GENDER BIAS PERSISTS IN COURTS
by: Mace H. Greenfield
The August 2002 article in Newsday, “Gender Bias Found to Persist in Courts,” by
Robin Topping, was interesting, but misleading. Gender bias does persist in the
Courts, but not against women, against men. The studies are based on interviews
of women and women advocates, who have self-serving agendas. The Courts always
immediately order a man to pay child support when the woman has the child(ren),
but usually delays in ordering a woman to pay child support if the man has
custody, and often pressures the man to waive child support regardless of how
much money the woman earns.
The Courts are quick to throw a man out of the marital house even if it is clear
that it is the woman causing all the problems. If a woman says a man hit her, he
is arrested and ordered to stay away from his home and children even if he can
prove he was not home at the time or there are witnesses the woman hit the man.
When a man is caught lying, he pays the price; but when a women is caught lying,
no one cares. Women nearly never get jailed for violating a court order, men
often do.
Women who earn money off the books are not held accountable but men are and have
income imputed to them. Men are usually ordered to pay more support than they
can afford and continue to live, and a woman is usually given more than needed
when coupled with income she does or should earn. Advocates patrol the hallways
for women to help, no one is there for the men. Courts give mothers custody even
when the forensic expert recommends for the father, but never gives a father
custody when the forensic recommends for the mother. Why waste time and money on
forensics when judges often ignore it when it recommends for the father?
The Courts are very biased, against men and in favor of women. The Appellate
Division Justice, Hon. Betty Weinberg Ellerin, interviewed in the article really
should recuse herself from all cases on appeal involving the Domestic Relations
Law or the Family Court Act, based on her biased opinions expressed in said
article.