Legal Question in Family Law in Wisconsin
One parent in prison, what rights do they have to children?
My ex-husband is in prison and has been in and out for most of his life. He told me there is a law that would force me to let someone take our son up to see him if I didn't want to. I don't think someone should force a child to go to a prison. Is this true, and if it is, what rights do I have as the "good" parent?
2 Answers from Attorneys
Re: One parent in prison, what rights do they have to children?
I would recomend the appointment of a
guardian ad litem, who would be an attorney
to represent your child's interest, in the
event you are not able to work things out
on your own with the father (which is always
best). As a practical matter, if you do
nothing, is the father likely to be able to
afford bringing you back to court while he's
in the slammer? If not, I would be surprised
to see anything come of his threat to force
visitation, since that can only be done
through a court (and the use of courts costs
money).
Re: One parent in prison, what rights do they have to children?
Depends on the most recent order of the Court.
If there is an order allowing for specific prison visits then yes he may have a person to do it. If there is no order, I would not worry about it. He can't excercise it. There is a new law 767.242 that has a "use it or loose it" visitation provision and since he is always in jail then perhaps you may seek counsel to "hold open" or stop visitation. If he hires an attorney then it will boil down to what the child's attorney or judge recommends. This is fact intensive.
Good luck.
Atty. E. Romero
www.WisconsinForms.com