Yes, my brother. But I don't think my x-sil contested that really. |
Unless that is what the dad wants, which sadly is often the case. |
Yes, I know one in VA. I don't know the details. (We were neighbors). The ex-wife had what you'd usually consider the fathers visitation - every other weekend and they'd alternate major holidays. |
Three. All military officers.
One had custody of his two boys. Not sure of the backstory but his wife (their step mom) basically raised them since early elementary. He was not married to their mom. One I have no idea of the backstory, but dad had primary custody of his elementary daughter and middle school son. Mom got them very occasionally. The other case the dad had the kids since they were babies. Birth mom had very minimal involvement in their lives until they were teenagers. Dad was in a field where he deployed. Grandparents helped. He eventually married a lovely woman who raised those kids as her own. They are now really great and stable young adults. I have no idea why mom lost custody but it must have been bad for a judge to give the toddler/baby to a dad who deployed regularly and moved every 1-3 years. |
Yes, my husband has full custody of his kids (my step kids). |
Yep. My cousin. His ex was a drug addict. Well, is. She is serving jail time now. He is a great dad. |
As a divorce attorney, I have seen fathers get primary custody only in three circumstances:
(1) Mom doesn't want custody (used to be unheard of early in my practice, but now, in my 23rd year of practice, roughly once a year, I come across a mom who doesn't want custody). (2) Father is a stay at home dad or works very little and has been the kids' primary caretaker for a long time. (3) Mom has severe and documented mental or substance abuse problems. If the problems aren't documented, the man will need a slew of witnesses with nothing to gain (so, for instance, kids' teacher but not dad's meddling mom who is eager to edge out biological mom). I have never seen a man get primary custody against an involved, normal mother who is fighting for custody. The most he can hope for is 50/50. |
Yes. My friend lost custody to her ex. He could afford a good lawyer and she could not. She gets holidays, summers, and every other weekend. The judge basically decided he had more money and more extended family and that meant he could provide a better lifestyle. |
Yes. Close friendships, twice and have come across others as well. In both cases where I was close friends there was an issue with the mother and in one case the mother didn't really want custody. |
Another VA divorce attorney here. Agree with this breakdown. |
I have primary physical custody. By agreement. Wife left for her affair partner and he rejected her. She's not interested really in the kids. She is f ing crazy in my view. She doesn't take the time she has. I guess I should count my blessings it wasn't a fight. |
Yes, my father was, about 20 years ago. He had a stable job and more money. My mother had mental health issues (PTSD and depression) and was in a bad way, under his pressure she forfeited custody. She ended up with supervised visitation only. |
Which jurisdiction are you in, OP? |
Yea my boss. |
Yes, but the mom had documented drug problems and was neglecting the daughter's care. Dad still had to fight for full custody. |