Thursday, August 23, 2007

Lie Detectors Needed in the Family Court

MP wants lie detectors in Family Court


An MP has called for compulsory lie detector tests for parents facing
the Family Law Court.

South Australian independent MP Ann Bressington says current family
law is a divisive "cash cow" that harms those it aims to
protect -children.

The federal government must intervene and rewrite the law, just as it
is acting to protect indigenous children in the Northern Territory, Ms
Bressington told AAP in Sydney, where she is attending a Human Rights
and Equal Opportunity Commission conference.

"We have to ask why the Attorney-General (Philip Ruddock) and the
Prime Minister (John Howard) would be seen to support such a
dysfunctional (Family Law) Act when they can take the action
they did in the Northern Territory to supposedly protect
Aboriginal children,"she said.

A draft bill to introduce polygraph (lie detector) tests
for individuals before Family Court proceedings would be introduced
in the South Australian parliament in the next session,
said Ms Bressington.

However, she said the use of polygraph tests needed to be implemented
federally.

"There is no recognition of perjury. A man or a woman can go into a
Family Law Court and lie about the conduct of their partner and it can
be proven to be false but there is no course of action that's taken,"
Ms Bressington said.


"I believe the research and evidence to support the use of
polygraphing, not for court but pre-court is very strong. It has a 98
per cent accuracy .

"If we can save resources in the social services departments and
thousands of hours spent by social workers investigating false
allegations ... that's a good thing."

Ms Bressington said the family law system was biased against men, but
children suffered too.

"On top of the dysfunctional family law system we have a corrupted
child protection agency.," she said.

"We have children being coerced in interviews to support false
allegations.

"It's a feeding ground, it's a cash cow, people are literally striped
of any assets and use it (the court) against one another," she said.

Ms Bressington said her main focus was on drug and alcohol issues but
through this she had experienced first hand the difficulties people
faced with family law.

In 2006 she introduced a bill calling for random drug testing of SA
school children.

She is the chief executive officer and founder of DrugBeat South
Australia, a treatment and rehabilitation centre.

1 comment:

julie said...

I agree with this. A lie detector would put an end to a lot of crap.

Although I dare say, it might take the children off both parents in some cases. lol