -- and their children across Canada.
But monetary and other penalties remain rare. Few access deniers spend more than a few
days in jail. Ms. Bateman and other lawyers said the hefty fine meted out by Judge Snowie
is the highest they had ever seen from a Canadian court. Roger Gallaway, the Liberal MP
for Sarnia, Ont., and co-chair of the recent special joint Senate/House of Commons
committee on custody and access, said courts have been remiss in not handing out stiffer
sanctions when confronted by egregious cases of wrongful access denial, or "parental
alienation" -- a term coined to describe the phenomenon of one parent (usually the
custodial parent) brainwashing the child against the other parent by denigrating and
devaluing that parent. Judge Snowie held that the mother's persistent refusal to comply
with two court orders requiring her to facilitate family counselling, and telephone
contact between the girls and their father, amounted to civil contempt of court. The judge
remarked she might have awarded sole custody to the father -- instead of joint custody --
were it not for the fact the youngest, the only child still at home, is so attached to her
mother and will soon be independent. "I find that [the mother's] sabotaging actions
have been knowing, wilful and deliberate," found the judge. "As a result of
[her] behaviour, the children have little or no relationship with the father who loves
them, who has tried to be a good father, and who has been a good provider throughout their
lives." The girls were nine, 13 and 18 when their parents split up in 1998 after
nearly 25 years of marriage. The eldest, now 25 and married, recently started to see her
father on her own initiative. The judge emphasized all children have a right to a
relationship with both their mother and their father. "There is no evidence before
this court that would indicate that Mr. Cooper was anything but a good father, a loving
father, and father who throughout the last seven years wanted to be involved in any
capacity in his children's lives," wrote Judge Snowie. "He has admirably and
heroically been before this court on at least 15 occasions trying, unsuccessfully, to
obtain access with his children. He still continues valiantly to attempt to have a
relationship with his children." Judge Snowie said despite the "heroic
efforts"of judges, therapists, counsellors and others to reconcile the girls with
their father, their mother "successfully manipulated the situation to sabotage all
contact
Due to a "major depression" that was partly caused by his estrangement from his
daughters, Mr. Cooper has been on disability leave for the past two years from his post as
a captain with Air Canada, says the judgment. He continued to pay combined child and
spousal support of almost $5,000 a month even though his income fell drastically. He also
voluntarily paid $41,300 for the university costs of his two older daughters.
Bron. National Post 2005