Sue Moss speaks to the New York Post on how some people are using the Covid-19 pandemic to “get back” at their exes.
The New York Post: How some people use coronavirus to get back at their exes
After her estranged husband took off with the kids to Long Island, a woman claims she was kept away from her kids for nearly two months with no physical contact after her ex suggested she quarantine. Feeling as if he used this as a means to punish her, Laura, the mom of four, says the kids have been brainwashed against her to the point of panic when she recently went to drop mail off into the main house. This wild situation is just one example of how the coronavirus has created chaos over child-custody issues for city residents since the Big Apple became a global epicenter for the contagion this spring.
Susan Moss, law partner at Chemtob, Moss, Forman & Beyda, expresses how “custody is like the wild west. With the courts being [partially closed], there is no sheriff in town. …. Each parent thinks they’ve been deputized to make their own rules.”
After her estranged husband took off with the kids to Long Island, a woman claims she was kept away from her kids for nearly two months with no physical contact after her ex suggested she quarantine. Feeling as if he used this as a means to punish her, Laura, the mom of four, says the kids have been brainwashed against her to the point of panic when she recently went to drop mail off into the main house. This wild situation is just one example of how the coronavirus has created chaos over child-custody issues for city residents since the Big Apple became a global epicenter for the contagion this spring.
Susan Moss, law partner at Chemtob, Moss, Forman & Beyda, expresses how “custody is like the wild west. With the courts being [partially closed], there is no sheriff in town. …. Each parent thinks they’ve been deputized to make their own rules.”
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