SBM
--Goldberg said "I think" the Indonesian authorities will accept an American ruling on this matter. [I suspect at this point he really has no idea.]
I agree.
Problem: how would such an adoption happen? I don't think an American judge can, out of nowhere, order the child to be put up for adoption. So who, with standing, is even going to argue for such a thing?
Kamille said:
This is where they lose me every time. Stella is an American citizen because Indonesia does not allow for a person born there to be granted automatic citizenship if the parents are not Indonesian citizens. At the time of her birth, Stella was an undocumented foreigner in the country. The child of a pair of accused murderers on an expired tourist visa. And shortly after, the child of a pair of convicted murderers. Did no one in any official/legal capacity even suggest that Stella be returned to the US after her birth? Why did the Indonesian authorities have any say in where she was placed and have the authority to give her mother the right to decide to keep her in a prison for two years?
Anyway, so with that in mind, why would the Indonesian authorities have to accept anything with regards to a ruling in an American court regarding an American citizen who is not there on a Visa and is not being detained herself due to a criminal act. IMO, Stella should have been turned over to the American authorities/embassy and deported as soon as she was born. Her parent's visas were long expired and while they were being held in the country due to legal proceedings, there was no reason for Stella to also be held. And the US authorities should have demanded her return and forced their own embassy in the country to make it happen. By not doing that, they have contributed to this poor child just becoming a million dollar pawn.
Obviously this was a first for both countries but the way it was handled, and continues to be handled, is absurd. Why on earth didn't KW apply for guardianship two years ago when she was there at the time of the birth? She tried then to just get HM to hand Stella over. How was that supposed to work? Did she think she could have just gotten on a plane with an undocumented baby and flown home because HM told her it was okay to take her home? Is that all it would have taken for Stella to have been returned to the US, her psycho mother's say so? Would the authorities have allowed that? Does Stella even have an American birth certificate? Passport? Has either document even been applied for? I have to assume that Ms Favia at least was on top of that?
MOO
Im not sure that that can happen either ...
Though we know that lines are blurred with the systems.
so,
Who has the final say on the placement of Stella?
...and as far as I can work out, if Stella's birth was registered in Indonesia - she is Indonesian citizen by territorial birth
- which, I assume, gives Stella the rights of the law under Indonesian citizenship, regardless if her biological parents are not registered citizens or not registered as married.
Would it not be the Indonesian Law that governs what happens to Stella in this case?
I also assume some of this would be dependant on if Stella's birth was registered in Indonesia - which I assume it would have had to have been because she would not be entitled to the civil benefits available under Indonesian Law - such as health care, schooling, and her time staying in jail with her mother

facepalm

.
Depending on how much 'say' the parents have in Stella's welfare and placement after she is taken from the jail, Stella shares Indonesian civil rights (which attaches her with both her U.S parents) - not just her mother, so I assume TS also has a say in the child's future welfare. Prior to 2014, the child shared civil rights only with the mother.
Though I guess the complication is that she has 2 U.S parents and was born in Indonesia making her an Indonesian citizen with U.S connections (possibly dual citizenship)
...and then again, I may have this totally skewed as sometimes the laws are not all that clear to interpretation.