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Thread: Christopher Savoie arrested in Japan for trying to take his children from fugitive ex

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    Christopher Savoie arrested in Japan for trying to take his children from fugitive ex

    This makes my blood boil. Apparently unequal treatment of fathers with regard to child custody is a global phenomenon.

    TOKYO, Japan (CNN) -- Had this custody drama played out in the United States, Christopher Savoie might be considered a hero -- snatching his two little children back from an ex-wife who defied the law and ran off with them.
    A Tennessee court awarded Christopher Savoie custody of his son, Isaac, and daughter, Rebecca.

    A Tennessee court awarded Christopher Savoie custody of his son, Isaac, and daughter, Rebecca.

    But this story unfolds 7,000 miles away in the Japanese city of Fukuoka, where the U.S. legal system holds no sway.

    And here, Savoie sits in jail, charged with the abduction of minors. And his Japanese ex-wife -- a fugitive in the United States for taking his children from Tennessee -- is considered the victim.

    "Japan is an important partner and friend of the U.S., but on this issue, our points of view differ," the U.S. Embassy in Tokyo said Tuesday. "Our two nations approach divorce and child-rearing differently. Parental child abduction is not considered a crime in Japan."

    The story begins in the Nashville suburb of Franklin, Tennessee, with the January divorce of Savoie from his first wife, Noriko, a Japanese native. The ex-wife had agreed to live in Franklin to be close to the children, taking them to Japan for summer vacations.

    Savoie in March requested a restraining order to prevent his ex-wife from taking the children to Japan, saying she had threatened to do so, according to court documents obtained by CNN affiliate WTVF and posted on the station's Web site. A temporary order was issued, but then lifted following a hearing.


    "If Mother fails to return to Tennessee [after summer vacation] with the children following her visitation period, she could lose her alimony, child support and education fund, which is added assurance to Father that she is going to return with the children," Circuit Court Judge James G. Martin III noted in his order on the matter.

    After that ruling, Christopher Savoie tried to have Martin recuse himself, as he was a mediator in the case prior to becoming a judge, said Marlene Eskind Moses, Noriko Savoie's attorney. But that request was denied, as Savoie earlier said he had no concerns about Martin hearing the matter.

    Following the summer trip, Noriko Savoie did return to the United States, and Christopher Savoie then took the children on a vacation, returning them to his ex-wife, his attorney, Paul Bruno, told CNN.

    But days later, on the first day of classes for 8-year-old Isaac and 6-year-old Rebecca, the school called Savoie to say his children hadn't arrived, Bruno said. Police checked Noriko Savoie's home and did not find the children.

    Concerned, Savoie called his ex-wife's father in Japan, who told him not to worry.

    "I said, 'What do you mean -- don't worry? They weren't at school.' 'Oh, don't worry, they are here,' " Savoie recounted the conversation to CNN affiliate WTVF earlier this month. "I said, 'They are what, they are what, they are in Japan?' " Video Watch Savoie talk about how much he misses his kids »

    The very thing that Savoie had predicted in court papers had happened -- his wife had taken their children to Japan and showed no signs of returning, Bruno said.

    After Noriko Savoie took the children to Japan, Savoie filed for and received full custody of the children, Bruno said. And Franklin police issued an arrest warrant for his ex-wife, the television station reported.

    But there was a major hitch: Japan is not a party to the 1980 Hague Convention on international child abduction. The international agreement standardizes laws, but only among participating countries.

    So while Japanese civil law stresses that courts resolve custody issues based on the best interest of the children without regard to either parent's nationality, foreign parents have had little success in regaining custody.

    Japanese family law follows a tradition of sole custody divorces. When a couple splits, one parent typically makes a complete and lifelong break from the children.

    In court documents filed in May, Noriko Savoie denied that she was failing to abide by the terms of the couple's court-approved parenting plan or ignoring court-appointed parent coordinators. She added she was "concerned about the stability of Father, his extreme antagonism towards Mother and the effect of this on the children."

    Noriko Savoie could not be reached by CNN for comment.

    Bruno said he helped Christopher Savoie pursue legal remedies to recover the children, working with police, the FBI and the State Department.

    "We tried to do what we could to get the kids back," Bruno said. "There was not a whole lot we can do."

    "Our court system failed him," said Diane Marshall, a court-appointed parent coordinator who helped Savoie make decisions about the children. "It's just a mess."

    But Moses, Noriko Savoie's attorney, told CNN that the children's father had other legal options.

    The International Association for Parent-Child Reunion, formed in Japan this year, claims to know of more than 100 cases of children abducted by non-custodial Japanese parents.

    And the U.S. State Department says it is not aware of a single case in which a child taken from the United States to Japan has been ordered returned by Japanese courts -- even when the left-behind parent has a U.S. custody decree.

    Facing such statistics and the possibility of never seeing his kids again, Savoie took matters into his own hands.

    He flew to Fukuoka. And as his ex-wife walked the two children to school Monday morning, Savoie drove alongside them.

    He grabbed the kids, forced them into his car, and drove off, said police in Fukuoka.

    He headed for the U.S. consulate in that city to try to obtain passports for Isaac and Rebecca.

    But Japanese police, alerted by Savoie's ex-wife, were waiting.

    Consulate spokeswoman Tracy Taylor said she heard a scuffle outside the doors of the consulate. She ran up and saw a little girl and a man, whom police were trying to talk to.

    Eventually, police took Savoie away, charging him with the abduction of minors -- a charge that carries a jail sentence of up to five years.

    Bruno said if the situation were reversed and a Japanese parent had abducted a Japanese child and fled to America, U.S. courts would "correct that problem, because it's a crime."

    He said he has "concerns about Japan ... providing a place for people to abduct children and go to. The parent left behind does not have recourse." He added, "the president and his administration should do something to correct this."

    The consulate met with Savoie on Monday and Tuesday, Taylor said. It has provided him with a list of local lawyers and said it will continue to assist.
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    Meanwhile, the international diplomacy continues. During the first official talks between the United States and Japan's new government, the issue of parental abductions was raised.

    But it is anybody's guess what happens next to Savoie, who sits in a jail cell.
    http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapc...her.abduction/
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  2. #2
    Great President sorrow_discord's Avatar
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    what I don't get is this,
    Parental child abduction is not considered a crime in Japan.
    I am sitting here wondering why then he was arrested. Am I not understanding that statement right?

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    We're only hearing one side of the story, here. Was there some kind of abuse going on? Women don't usually just up and leave a stable happy home and uproot the children. He may be a prince of a guy and she's a total bitch, I don't know. All I'm saying is, there's more to this situation than what we're hearing here.

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    Grand Count thehesbomb's Avatar
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    I don't know. If there was ANY history of abuse I don't imagine that custody of the kids would have been awarded to the dad.

    It takes a lot for father's to be awarded custody (or "primary residential responsibility" as the PC courts have dubbed it). If anything I wonder if she had some sort of problems (mental/substance/etc.).
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    Quote Originally Posted by RaVen Blackehart View Post
    We're only hearing one side of the story, here. Was there some kind of abuse going on? Women don't usually just up and leave a stable happy home and uproot the children. He may be a prince of a guy and she's a total bitch, I don't know. All I'm saying is, there's more to this situation than what we're hearing here.
    And courts don't usually give full custody to the father, maybe she's just a fucken nut case, with no redeeming qualities

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    Great Count Pene784's Avatar
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    Lots of women and men will take children just to piss off their ex. Some kill em others just runaway with the kids to make the other parent miserable for breaking off their relationship. I dont know if that is the case here, just stating that it could be.

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    Quote Originally Posted by biteme View Post
    And courts don't usually give full custody to the father, maybe she's just a fucken nut case, with no redeeming qualities
    This is not true and kind of offensive. Alot of things are taken into consideration when custody is given to either parent, such as jobs, housing, stability, amount of money that each parent earns, etc, etc. This is not the olden days when the mom automatically got custody no matter what.
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    Grand Count ImmortalOne's Avatar
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    I really feel for the father in this case. This is utterly disgusting to me as a parent.

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    YANAGAWA, Japan (CNN) -- Wearing a Nashville School of Law T-shirt, Christopher Savoie walked into a second-floor police interrogation room. In one corner, a stopwatch was running to hold him to the 15 minutes allotted for the interview.
    A Tennessee court awarded Christopher Savoie custody of his son, Isaac, and daughter, Rebecca.

    A Tennessee court awarded Christopher Savoie custody of his son, Isaac, and daughter, Rebecca.

    "I'm so scared," he said.

    Savoie chose his words carefully, lest police Officer Toshihiro Tanaka cut short the rare interview Savoie was granted with CNN on Thursday. There were so many rules: No recording devices. No tough questions. Speak only in Japanese.

    "I want Americans to know what's happening to me," Savoie continued in Japanese. "I didn't do anything wrong. Children have the right to see both parents. It's very important for my children to know both parents."

    But Japanese authorities disagree.

    They have charged Savoie, 38, a Tennessee native and naturalized Japanese citizen, with kidnapping his two children -- 8-year-old Isaac and 6-year-old Rebecca -- as his estranged wife, Noriko, was walking them to school Monday in Yanagawa, a rural town in southern Japan. Video Watch why the case is complicated »

    He headed for the nearest U.S. consulate, in the city of Fukuoka, to try to obtain passports for the children, screaming at the guards to let him in the compound. He was steps away from the front gate but still standing on Japanese soil.

    Japanese police, alerted by his estranged wife, arrested him.

    The Savoies were divorced in Tennessee in January after 14 years of marriage. The marriage has not been annulled in Japan, and the children hold Japanese passports.

    Christopher Savoie had visitation rights with his children, but after he returned from a short summer trip, his estranged wife fled to Japan with the children, according to court documents. A United States court then granted sole custody to Savoie.

    Japanese law, however, recognizes Noriko Savoie as the primary custodian, regardless of the U.S. court order.

    A 1980 Hague Convention standardized laws on international child abduction. But Japan is not a party to that agreement. Savoie was out of luck.

    If a child in Japan is taken against the wishes of the recognized Japanese parent, the person who took the child is considered an abductor.

    "Japanese people think she's the victim here," Savoie said. "In the States, my ex-wife is the one who's in the wrong."

    U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley recognized this case as a difficult one. Even though the United States has strong ties with Japan, on this particular issue, the two nations' points of view could not differ more, he said.

    In Yanagawa, those who have heard about the abduction case tend to side with the woman.

    "They belong with their real mother," said one woman, herself a mother of two children.

    Savoie's attorney, Tadashi Yoshino, knows the cultural divide will be hard to overcome.

    "He technically may have committed a crime according to Japanese law but he shouldn't be indicted," Yoshino said. "He did it for the love of his children."

    Savoie, a law student who already has a Ph.D. and a M.D., will spend 10 days in jail while Japanese prosecutors sort out the details of the case.

    In the interrogation room, Savoie appeared exhausted. Tears welled in his eyes. He glanced over at the police officer, then paused to regain composure.

    "I love you, Isaac, Rebecca," he said. "Your daddy loves you forever. I'll be patient and strong until the day comes that I can see you both again. I am very sorry that I can't be with you."

    He was grateful be able to get the words out. Moments earlier, the interview had almost ended after Savoie blurted out in English: "I love you," a message intended for his current wife, Amy, in Nashville.

    Then, as is Japanese custom, he bowed. And from the other side of the glass barrier, he gave a thumbs up, mouthing the words, "Thank you."


    http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapc...ody/index.html
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    Japanese police released an American man held for 18 days on Thursday, pending an investigation into accusations he snatched his children from his ex-wife.

    The case is among a growing number of custody disputes in Japan that involve one foreign parent. Japanese law allows only one parent to be a custodian - almost always the mother - leaving many divorced fathers without access to their children until they are grown.

    While prosecutors have not pressed charges against Christopher Savoie, they haven't yet dropped the case either, and an investigation is continuing, said police official Kiyonori Tanaka in the southern Japanese city of Yanagawa. They decided to release him on grounds that he was not a flight risk, he said.
    [...]
    http://www.sanluisobispo.com/topnews/story/885279.html
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