On 2021 Nov 15, Richard Lorman shot his girlfriend, Lindsay Smith, in the head then later shot and killed himself. Weeks before, Smith was denied a permanent restraining order which has led to the NH court system to review their policies and relevant laws.
The problems that led up to this tragic event have existed for years. The review is important, it is being done with a lot of public exposure and involvement.
This page was written to record my written testimony for a public hearing and to record other important references.
My written testimony, Comments of Paula Werme, Esq. (retired) on this Committee's Inquiry reflects a lot of what I have learned during my career and in my retirement. I hope the task force reads it.
It refers to other sources that are even longer but also worth reading:
Still more resources:
Domestic
Violence Rebuttable Presumption: Case Law Update 2018-2020
From the page:
This document contains summaries of published state court decisions of interest related to a rebuttable presumption against awarding sole or joint custody to a parent who has engaged in domestic violence against the other parent. Such provisions have been adopted in some form in 28 states. While most of these summaries are brief, containing only the court's holding and any necessary background or procedural details, a few have been expanded based on their complexity, their uniqueness, or the importance of their holding.
When
courts accept what science rejects: Custody issues concerning the alleged “parental
alienation syndrome”
Unfortunately, the article is paywalled. The abstract:
“Parental alienation syndrome” (PAS) is unscientific and is an affront to children, women who hold the custody of children of separated couples, science, human rights, and the justice system itself. Justice, to be just, should be based on scientifically proven theories and evidence. This article describes investigations carried out to show that two of the principles that underpin PAS are false: That children lie when pressed (alienated in the terminology of PAS), and that the principle that should guide judges' actions for the good of the child should be that for the child to always be in contact with both parents. The results of these investigations show that these two principles are false and advocates the use of truly scientific proceedings for judges to grant custody in case of dispute between parents, as well as for determining the visitation for the noncustodial parent.
Written 2022 Jan 24, last updated 2022 Mar 10.