on appointing a new Judge in Gorcyca's place since her recusal.
I don't know if this is typical, but it would seem that if nothing else it is supportive of the children stabilizing in their current situation and having time to work through therapy.
My layperson's guess is that the first move by the court will be some sort of case assessment to see which filings are still live and need consideration. By my own count we have Dad's custody filing, Grandma's Next Friend request and whatever responses there have been to these. Still think that the emergency partial lifting of the stay, and the stay itself are now moot. I did a bit of poking, as I recall that somewhere Mom's attorney had started to lay the groundwork for a potential Daubert hearing on the admissibility of evidence relating to parental alienation. I couldn't find it by name in the list of filings since July, so I am thinking it must have been included in something else--I will keep looking.
However, the organized pro-mom forces posting on each and every article on the topic have recently taken to a renewed interest in Gardner (the doc who first used the terminology and researched alienation as a syndrome) bashing and dredging up bits from decades old-decisions finding alienation (or more specifically Parental Alienation Syndrome) as falling outside Daubert or Frye requirements.
Here is a link to a fairly comprehensive summary of case law relating to alienation, both as PAS, and simple PA.
http://www.dvleap.org/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=vCU_jqwlgAI=&tabid=935
From my lay perspective, I do not see a clear indication of how a court today in Michigan might rule. However, I do not personally see any cause to suspect a blanket elimination of five years of clinical findings, culminating in what is likely to be presented as current expert testimony.
At one point, I had hoped that the current situation might tip the balance for Mom in terms of engaging in therapy and making an honest attempt to be able to regain at least a shared custody situation (owing to Dad's change of residence which enables a more typical sharing of residences, time and so forth). More and more I suspect that any honest mental health appraisal of Mom will determine that she cannot be helped by counseling, in terms of her fitness as a parent. This must truly be very difficult for the children, who must be feeling this inability as an abandonment.