Are there laws that protect one parent from being a victim of the other parent’s continuous reporting, through the other parent’s attorney, about violations of a restraining order that are all lies?
Abuse, Best Interest of the Child, Child Abuse, Children in Divorce, Division of Child and Family Services (DCFS), Evidence, Fathers' Divorce Issues, Legal System, Men's Divorce Issues, Mental Illness, Mothers' Divorce Issues, Parental Fitness, Parental Rights, Protective Orders, Protective Supervision, Restraining Orders, Women's Divorce Issues
78B-5-825, attorney, bad-faith, behavior, cost of litigation, courts, denied, discovery, evidence, evidentiary support, frivolous, harass, improper purpose, independently verifiable, investigation, judge, laws, legal system objective, lies, litigation, needless increase, nonfrivolous argument, parent, protect, punish, reasonable opportunity, reporting, restraining order, rule 11, sanctions, unnecessary delay, Utah code, victim, violations
Are there laws that protect one parent from being a victim of the other parent’s continuous reporting, through the other parent’s attorney, about violations of a restraining order that are all lies? Are there laws that protect one parent from…