Kaine got the RO and the divorce filed prior to Terri being served with either. She had no chance to contest before the RO was assigned.
Reading through the RO, the only evidence seems to be Kaine's hand-written statement that LE gave him reason to believe the statements he made in the document (that Terri kidnapped his son and tried to hire someone to murder him) were true.
It is after that which this thread addresses why she didn't contest it once served.
Isn't that standard procedure? I am asking, as I would assume that is the way it works. You file the papers first, then they are served on the other party. It is then up to the other party to contest, no? If so, Terri chose not to contest.
Right. But Donjeta's question had to do with why Terri didn't contest the RO as it was in front of the judge. At least, that is what I was responding to in my reply.
As I recall, Kaine had left the house on the 26th and Terri was served on the 28th.
I'm not sure what is meant by "assigned". I posted a long post with the process outlined in the post. I'll do it again a bit shorter: 1. An emergency hearing is held. That's when the RO application is filed. The accused may have received a short amount of notice or none at all. 2. At the emergency hearing, the judge decides based on the application, and, if the accused shows up, based on anything the accused submits after quickly reading the application, whether or not to grant the RO on a temporary basis. 3. If the judge grants the RO, one of two things happens: a) the judge automatically sets a hearing date for the parties to come to and litigate the RO request, which will happen after the accused is served with the RO application, or; b) No hearing is set and the accused is given 30 days after service of the RO to request a hearing date if he or she wishes to contest the RO. If they choose not to request a hearing, the "temporary" orders issued become "permanent", (i.e. they will last for one year).