Wednesday, May 30, 2012

CRIMINALS AND LAWBREAKERS


Today's post has been contributed by Ray Ferris who provides occasional and always informed and helpful counsel to parents who seek him out for advice to deal with the personal crises they are encountering when dealing with the social service agency known as the Ministry of Children and Family Development. Today he deals with the Justice/Law and this is worth the time to read it.
What is the difference between a criminal and a lawbreaker? Is it just a term, or is there a real difference? Well it seems to me that lawbreaker is a generic term, which applies to anyone who breaks any law, but a criminal must specifically break the criminal law. We know what happens to criminals, because they go to prison, or get fined, or put on probation. Some countries put them to death.

What about all the other laws which are not criminal. Civil law and administrative law? What happens to breakers of these laws and who are typical lawbreakers? Well we know all about speeding tickets and parking fines. We know all about income tax penalties and divorce and custody orders. There can be unpleasant consequences if you fail to pay maintenance or fail to return a child on a court ordered access visit.

Do we find lawbreakers in family court in child protection cases?
We most certainly do and those lawbreakers are not all at the back of the court. A lot of the lawbreakers are social workers and their bosses. There are also plenty of lawbreakers in front of the bar among the various lawyers who make a living out of the Child Family and Community Services Act. But the biggest lawbreakers are right on the bench. Those judges who collude and enable social workers, their lawyers and others to ignore just about every requirement of the act.

The CF&CSA is civil law and it is also administrative law which lays certain responsibilities on people. Unlike other law, they can ignore all those requirements without any fear of consequences. Social workers, lawyers and judges become so nonchalant about those responsibilities that the law may as well not exist. Social workers often fail to serve notice properly, but no matter let us all agree to waive them, they are just a formality. Surely the parents can guess at the order we want. How picky to demand the information in writing. Defence lawyers who fail to demand proper process are colluding at breaking the law. The law requires prompt disclosure of the social workers of their evidence. What is prompt, what is timely? Whatever the social worker says it is. This year, next year, sometime never. Lawyers and judges who do not insist on prompt disclosure are once more in collusion at law breaking. Judges can define in specific terms what is meant by prompt and timely, but they are not likely to do it unless a lawyer presses the issue. So these lawbreakers can ignore every guideline in the act and every firm requirement in the act, without suffering any consequences. Every time the defence counsel fails to read the act and demand disclosure and prompt process, there is collusion at breaking the law. Every time a judge allows lengthy adjournments he or she is colluding at breaking important guidelines in the act.

Are there any consequences? You bet there are. Only the consequences are visited on innocent young children and distraught parents who are helpless at protecting their children against the precarious care of the ministry of children and families. Even if you have fifty to one hundred thousand dollars to spend on a lawyer, it may just evaporate while you get nowhere.

The case of little Ayn raises all these issues. Did Derek's lawyer look up the act and demand prompt disclosure? Did he/she insist on proper notice and hold the ministry to account if they failed to obey the law? The act is clear that no child under five years should be in temporary care for more than one year. Yet judges keep them in temporary care for years. Just look at the Bayne case, where it was nearly four years. Oh that's okay; we just relabelled it as interim custody. When the judge ordered six months temporary, he did not comply with the law. Was he a lawbreaker? What do other readers think?

Ray Ferris retired from a a career with the Ministry of Children and Family Development has been openly critical of Ministry practices and case management for some time. Occasionally I print some of his informed pieces. Ray is the author of 'The Art of Child Protection'. You can purchase it from him by writing to rtferris@telus.net

1 comment:

  1. Ron, when I tried to repost the link to this blog I discovered that it had been marked by FB as "abusive and spamming", so I couldn't do so. I've already sent them a message to take the ban off ASAP. It seems to me that our fight with MCFD and the corrupt legal system started biting their butts, so they employ all dirty tricks at their disposal to at least hamper the impact. FYI, this is not the first time that totally correct and responsible posts or blogs critical of governments or their agents/agencies have been mrked and bloccked in the same fashion. That's a criminal abuse of BC taxpayers' money and plainly fascist.

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