Ok as I said before I can't post the cases I know bc of legal issues but here all you have to do is search google to see parents that loses custody bc being in the service. These may not be adoption cases but they still lost custody and that's wrong.
http://www1.divorcenet.com/bbs/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=228549
here is a dad that didn't win custody but the mom that was on drugs did. yes two sides to every story however they can't all be wrong.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18506417/page/2/
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Iowa Guardsman Mike Grantham thought he was serving the best interests of his children when he arranged for his son and daughter to stay with his mother before reporting for duty in 2002. He had raised Brianna and Jeremy since his 2000 divorce, when ex-wife Tammara turned physical custody over to him.
After mobilizing, Grantham was served with a custody petition from Tammara. A trial judge temporarily placed the children with her. A year later, though Grantham had returned, the judge made Tammara the primary physical custodian.
An
appeals court sided with Grantham, saying: A soldier, who answered our Nations call to defend, lost physical care of his children ... offending our intrinsic sense of right and wrong.
But the Iowa
Supreme Court disagreed, saying Tammara was presently the most effective parent.
Now, Grantham says, his visitation rights mirror those that his ex-wife once had: every other weekend, Wednesdays, and certain holidays Fathers Day, for example.
Being deployed, you lose your armor, he says."
another "
Army reservist Brad Carlson lived in Phoenix with his wife, Bianca, and three kids before deploying to Kuwait in 2003.
A year later, his wife indicated she wanted to end the marriage and remain in Luxembourg, where she had moved the family and where her parents lived.
Carlson filed for divorce in Arizona, and later invoked the Servicemembers Act, but in vain. A Luxembourg court awarded custody to Bianca.
I feel really betrayed, Carlson says"
another
"
She had raised her daughter for six years following the divorce, shuttling to soccer practice and cheerleading, making sure schoolwork was done. Then Lt. Eva Crouch was mobilized with the Kentucky
National Guard, and Sara went to stay with Dad.
A year and a half later, her assignment up, Crouch pulled into her driveway with one thing in mind bringing home the little girl who shared her smile and blue eyes. She dialed her ex and said shed be there the next day to pick Sara up, but his response sent her reeling.
Not without a court order you wont."
"
Within a month, a judge would decide that Sara should stay with her dad. It was, he said, in the best interests of the child.
What happened? Crouch was the legal residential caretaker; this was only supposed to be temporary. What had changed? She wasnt a drug addict, or an alcoholic, or an abusive mother.
Her only misstep, it seems, was answering the call to serve her country."
"
A
federal law called the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act is meant to protect them by staying civil court actions and administrative proceedings during military activation. They cant be evicted. Creditors cant seize their property. Civilian health benefits, if suspended during deployment, must be reinstated.
And yet service members children can be and are being taken from them after they are deployed."
Some family court judges say that determining whats best for a child in a custody case is simply not comparable to deciding civil property disputes and the like; they have ruled that family law trumps the federal law protecting servicemembers.
Even some supporters of the federal law say it should be changed that soldiers should be assured that they can regain custody of children.
Military mothers and fathers speak of birthdays missed, bonds weakened, endless hearings.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18506417//
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The act states: Everything will be put on hold until Im able to get back. It doesnt happen, he says. I found out the hard way."