When police or prosecutors conceal significant exculpatory or impeaching material, we hold, it is ordinarily incumbent on the state to set the record straight. - Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Showing posts with label My views. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My views. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Just Shocking

Bfrjk4FCUAEOobc

After learning what has happen to my son, I really have to wonder how Judge Eileen Anita Olds is fit to a family court judge, where there is no records or accountability for her actions or judgments.

Now she has written a book on how to parent, shocking since she doesn’t have any kids herself..

During my time in front of this hack, she gave full custody to my ex-wife ignoring the NC Court order which gave us joint custody. It has been 17 years since my first appearance in front her.

Recently, I found out my ex-wife home school my son (actually I have known this since 2005). Doing this, solely to keep me from having school records and other information about my son.

Judge Olds has by her own actions aiding and abetting my ex-wife actions.

What I know, is that my ex never provide a long term home, I know at least 13 different address within the 18 yrs. span, while I have five, finally buying and owning my own home. My ex, didn’t get my son help with his speech problem, the very same that I had when I was child. I don’t know how many partner she had in those 18years but I only had one.

Now I have learn that for a short time my son might have lived out of a truck, and that her family really hasn’t help them out at all. Whom by the way live in the area.. 

Judge Olds has allow this to happen, throughout the hearing I brought this up the many times, the number evictions from apts, trailers and homes through the Hampton Roads area, and Richmond, VA and a few other cities in VA.

Judge Olds ignore reports that my son might have been abused, that he went through a full body x-ray when he was 2yrs old. Then there is a report that he fall down two flights of stairs when he was 3 yrs. old. Time after time siding with my ex and her mother that I was a threat to my son. My Ex even claimed in court that I try to throw my son off a bridge, which is funny cause I never been alone with him since we split and all visitation was supervised by a counselor or a social worker in Chesapeake.

Judge Olds may be the first female African American judge on the bench in Virginia, but she is surely no damn role model. She has abuse her powers and authority as a family court judge. She has destroy more families then she has help. Then again what type of judge give a child rapist a PR Bond??

 

(photo credit, from here)

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

New crap from Olds

Children First
Eileen Olds says destiny made her a trailblazer.
By Arthur Hill
Posted 08/11/08


“My calling is to make a difference,” says Eileen Olds (Psychology ’79). “I believe that I have been called to make a difference in the lives of the children and the families that I serve.”

I don’t know what she called making a difference in children lives, unless it means to block loving parents from their kids. In my a father who has never been with his child alone, never able to take his only son to movie, baseball game, or any other public event all, whom to this day doesn’t know where his son is or how his health is. Yet she call this making a difference good. This coming from a 50-something non parent, the only kids she is close to is those of other family members

Chance meetings and “failures” with silver linings—otherwise known as “destiny”—have led her to where she is, says Olds, a judge on the Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court in Chesapeake, Va., since 1995, the first woman and the first African American in the city’s history to sit on the bench. “When I look back on my life, I can see there were moments of revelation. I now understand that I have gone through a natural progression of events. You join a path that was chosen for you to take.”

Attending the University of Virginia was on that predestined path. A chance meeting with Lloyd Ricks, then dean of admissions, led to the Chesapeake native entering the fourth class that included women. And she says that if she had not run for state legislature—a race she lost by 87 votes—she might not have become a judge. “I was appointed at least in part by the efforts of my opponent after he took office,” she says.

Sometimes I wish she had won that election then at least she would have just mess up the children lives but everyone lives in Virginia. She was appointed by her opponent, mmm I wonder why?

It’s a destiny filled with trailblazing and perseverance. After being elected her middle school’s first African-American student-council president, the school abolished the council, presumably to prevent her from taking office.

Does she know this for a fact!

After graduating with honors from the University, she became one of four African Americans in her class at the College of William and Mary’s Marshall-Wythe School of Law, the first African American in private practice in Chesapeake and, at 26, one of the youngest presidents of her local NAACP chapter. Last year, the 3,000-member American Judges Association, an international organization headquartered in Williamsburg, Va., elected her its president—the first African-American and only the fourth woman president in its 50-year history.

Early in her career, juvenile justice became her passion. Olds realized that the “most devastating and gut-wrenching criminal cases” were those involving the abuse and neglect of children. “I know absolutely that dysfunction in families has an enormous impact on the futures of innocent children,” she says.

I wonder if her parents were place on trial today for the way they were raised I wonder only many actions would be considered as abuse and neglect. She as an impact on the children alright a negative one that is for sure.

Over the years, she has fulfilled her goal to protect and defend them. “I recognized my ability to advocate effectively,” she said. “My selection as a juvenile and domestic relations judge was a natural progression for me.”

Well then I guess the only advocating that she does is for single motherhood, and mothers rights, since she does give the same to father at all in her court, just maybe once in a while a father will win in her court case the issue are so great that she can’t see a way to justify her actions or decision if she finds for the mother.

At the American Judges Association, Olds has established an outreach program called Tell It to the Judge, a multiyear effort to seek input from the general public about the judicial process. The AJA is holding events around the country that allow citizens to talk to panels of judges about their experience with the judicial process and offer recommendations for change. “The most important thing that citizens are looking for is an opportunity to be heard—not necessarily a favorable outcome,” says Olds.

That is one program I would love to take part in.

Olds also believes the nation’s judges will gain from opinions and recommendations of citizens whose lives have been changed by decisions made in the nation’s courts. “We’re the gatekeepers of the system,” she says. “We have to better understand how others perceive us.”

What does the future hold for Olds? Except for her belief that her travels along a predetermined path of progress will continue, she has no idea. She wants to offer a message of “hope and possibility” to children, and she’ll go “where the Lord leads me” to deliver her message. “It’s worked well so far,” she says.

The future needs to lead her sorry ass back out of the Chesapeake JDR and back into private practice. Where she should have been all this time?


my comments are those in italic