Brazilian Court Rules for US Dad in Custody Fight

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Brazilian Court Rules for US Father David Goldman in Custody Fight - Sphere News

A federal appeals court ruled Wednesday that a 9-year-old boy living in Brazil should be returned to his American father, but the case will likely be appealed again, officials said.

A panel of three Brazilian judges ruled the boy must be handed over to his father, David Goldman, at the U.S. Consulate in Rio de Janeiro within 48 hours, said Ricardo Zamariola, Goldman's attorney.

"He's really happy but he is worried about any eventual future decision that could block the boy being handed over to him," said Zamariola, who added that he didn't expect a final resolution until at least the first half of next year.

Goldman's lengthy court battle to get custody of his son, Sean, has gained international attention as President Barack Obama, the U.S. Congress and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have all weighed in, seeking the child's return.

The decision by the federal appeals court in Rio de Janeiro upheld a Brazilian federal judge's earlier ruling.

But Zamariola said he was certain lawyers for Joao Paulo Lins e Silva, the Brazilian stepfather with whom Sean is living, would appeal, perhaps to the Supreme Court.

Lins e Silva's attorney, Sergio Tostes, declined to comment.

Goldman was not present for the ruling Wednesday and didn't return a request for comment made to his U.S.-based attorney, Patricia Apy. Zamariola said he spoke with Goldman and that he was expected to arrive in Rio de Janeiro on Thursday morning.

The case began in 2004, when Goldman's wife, Bruna Bianchi, took then-4-year-old Sean to her native Brazil. Goldman says it was to be a two-week vacation.

But she stayed and so did the boy. She eventually was divorced there and remarried. Last year, she died giving birth to a daughter.

Goldman, who lives in Tinton Falls, New Jersey, had already been seeking his son's return under an international treaty that covers cross-border child abductions.

Bianchi's death generated more interest in the case, which has been discussed this year by top-level diplomats in Washington and the Brazilian capital, Brasilia. It also has been the subject of congressional hearings in the U.S. and has prompted protests in both countries.

Previous rulings favorable to Goldman have been scuttled by other Brazilian courts.

But U.S. Rep. Chris Smith, who has traveled to Brazil with Goldman and held congressional hearings on the issue, said he was optimistic Sean would soon be in the U.S.

"It's outstanding news," the New Jersey congressman said of Wednesday's ruling. "Even if there is an appeal, the order is to deliver Sean to the Embassy Friday."

Meanwhile, Sean's Brazilian maternal grandmother has said that Sean wants to stay in Rio. She has filed a petition with the Supreme Court asking that the boy's statements be taken into consideration. A similar request from the Brazilian family was denied earlier this year. The child, who has dual citizenship, has been shielded from speaking directly to the news media.

Both Goldman, a former model who now has a fishing charter business, and members of Bianchi's family, including her second husband, have appeared on television talk shows to make their case.

Goldman and his son reunited in February for the first time since the child was taken to Brazil. They have not seen each other since June.

I pray that he'll finally be able to bring Sean back to the US. Poor little guy, he'll need therapy to deal with all the dramas that has arisen. The stepdad should never have the right to regain custody of this little boy considering that the fact his biological dad is still alive and in the picture.
 
Sounds good. I hope it is all for the best and the stepfather needs to butt out of this since he is NOT the real father when the real father is still alive and well, and REALLY wanted his son to be with him so...what really digust me is that the stepfather tried to change his last name from the real father's name...thats...kinda like stealing your son, in a way you know? His mother told her husband he go on vacation and never came back cause she was already with another man so obviously she had an affair and divorced him...and gained custody with him and the stepfather. what a total bitch she was. of course she died after having another baby...and thats all hell break loose on the custody of that boy. Now I hope it comes to a complete end and that the stepfather just LET IT GO and accept the boy go to his biological father.
 
Hmmm.. is her bio-mother alive? I don't see that mention?
 
sigh I just heard they are delaying the son's return to the US to be with his real father...obviously the stepfather set appeal for this. He won't let it go.
 
Brazil's Top Court Halts Boy's Return to US Dad

Brazil's Top Court Halts 9-Year-Old Sean Goldman's Return to US Father - Sphere News

Brazil's Supreme Court delayed the return of a 9-year-old boy to his U.S. father only hours after the man arrived from New Jersey on Thursday in hopes of taking the boy home for Christmas.

The court suspended the previous day's appellate court decision ordering the child handed over to David Goldman, and held that the boy must stay in Brazil while it considers whether to hear his testimony in a case that has dragged on for five years.

The ruling means the boy will be in Brazil at least until Feb. 1, following the judges' return from a recess, according to a court spokesman who commented on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to discuss the case.

"The court of appeals, the three judges, recognized the urgency of my son to come home. This stay is ridiculous," Goldman said.

Goldman's lawyer Ricardo Zamariola confirmed the ruling means he will be unable to pick up his son Sean at the American Consulate in Rio on Friday, as a federal appeals court had ruled on Wednesday.

"We're studying the decision, and we'll decide what to do soon," Zamariola said.

Thursday's ruling, written by Justice Marco Aurelio Mello, found that "at stake is a fully formed life. At stake is the right to come and go, the right of opinion, expression and human dignity."

Mello told reporters afterward that the Supreme Court will "question the necessity of Sean, the boy, who is almost 10 years old, to be heard directly by a judge."

Silvana Bianchi, Sean's maternal grandmother, told the privately run Agencia Estado news service she was elated with the decision. According to her, Sean, who has dual citizenship, has said he wants to remain in Brazil.

"His testimony has never been heard," she said. "As a Brazilian citizen, he deserves it. He is a child of nearly 10 and he knows quite well what he wants."

To underscore that point, the lawyer for the Brazilian family showed reporters a card he said Sean drew. "I want to stay in Brazil forever," it read in large, green lettering.

Goldman, however, said it was wrong to ask a child to testify. He suggested that the family is unduly pressuring the boy, trying to convince him that he wants to remain in Brazil.

"Everyone knows the abuse that my son is being afflicted by," he said.

Brazil "does not want to be looked at as a country that is a safe haven for kidnappers, that will allow a child to remain separated from their only parent," Goldman added.

In 2004, Goldman's wife, Bruna Bianchi, took Sean to her native Brazil.

Goldman says it was to be a two-week vacation, but she stayed and so did the boy. She eventually obtained a Brazilian divorce and remarried.

Goldman was already seeking his son's return under an international treaty that covers cross-border child abductions when his former wife died last year while giving birth to a daughter.

President Barack Obama, the U.S. Congress and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton have all urged the child's return, and a U.S. congressman traveled to Rio on Thursday to continue lobbying the case.

Rep. Chris Smith said he was deeply disappointed by the Supreme Court's ruling and called on Brazil to send the boy back to the U.S. based on international law.

"We have a reciprocity agreement when it comes to abducted children," Smith said. "We all have an international obligation to work to get children back to their habitual residence."

Sergio Tostes, attorney for Sean's stepfather, Joao Paulo Lins e Silva, said the case should never have reached such high political levels.

"This is not a fight between two countries," Tostes said. "This is just the pursuit of the truth and the pursuit of what is in the best interest of the boy."

Goldman and Sean were reunited in February for the first time since his son was taken to Brazil. They have not seen each other since June.

Earlier Thursday, before the Supreme Court stay was announced, Goldman, dressed in black, stepped off a 12-hour flight from New York and into a large scrum of reporters in Rio.

Facing the crowd of cameras and microphones, he looked blank and appeared a man exhausted - by the flight, the custody fight and the possibility another last-minute appeal would keep him from taking his boy back to New Jersey.

"I hope I can go home with my son," Goldman said quietly.

You're right, Steel. Poor man, I hope he'll win his son back and soon. If this does not pan out then he should hire someone to kidnap his son and smuggle him out of Brazil somehow.
 
Fuck to Brazil, their justice system is STINKY!!!! :mad2:
 
Yea...the stepfather is pretty much stealing his son, after the mother is dead...while the father is present...it just disgusted me.
 
Brazil's Top Court Halts 9-Year-Old Sean Goldman's Return to US Father - Sphere News

Brazil's Supreme Court delayed the return of a 9-year-old boy to his U.S. father only hours after the man arrived from New Jersey on Thursday in hopes of taking the boy home for Christmas.

The court suspended the previous day's appellate court decision ordering the child handed over to David Goldman, and held that the boy must stay in Brazil while it considers whether to hear his testimony in a case that has dragged on for five years.

The ruling means the boy will be in Brazil at least until Feb. 1, following the judges' return from a recess, according to a court spokesman who commented on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to discuss the case.

"The court of appeals, the three judges, recognized the urgency of my son to come home. This stay is ridiculous," Goldman said.

Goldman's lawyer Ricardo Zamariola confirmed the ruling means he will be unable to pick up his son Sean at the American Consulate in Rio on Friday, as a federal appeals court had ruled on Wednesday.

"We're studying the decision, and we'll decide what to do soon," Zamariola said.

Thursday's ruling, written by Justice Marco Aurelio Mello, found that "at stake is a fully formed life. At stake is the right to come and go, the right of opinion, expression and human dignity."

Mello told reporters afterward that the Supreme Court will "question the necessity of Sean, the boy, who is almost 10 years old, to be heard directly by a judge."

Silvana Bianchi, Sean's maternal grandmother, told the privately run Agencia Estado news service she was elated with the decision. According to her, Sean, who has dual citizenship, has said he wants to remain in Brazil.

"His testimony has never been heard," she said. "As a Brazilian citizen, he deserves it. He is a child of nearly 10 and he knows quite well what he wants."

To underscore that point, the lawyer for the Brazilian family showed reporters a card he said Sean drew. "I want to stay in Brazil forever," it read in large, green lettering.

Goldman, however, said it was wrong to ask a child to testify. He suggested that the family is unduly pressuring the boy, trying to convince him that he wants to remain in Brazil.

"Everyone knows the abuse that my son is being afflicted by," he said.

Brazil "does not want to be looked at as a country that is a safe haven for kidnappers, that will allow a child to remain separated from their only parent," Goldman added.

In 2004, Goldman's wife, Bruna Bianchi, took Sean to her native Brazil.

Goldman says it was to be a two-week vacation, but she stayed and so did the boy. She eventually obtained a Brazilian divorce and remarried.

Goldman was already seeking his son's return under an international treaty that covers cross-border child abductions when his former wife died last year while giving birth to a daughter.

President Barack Obama, the U.S. Congress and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton have all urged the child's return, and a U.S. congressman traveled to Rio on Thursday to continue lobbying the case.

Rep. Chris Smith said he was deeply disappointed by the Supreme Court's ruling and called on Brazil to send the boy back to the U.S. based on international law.

"We have a reciprocity agreement when it comes to abducted children," Smith said. "We all have an international obligation to work to get children back to their habitual residence."

Sergio Tostes, attorney for Sean's stepfather, Joao Paulo Lins e Silva, said the case should never have reached such high political levels.

"This is not a fight between two countries," Tostes said. "This is just the pursuit of the truth and the pursuit of what is in the best interest of the boy."

Goldman and Sean were reunited in February for the first time since his son was taken to Brazil. They have not seen each other since June.

Earlier Thursday, before the Supreme Court stay was announced, Goldman, dressed in black, stepped off a 12-hour flight from New York and into a large scrum of reporters in Rio.

Facing the crowd of cameras and microphones, he looked blank and appeared a man exhausted - by the flight, the custody fight and the possibility another last-minute appeal would keep him from taking his boy back to New Jersey.

"I hope I can go home with my son," Goldman said quietly.

You're right, Steel. Poor man, I hope he'll win his son back and soon. If this does not pan out then he should hire someone to kidnap his son and smuggle him out of Brazil somehow.

and US need suspension of aid to Brazil until son has return to US, they will learn the tough lesson due poor and developing country.
 
Yea...the stepfather is pretty much stealing his son, after the mother is dead...while the father is present...it just disgusted me.

It would be good idea to hire secret agent to visit and shoot at stepfather, that all I have say.
 
the boy was born American so of course he should back to his birth land. remember that fight about the Cuban boy more than 10 years ago? they fought for his rights to stay in America but they lost and he was forced to go back to Cuba due to illegal crossing.
 
Fuck to Brazil, their justice system is STINKY!!!! :mad2:
Don't get mad at Brazil. Remember, it was the boy's maternal grandmother who interfered.

Even the United States court system would respond the same way if something like this happened here.

That's why they're looking into it further.

There's a high possibility that the boy's maternal grandmother is very biased and selfish... enough to "bribe" or trick the boy into staying.

I've seen this happen with foster kids. When the time comes for the child to be in court and decide whether the child is returned to his biological parents or be adopted by his foster parents, the judge will ask for the child's opinion. In this case, the biological parents will spoil their kids "like there's no tomorrow" with hopes that their kids will want to go back to them instead of the foster parents.

So, this is probably what's happening with the boy's family in Brazil. They're probably promising him this and that if he says that he wants to stay in Brazil. Even his comment, "I want to stay in Brazil forever!" is something only a person would say if they were dreaming.

Even a grown woman having a fantastic time in Disney World would say, "I wish I could stay here forever!"
 
Father Invited to Brazil for Christmas With Son

American Father David Goldman Invited to Spend Christmas With Son in Brazil - Sphere News

An American man fighting for custody of his 9-year-old son has been invited to spend Christmas with the boy's Brazilian family, the family's attorney said Friday.

David Goldman has been locked in a legal battle over custody of his son, Sean Goldman, with the family of the boy's deceased mother.

The family's attorney, Sergio Tostes, said Friday that the legal battle had gone too far.

"It is about time that Sean's family, and I mean all Sean's family, get together. I am authorized by Mrs. Silvana Bianchi to invite you, Mr. Goldman, to spend Christmas night at her house," Tostes said, referring to Sean's maternal grandmother. "This will be a long awaited family reunion"

"I hope you can accept and we can talk logistics," he said, with the boy's grandmother standing next to him.

Tostes also said that the family would consider allowing the boy to go to the United States, perhaps for the holidays, if Sean wants to go. However, "Sean must be heard in court," he said.

There was no immediate response from Goldman.

Earlier Friday, Goldman slammed a decision by a Brazilian Supreme Court justice Thursday that prevented the boy's return to the United States. That decision had "nothing to do with the merits" of the case, he said.

On Wednesday, a lower court unanimously upheld a decision ordering that Sean be returned to his father in New Jersey. That decision was made in accordance with the 1980 Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of Child Abductions.

"Every day that my son is under that roof, he is being severely psychologically damaged," Goldman said. He insisted that there is the "utmost urgency" for Sean to be reunited with him.

"My son is suffering, and he's losing the innocence of ... a child," Goldman said.

The family argues that it would traumatize Sean to remove him from what has been his home since 2004, when his mother took him to Brazil on what she said would be a vacation.

The family said Sean screamed with joy when he found out Thursday that he would not have to leave with his dad.

The custody battle began in 2004, when Goldman's wife, Bruna Bianchi, took their then-4-year-old son from their home in New Jersey to Rio de Janeiro for what was to have been a two-week vacation. She never returned, instead remarrying there and retaining custody of Sean. She died last year in childbirth.

Goldman has argued that as the sole surviving parent, he should at last be granted custody.

Instead of traveling to Brasilia, where the high court is, Goldman planned to stay in Rio de Janeiro on Friday, where he is just miles from Sean.

He hasn't seen his son since February.

Rep. Chris Smith, R-New Jersey, who is traveling with Goldman, said three court-appointed psychologists tasked with determining the boy's emotional and psychological well-being had unanimously concluded that he is being hurt emotionally "by the continuance of this abduction."

Smith said Sean was previously put in front of a video camera as adults asked questions. The boy made remarks in that video that members of his mother's family suggest indicate he should stay in Brazil.

If the court allows a child's drawings or such a videotape to be used as evidence in a courtroom, Smith said, "every kidnapper everywhere in the world -- every child abductor in the world" would have the children make such things.

Goldman also addressed the videotape: "What is he going to say? 'No, I hate it here,' knowing he'll go back up under their roof? What do you expect? He is an innocent, helpless, vulnerable, defenseless child that needs to be freed from this circumstance."

Smith called on Brazil's full Supreme Court to "vacate this illogical and unjust stay on the rightful return of Sean Goldman to his only dad."

If the court does not do so, Smith said, he and Goldman hope Chief Justice Gilmar Mendes will.

Smith also said Brazil's Central Authority, which represents interests of the International Court of Justice in the country, planned to appeal to get the justice's stay lifted.

Brazil's Central Authority did not immediately return calls seeking comment Friday.

Goldman described how he longed to bring his son home in time for Christmas, to play with him in the yard, to go to movies and eat popcorn.

Smith said that all the "surveillance" present at the time of the February visit -- including a psychologist that the family had "almost right next to David and Sean the whole time" -- made it "an oppressive situation."

"David ought to be with his son, not on a visit but permanently," Smith said.

The family has said Goldman can visit his son.

"It's not about going to a compound with a man standing over us, intimidating my son" and "making him nervous," Goldman said.

He added that when his son "was abducted," he would cry, "I want to be with my dad."

In separating the child from him, "You poison the child's mind," he said.

The case has drawn attention worldwide.

Smith called it a "major embarrassment to the Brazilian government."

Goldman said he holds out hope that he will be able to take Sean home so the two "can go on with our life as father and son."

"I'm ... begging for justice, begging," he said. "Why is it so hard? Why?"

I wouldn't trust the grandmother as she helped her daughter abduct Sean.
 
Don't get mad at Brazil. Remember, it was the boy's maternal grandmother who interfered.

Even the United States court system would respond the same way if something like this happened here.

That's why they're looking into it further.

There's a high possibility that the boy's maternal grandmother is very biased and selfish... enough to "bribe" or trick the boy into staying.

I've seen this happen with foster kids. When the time comes for the child to be in court and decide whether the child is returned to his biological parents or be adopted by his foster parents, the judge will ask for the child's opinion. In this case, the biological parents will spoil their kids "like there's no tomorrow" with hopes that their kids will want to go back to them instead of the foster parents.

So, this is probably what's happening with the boy's family in Brazil. They're probably promising him this and that if he says that he wants to stay in Brazil. Even his comment, "I want to stay in Brazil forever!" is something only a person would say if they were dreaming.

Even a grown woman having a fantastic time in Disney World would say, "I wish I could stay here forever!"

Ok, I understand now so thanks for more information.
 
Interesting...at least he'll get to see his son for christmas in brazil better than nothing.

I dont know if I should believe that when they said the boy screamed with joy that he isn't going back to the US with his dad yet.

There still isn't enough proof on whats really going on with them and the boy.
 
US Dad Should Get Custody of Son, Brazilian Justice Says

Brazil's Chief Justice Rules for US Dad David Goldman in Custody Battle - Sphere News

Brazil's chief justice on Tuesday ruled in favor of a U.S. man who has pursued a five-year court battle to gain custody of his son.

According to the court's Web site, Chief Justice Gilmar Mendes ruled David Goldman's 9-year-old son must be delivered to him by the boy's Brazilian relatives, as a federal court ordered last week. A time frame for the handover was not clear.

The ruling put Goldman one step closer to finally being reunited with his son, Sean. The boy was taken by Goldman's now-deceased ex-wife to her native Brazil in 2004, where he has remained. Goldman has been fighting to get him back from the boy's stepfather.

Lawyers on both sides have said there was still a chance for the Brazilian family to appeal to Brazil's highest appeals court, though the chances of success seemed slight.

A member of Goldman's team reached just minutes after the ruling described the father as happy, but said he had seen earlier rulings ordering Sean's return be blocked and was waiting to see if the latest ruling would stick or be enforced.

Goldman, who lives in Tinton Falls, New Jersey, declined to comment until he learned more details.

For days the Goldman camp has expressed worries the Brazilian family might try to flee or hide Sean.

Calls to the Brazilian family's lawyer were not immediately returned.

Both the U.S. and Brazilian governments argued that the case clearly fell under the Hague Convention, which seeks to ensure that custody decisions are made by the courts in the country where a child originally lived - in this case, the United States.

A lawyer specializing in the Hague Convention said Tuesday's decision by Mendes was the only right one to make.

"It would be virtually impossible to reconcile international law with a ruling in favor of the Brazilian family," said Greg Lewen of the Miami-based law firm Fowler White Burnett.

He said that if the Hague Convention were not followed by the chief justice, "the State Department should immediately issue a travel advisory warning parents not to go to Brazil with their children."

Goldman launched his case in U.S. and Brazilian courts after Sean was brought by his mother in 2004 to her home country, where she then divorced Goldman and remarried. She died last year in childbirth, and the boy has lived with his stepfather since.

In an interview with The Associated Press on Sunday, Goldman said he would allow Sean's Brazilian relatives to visit with his son if he won the case. "I will not do to them what they've done to Sean and me," he said.

The case has affected diplomatic ties between Brazil and the U.S., and has been discussed by President Barack Obama and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. Last week, a U.S. senator reacted to the case by blocking renewal of a $2.75 billion trade deal that would lift U.S. tariffs on some Brazilian goods.

The U.S. State Department pressed for the boy to be returned. But a Brazilian Supreme Court justice on Thursday stayed the lower court decision ordering Sean to be turned over to his father.

Goldman and Brazil's attorney general both filed appeals Friday asking the Supreme Court to overturn the justice's decision to block Sean's return while the court considers hearing direct testimony from the boy. On Tuesday, Mendes ruled the order no longer valid.

The Brazilian family's lawyer, Sergio Tostes, had told the AP that he would like to see a negotiated settlement, saying he wanted to end the damage being done to Sean and to U.S.-Brazil relations.

"We're raising the white flag and saying: 'Let's get together, let's talk. We're the adults, we have responsibilities, so let's start to have a constructive conversation,'" Tostes said.

Goldman, however, was in never in a mood to negotiate.

"This isn't about a shared custody - I'm his dad, I'm his only parent," Goldman said. "This isn't a custody case - it's an abduction case."
 
Hmm...looks like there may be a good chance for him to go back to the US to be with his real father then...since he was born american, after all.
 
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