In one of the most outrageous injustices of our time, Peter Spitz (pictured right) was separated from his son and almost lost custody of him after his ex-wife shot him in the face and murdered his mother. Fathers and Families advised Peter, helped him get legal counsel, and also publicized his case, and we are pleased to announce that Peter has now won full custody of his seven-year-old son.
Special credit and thanks goes to talented Colorado family law attorney Brett Martin (pictured below), who took on Spitz’s case and won a decisive victory–the court decision is here. We also thank Fathers and Families Board Member Robert Franklin, Esq., who covered this case extensively and helped to advise Peter–his write-up of the new decision is below. Together with you in the love of our children, Glenn Sacks, MA Executive Director, Fathers and Families
The judge was extremely critical of both guardians and Teresa, accused them of contradictory testimony, aligning together to prevent me from fathering (my son), and was surprisingly harsh at the Reynolds by stating twice that they placed (the child) at extreme risk by allowing Teresa any contact, that it showed a terrible lack of judgment. He also dismissed the testimony of the therapist as he said she was clearly aligned with the guardians and was not a reliable witness. He went on to say that they presented no credible witnesses. Finally, he stated that even with the lower standard of presumption (preponderance) of evidence, they failed not only to prove their case but that he found that it was , indeed, in (the boy’s) best interest to be with me.
As I said, this should have happened years ago. Peter Spitz is a fit parent; no credible claim to the contrary has ever been made. His disability certainly has no negative impact on his ability to parent, so after he recovered from his wounds, custody of his son should have been immediately returned to him. But it wasn’t. I suppose the Reynolds somehow concluded that “possession is nine points of the law,” so the boy was rightly theirs. Judge Fasing apparently was intensely interested in how they spent the $600 plus dollars the little boy receives from the Social Security Administration due to his father’s disability. That suggests their interest may have been more pecuniary than parental. Whatever the case, their outrageous act of parental hegemony, coupled with ineffective assistance of counsel for Peter, resulted in his prolonged separation from his son. One interesting sidelight is that the therapist, whose testimony at trial Judge Fasing discounted, is employed by an organization called Aurora Mental Health. It just so happens that Don Reynolds does volunteer work at Aurora Mental Health. So apart from attempting to give testimony she was not qualified to give, there appears to be a conflict of interest in the involvement of Aurora Mental Health in this case. That’s made even clearer by the fact that Peter was convinced to take a parenting class offered by Aurora Mental Health. What goes on in those sessions is clearly privileged and not subject to disclosure absent the client’s consent. But what do you think happened? Sure enough, things Peter said were reported to the attorney for the Reynolds in what looks like a violation of his confidentiality. That’s all over now. Peter Spitz has at last been reunited with his son. The only legal hurdle yet to be cleared is the family court custody matter. Peter’s only opponent in that case is his ex-wife, Teresa, who killed his mother and tried to kill him. She’s since spent seven years in a mental institution. Her claim to custody, if she intends to make one, would seem to be unlikely to succeed. The most I can see a judge giving her is closely supervised visitation, and if she gets that, she’ll get to pay child support. Speaking of Teresa, Peter tells me that, when he and his friend went to pick up his son two days ago, “we were told that she was ‘curled up in a ball in a corner of the basement’ and unable to return to the mental hospital in Pueblo, 100 miles away per doctors orders.” Peter Spitz now has his son and his son has his father. Fathers and Families is proud to have helped that happen.