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Don’t pay support, go directly to jail
San Antonio Express-News ^ | 06/15/2010 | By Craig Kapitan - Express-News

Posted on 06/16/2010 8:59:20 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd

 

Ricky Luna was standing again in front of Associate Judge James Rausch. This time, the 30-year-old father was in trouble for failing to appear at a child support hearing months earlier.

Despite being locked up before for ignoring orders to pay child support, Luna had managed to come up with only $13.11 for his two children during the past year. He mumbled that he couldn’t give more, that he didn’t have a job and that he lived with his parents.

In Bexar County, parents like Luna who miss child support payments are far more likely to get jail time than in Texas’ four other largest urban counties.

Last fiscal year, 1,013 parents were held in Bexar County Jail for failing to pay child support, according to figures from the Texas attorney general’s office.

That’s more than five times the number of deadbeat parents jailed in Dallas, Harris, Tarrant or Travis counties. Those four counties combined sent 631 people to jail last fiscal year for owing child support.

So far this year, deadbeat parents have taken up an average of 161 beds per week at the jail — the same number that Harris County jailed all last year.

The vast discrepancy reflects a tougher-than-average philosophy in Bexar County in which parents who owe child support more often are summoned to court, judicial officials said. Usually, they’ll stay in jail for a few days or weeks to teach them a lesson or until they come up with some money.

“In two days, your namesake is going to turn 10. That’s a pretty big day for him,” Rausch barked at Luna, ordering him back to jail until he could make a $2,000 lump-sum payment. “A week later is Father’s Day, and you’re going to be in jail for both of those. I don’t think it matters to you.”

After Luna’s hearing, Rausch said fathers who don’t have relationships with their children often need to be threatened with jail to get their attention.

“The intact family is disappearing,” he said. “There are good fathers out there, but the numbers are going in the wrong direction.

“This court has taken a very firm, tough approach to fathers and mothers who don’t pay child support. I feel very comfortable and confident we’re handling it the right way.”

Not everyone, however, agrees.

“It’s counterproductive to me, and it just doesn’t make a lot of sense,” County Judge Nelson Wolff said.

It costs the county $60 a day to house a prisoner in Bexar County Jail, which often is overcrowded, he said. That equates to $2.7 million taxpayers must pay each year to incarcerate the parents, he estimated.

Hand in hand with the cost is the problem of jail overcrowding.

“I think there has to be a better way to do it,” Wolff said.

‘Release and reset’

In Bexar County, fathers or mothers whom the Texas attorney general has targeted as in arrears on payments usually aren’t brought into court unless they have been delinquent for months or years.

Once at Bexar County Courthouse, many work out deals with prosecutors or the other parent on the spot. If the case remains unresolved and a judge finds a defendant at fault, he or she may be put on probation or sent to jail until a lump sum can be paid.

Even if released, those found at fault frequently are summoned back for updates on their payment status. The intensive “release-and-reset” strategy can result in more people being jailed, judges said.

A parent could be jailed up to six times in a year for missing payments or failing to appear in court, Bexar County officials say.

The county’s use of “flash incarcerations” may be different from other counties, where jail time is viewed more as a last resort, University of Texas family law Professor John Sampson said.

That appears to be the case in Dallas County, which has roughly the same number of child support cases as the San Antonio area, but far fewer people being sent to jail.

Both counties collected similar amounts of child support payments — between $262 million and $265 million — last fiscal year. Dallas, however, sent 160 deadbeat parents to jail.

“I guess it’s a carrot-stick approach,” said Judge George Collins, who oversees one of Dallas’ four child support courts. “When you can’t seem to encourage them anymore, you lock them up.

“We’re not big on putting them in jail. We’re big on collecting money.”

‘Doesn’t add up’

San Antonio attorney Lisa Dossmann has seen the differences in judicial philosophies firsthand, having worked for child support offices with the attorney general in Dallas and Bexar counties before going into private practice a decade ago.

On her first day in Rausch’s court after transferring from Dallas, the case she was prosecuting resulted in jail time.

“I was stunned,” she said. “In Dallas, they gave them a lot more time to come up with the money.”

Like other attorneys and judges interviewed for this report, she sided with both of Bexar County’s child support judges, even though she’s now a defense attorney.

“I think it’s a fair approach,” she said, explaining that her clients rarely end up in jail because she warns them of the consequences. “If the client comes up with some kind of lump sum, even if it’s a low amount, the judge isn’t going to incarcerate them.”

And when they do refuse to pay, incarceration often will spur family members to chip in to make a payment so the defendant can be released quickly, she said.

Although Bexar County’s system is different from other counties in Texas, it does seem to be effective, said Janece Rolfe, a spokeswoman for the attorney general’s Child Support Division.

“It is a program that (prosecutors) are very pleased with,” she said.

But with a child support collection rate on par with Dallas County, Bexar County’s judicial philosophy doesn’t make sense, Wolff said. Once a person is in jail, he’ll lose his job or can’t look for work.

“It just doesn’t add up,” he said. “Obviously, all of the other counties have come to the same conclusion except for us. ..... You’re putting them in there with the criminal element. ..... Jail should be for the protection of the public.”

Wolff said he has been critical of the incarceration rate for most of his political career with the county. But it’s the elected district court judges who hire the child support court judges, and so his griping has had little effect, he lamented.

Why so high?

Senior state District Judge David Peeples sees a parallel between getting a child to obey and making a parent pay child support. Like the threat of spanking, incarceration can persuade a parent to follow court orders.

“You need that possibility of going to jail hanging in the background,” he said.

Peeples, who oversees the two child support courts in Bexar County and nearly two dozen in the region, knew the incarceration rate was disproportionately high in Bexar but was unaware of how high.

Peeples speculated that could be somewhat reflective of Bexar County’s low-income population, and judges’ vigilance in pursuing low-income defendants who might slip under the radar in other jurisdictions.

It might not be as lucrative going after a deadbeat parent who’s poor, and it might not add a lot to the total collections tally, but the money collected — even if a smaller amount — is significant to the other parent struggling to raise the children, Peeples said.

Still, he said, the numbers need to be carefully examined.

“If we’re not getting any more bang for our buck, you’d wonder why we do it,” he said.

Peeples also joined other judges, such as Delia Carian, Bexar County’s other support court judge, and Harris County child support Judge Gregory Wettman, in voicing skepticism that the incarceration statistics have been submitted the same way by each county.

“I’ve got to believe they’re just counting it different,” Wettman said.

Carian, who has been on the child support bench in Bexar County for three years, admits she and Rausch are tough. But she never thought of that as an anomaly.

“To me, it seems like everybody has the same position,” she said.

Representatives with the attorney general’s office said the agency is reviewing the numbers, but so far no reporting discrepancies have been found.

Neglected children

Inside Rausch’s and Carian’s court chambers are lists of every defendant in jail for owing child support. The files are revisited weekly.

While fathers like Luna theoretically could stay in jail indefinitely if the ordered amount isn’t paid, chances are the most hopeless cases will result in releases from jail after a few days or weeks, Rausch said.

The released prisoners then will be brought back to court months later to see if their attitudes have changed, he said.

Over the course of two days in the first week of June, Rausch ordered 48 people released — about five of whom paid the demanded amount.

“I’m sympathetic with the jail population issue,” said Rausch, who has been on the bench for nearly 22 years and serves on the National Judicial Child Support Task Force.

“It does no good to put someone in jail and intend for them to stay there and serve out that sentence,” he said. “I’m hoping their time in jail taught them a lesson.”

At the very least, he said, it gets the attention of other parents waiting in the courtroom — most of whom won’t end up in jail.

On a recent day this month, prosecutors in Rausch’s court collected $15,000 in back payments for children who’d previously been neglected.

Rausch, who said he had a great relationship with his own father, finds it frustrating to see parents neglecting the needs of their children. He has seen scores of children cry in his office because of an absent parent. While he can’t force parents to have relationships with their children, he does have the tools to make sure they support them, he said.

“We’re tough — very tough,” he said. “My bedrock philosophy is, if you’re going to bring a child into this world, you have to support that child. The court system is the only entity that can enforce that.”

And if that means jailing parents, so be it.

“If you place significance on a parent’s obligation to support the child, I don’t see where there can be any other approach,” he said.

 

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TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: childsupport
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To: Responsibility2nd

It’s often not an attitude issue, it’s a flat-broke issue. This is just debtor’s prision, which in unconstitutional (not that that matters any more).


21 posted on 06/16/2010 9:20:33 AM PDT by piytar (Ammo is hard to find! Bought some lately? Please share where at www.ammo-finder.com)
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To: All

Dr Laura had a great solution for handling divorce:
The kids get the house and the parents take turns visiting.....


22 posted on 06/16/2010 9:21:40 AM PDT by Maverick68
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To: Responsibility2nd
Jail for deadbeat moms?

Jail for fraudulent abuse charges?

Mandatory DNA match for paternity?

Jail for fraudulent paternity charges?

Jail for fraudulent domestic violence charges?

Jail for secret abortions?

Jail for allowing boyfriend to abuse kids?Jail for Femanazis?

Crickets.

Didn't think so.

23 posted on 06/16/2010 9:24:14 AM PDT by Navy Patriot (Sarah and the Conservatives will rock your world.)
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To: Jack Hydrazine
"They forgot to mention all the deadbeat mothers out there.

Well, you've gotten right to the crux of the matter. This isn't about children or enforcing laws, it's wholly about politics - sexual politics. To women, this is a powerful issue, and women vote en masse, and are very female issue driven.

So, politicians play to this instinct and pass these incredibly draconian laws so that they can campaign in a way that appeals to women.

24 posted on 06/16/2010 9:25:02 AM PDT by OldDeckHand
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To: All

Wow, just wow. I agree that jailing a deadbeat is counterproductive in most cases but surely something has to be done? My ex has already spent one 6 month stint in the county jail and is probably headed there again at the end of this month for nonpayment.


25 posted on 06/16/2010 9:26:08 AM PDT by sfimom (Who are you? WHO ARE YOU??)
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To: Responsibility2nd; colorado tanker; OldDeckHand
RE :”Senior state District Judge David Peeples sees a parallel between getting a child to obey and making a parent pay child support. Like the threat of spanking, incarceration can persuade a parent to follow court orders

Debtors prison was bad enough but these family courts are like what you would see in Iran. The judge directs the man (typically) to give his money to the mother that is it. No trial, no jury, no rights an the judge has the power to throw you in jail without due process. In many cases the payee is not even the father but has no due process to oppose supporting some woman he had sex with for 21 years.

The current no-fault-divorce -child support system is counter-productive and somewhat immoral. The justification for the Stalin type justice is that ‘the child is entitled to the child support”. Yet, legally the money goes directly to the mother to spend on anything she wants, could be her boyfriends beer. The child has no legal right to the money (that is the flaw) nor does the father have a standing to question the direct use of the money. (He has to prove neglect which is indirect and harder to prove.)

One last complaint, the father has no say in whether his child is aborted but if the mother decides to let the baby live he must pay her. A pregnant woman can suspect that she will not get custody and decide to abort the child to avoid payments to him. The man has all the responsibilities (in most cases), no rights.

This after no-fault was the first step in encouraging women to not get married or break up families.

26 posted on 06/16/2010 9:27:17 AM PDT by sickoflibs ( "It's not the taxes, the redistribution is the federal spending=tax delayed")
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To: Maverick68
"The kids get the house and the parents take turns visiting....."

I think that is absolutely perfect. Today, custody isn't about the welfare of the children, it's about enriching the pocketbook of one of the parents, almost always the mothers.

27 posted on 06/16/2010 9:28:29 AM PDT by OldDeckHand
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To: OldDeckHand

The first three-day incarceration might scare some of them into paying their obligations (it would certainly scare me, if I were in this situation). But serially jailing the same individual is a complete waste of time and money and will ensure the support is never collected.


28 posted on 06/16/2010 9:29:02 AM PDT by steve86 (Acerbic by nature, not nurture)
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To: Responsibility2nd


Don’t pay support, go directly to jail

So much for the “good old days” when child support payments could be
avoided by going to Harris County TX (Houston) or Maricopa County AZ
(Phoenix), as long as you could work on a cash basis.

And that’s not a gender thang. I suspect some “deadbeat moms” followed
that strategy some decades ago.


29 posted on 06/16/2010 9:29:49 AM PDT by VOA
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To: Maverick68

Great advice.

I have a brother that believes strongly in 50/50 parenting.

Worst. Idea. Ever.

Why subject the kids to moving from here to there every month? It’s their idiot parents that have the problem. Let THEM move. Leave the poor kids alone.


30 posted on 06/16/2010 9:30:14 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd (PALIN/MCCAIN IN 2012 - barf alert? sarc tag? -- can't decide)
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To: magritte

“Jail for deadbeat moms that hold children’s visitation rights as a stick to beat up men? Didn’t think so...”

I agree that is also an issue and I also agree that the system does seem to be very rigged against men in general. Now, don’t get me wrong, I am not supportive of actual deadbeat parents, but I do have a question regarding the entirety of the system.

If it is a “woman’s choice” about carrying a pregnancy to term and the man has no legitimate role in deciding to keep the chile, then why is the man held completely accountable for support?

Yes, I am anti murder and I am pro responsibility. I am just pointing out another aspect of the system that is skewed against men....

Flame suit donned...


31 posted on 06/16/2010 9:32:06 AM PDT by CSM (Keeper of the "Dave Ramsey Fan" ping list. FReepmail me if you want your beeber stuned.)
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To: colorado tanker
I thought we didn’t do debtors prison any more.

Better rethink.

32 posted on 06/16/2010 9:33:11 AM PDT by sionnsar (IranAzadi|5yst3m 0wn3d-it's N0t Y0ur5:SONY|Remember Neda Agha-Soltan|TV--it's NOT news you can trust)
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To: Responsibility2nd

Just remember that there are other reasons for getting divorced besides dissatisfaction with one’s partner. I got divorced because my ex was abusive, both to me and to our daughter. Unfortunately, despite obvious evidence that she was more than a few cards shy of a full deck, including smart-mouthing the judge during the hearing, she still got primary custody (though we have joint conservatorship; she can’t take any actions unilaterally), and she still has 50% of my daughter’s time.

There’s no justification for keeping an abusive relationship together, nor should there be. One day, she’ll screw up, and I’ll have the incontrovertible evidence I need to show the court how bad an idea it was to allow her as much access to our daughter as she currently has. I just hope it doesn’t come at the expense of the little girl. The other hope is that she’ll one day get fed up, and just walk away, as many mothers have done in the past once they get what they think they wanted.


33 posted on 06/16/2010 9:33:22 AM PDT by Little Pig (Vi Veri Veniversum Vivus Vici.)
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To: colorado tanker

A guy who works for me had his son for two weeks in the summer 5 years ago. He took the boy to Oklahoma to visit the father’s parents. They were gone just over the weekend.

After the boy went back to his mother he must have mentioned going to visit Grandma and Grandpa. The ex-wife called the police and had the Dad arrested for taking the kid out of the state without the wife’s permission. He did about 30 days for that.

I didn’t pay him while he was in jail but was glad to get him back. Any way, he missed that month’s child support and only had ¾ of the next month’s payment. She sent the constable to arrest him for non-payment.

I loaned him the money to catch up so they wouldn’t put him back in jail. But I was shocked that in Texas child support doesn’t stop just because someone is in jail or the hospital.

The system sucks.


34 posted on 06/16/2010 9:33:41 AM PDT by SUSSA
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To: moose-matson; OldDeckHand; apillar; magritte; Mere Survival; Irisshlass; nesnah

I personally watched a family court case in Orange County for 2.5 years contempt after contempt, eventually revocation of probation hearings that went on for 13 months. The only time he paid was when he thought jail was a very real threat and he couldn’t continue it another time. That pretty much resets the punishment, a full payment.

During the times that I observed (which was pretty much 1 or 2 Fridays EACH month) I saw women as the non-custodial non paying parent exactly 4 times. Twice it was the same woman who’d been injured in a work accident. There were 30-60 men for “contempt Friday” each week.

I also saw 5 men sent to jail for a weekend to 30 days for non-payment.

I see how some people see it as a debtors prison, but if the parent that wasn’t paying lived in the home, didn’t watch their child and didn’t pay for food or clothes or take care of their child, it would be a criminal case of neglect. If they are non-custodial though, there are no charges like that, so it has to be based on what is court ordered which is support.

I saw a very low amount of people who couldn’t actually find work. I saw at least 75% of (typically) men who just didn’t want to pay child support, they had a second family, or they were working cash jobs, had their own businesses and just weren’t going to pay. I saw another relatively small amount of people that were injured, or ill, or perhaps mentally ill that in all likelihood couldn’t pay and couldn’t keep a job.

I personally think if the counties could figure out how to make it a profit center like a private company, they could be very creative in the ways of collecting money and making money. Somehow though with federal back end money, and certain quota’s - plus the reluctance to look profitable it isn’t happening. But it could!

(and yes, I’m a bit biased as the mom who worked two jobs, and made it to watch the proceedings.)


35 posted on 06/16/2010 9:34:15 AM PDT by porter_knorr (John Adams would be arrested for his thoughts on tyrants today!)
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To: GOPJ

“Child Support enforcement is a positive incentive to keep marriages together..”

Yes for him, I suspect quite the opposite is true for her.


36 posted on 06/16/2010 9:34:50 AM PDT by CSM (Keeper of the "Dave Ramsey Fan" ping list. FReepmail me if you want your beeber stuned.)
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To: Maverick68

That is an excellent idea.


37 posted on 06/16/2010 9:38:42 AM PDT by Excellence (A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky, dangerous animals and you know it.")
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To: OldDeckHand

“So, politicians play to this instinct and pass these incredibly draconian laws so that they can campaign in a way that appeals to women.”

Even though women have a slightly higher rate of being deadbeats than men.


38 posted on 06/16/2010 9:41:09 AM PDT by Jack Hydrazine (It's the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine!)
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To: colorado tanker

you thought wrong; “Texas-the incarceration state, we’ve built one for you!” And.....when Obamacare kicks in, failure to provide proof of health insurance, failure to pay the penalties........go to jail.

Welcome to Serfdom Sucker!


39 posted on 06/16/2010 9:43:17 AM PDT by glide625
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To: sfimom

With all due respect, how do you expect your ex to pay from inside a jail cell? To get a job so he can pay if a potential employer sees him labeled as a “deadbeat dad” who is likely to go to jail again soon?

Or does he have the money and just won’t pay? In that case, lock him up.


40 posted on 06/16/2010 9:44:00 AM PDT by piytar (Ammo is hard to find! Bought some lately? Please share where at www.ammo-finder.com)
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