On July 1, 2009, I received a decision on one of the more interesting cases I have worked on since embarking on my legal career. Â The case started out as a custody case in Juvenile Court, but quickly spiraled into a full-scale federal trial; and subsequently, an appeal in the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Â It’s safe to say that this was not your typical custody case. Â What made this case different, among other things, was that the family had moved to Ohio from Israel and the mother had returned to Israel. Â While in Israel, she decided to pursue custody and filed a Petition for the return of the minor child under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction, claiming that our client, the child’s father, had kidnapped the child and wrongfully retained him here in the United States instead of allowing him to return to Israel.
The Hague Convention was ratified in 1980 and signed by the United States in 1986. Â The primary purpose of the Hague Convention is to protect children from wrongful removal or retention from their nation of habitual residence and to put into place a procedure that … Read More... “International Custody Cases In Federal Court Are Complex”