| The kids were a boy and girl. |
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Dr. Cerina W. Fairfax, DDS
Dr. Fairfax earned her Bachelor of Science degree from Duke University in 1999. She then went on to obtain her Doctor of Dental Surgery degree, graduating magna cum laude from VCU’s Medical College of Virginia School of Dentistry in 2005, and was inducted as a member of Omicron Kappa Upsilon, a dental honor society. She went on to complete a one-year residency program in Advanced Education in General Dentistry, also at MCV. Dr. Fairfax enjoys all fields of dentistry. She has completed hundreds of hours of continuing education focusing on conservative, comprehensive dentistry. Dr. Fairfax considers it an honor and a privilege to serve the community of Fairfax, Virginia. She is committed to serving not only her patients but others as well through participation in community outreach programs, volunteer and sponsorship opportunities, vocational training programs, and contributions to local charities and nonprofits intended to aid individuals and/or organizations helping those in need. Dr. Fairfax is a member of the American Dental Association, the Virginia Dental Association, the Northern Virginia Dental Society, and the Omicron Kappa Upsilon Dental Society. Dr. Fairfax also recently received an Alumni Association Award from VCU as an Outstanding Graduate of the Last Decade. In her spare time, Dr. Fairfax loves to read, run trails with her energetic Vizslas, practice Bikram yoga, travel, and spend time with her wonderful family. |
| This is so sad, especially with the kids in the house |
| Presumably the successful dentist wife had a much higher net worth than him - which is unsettling for many egotistical/insecure men. Did she own her own practice? |
I don’t agree with that law, but how does it only protect men? Couldn’t it just as easily protect a pregnant woman from being abandoned by her spouse? |
Yes. https://www.drfairfax.com/?utm_source=local&utm_medium=organic&utm_campaign=gbp_home |
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She was clearly afraid of what was happening in that home to set up cameras. Which saved her from being wrongly accused of attacking him in prior 911 call and police visit.
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Horrible. I'm in a bad marriage (as a woman) and have had fits of blinding rage towards my spouse (some peri menopausal hormone stuff going on). I can almost see how someone could just pull a trigger but 1) I don't own a gun and never will 2) I've never fully lost control.
it's really scary because you never know when your partner could just lose it. I agree that cohabitation once a divorce is filed seems like a very risky requirement. |
The part they need to change is about "home abandonment." Fine, make people wait, but don't penalize their assets for leaving to do so. |
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I wonder if there were cameras in the basement as that is where he killed her.
I hope there is a watershed of information on when he got his gun and other indications of violence escalation. Somehow I don't believe like others have suggested that he just "snapped." His world was crumbling and he wasn't going down alone. At least he spared his children, but to what a traumatized future at that. |
Virginia has that law too. Six months with no kids, but that wouldn't have changed anything here. In Virginia if you file for divorce on grounds like cruelty there's no separation period, but then you're basically litigating almost a DV case (it's not quite that hard, but it's not easy) plus handling the difficulties of divorce. Hopefully without wading too much into the controversy, I do hope this case highlights how dangerous the period after separation is for women in divorce cases in far too many cases, and perhaps has an impact on Virginia law. It's not just the ability to physically leave - there's so much more, though certainly not less. |
She filed one year and one day after the date of separation. They had been separated since June/July 2024 according to her filing, so she filed in July 2025. It appears the issue may have been over the house, and if either of them left/moved out they abandon their rights to claim it. This is what kept her in jeopardy if she felt she couldn't leave. The required separation time was over. |
Anyone should be able to divorce their spouse at any time, for any reason. No one should be compelled to remain in a marriage. |
Agree. This is the part that needs to change. Someone should have been able to leave the house. |
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In January, Fairfax called police and alleged his wife had assaulted him. Davis said that officers who responded to the scene corroborated “that the alleged assault never occurred” based on footage from cameras that the wife installed at the house during the divorce process. No charges were filed.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/former-virginia-lt-gov-justin-fairfax-kills-wife-self-divorce-police-rcna332123 |