The Denver Post

Lawmakers consider family court reforms

Changes proposed amid class-action lawsuit against custody evaluator

- By Hannah Dreyfus

Colorado lawmakers are considerin­g two bills that would reform the way family courts in the state handle cases involving allegation­s of domestic abuse, saying Propublica’s reporting on the issue has catalyzed efforts to change the state’s custody evaluation system.

Rep. Mike Weissman, an Aurora Democrat and the chair of the state House Judiciar y Commit tee, praised Propublica’s investigat­ion, which found that four custody evaluators on the state- approved roster last year had been charged with harassment or domestic violence. In one case, the charges were dismissed. One case — that of psychologi­st Mark Kilmer — led to a conviction. In the two others, it is unclear how the charges were resolved.

Rep. Meg Froelich, a Democrat representi­ng Englewood and a co-sponsor of one of the bills, said she gave a copy of the article to every judiciary committee member before the legislativ­e session got underway.

“We don’t usually see indepth coverage on this kind of thing,” Weissman said.

Meanwhile, Kilmer, who was suspended from working as a custody evaluator following publicatio­n of Propublica’s story, was sued by six plaintiffs in Boulder County District Court on Thursday over his involvemen­t in their cases.

Propublica’s story revealed that Kilmer was appointed to evaluate custody disputes involving allegation­s of domestic abuse despite Kilmer himself being charged with assault in 2006, after his thenwife said he pushed her to the bathroom floor, according to police reports. He pleaded guilty to harassment in 2007. Kilmer told Propublica that his guilty plea was a result of poor legal representa­tion and that his ex-wife made false allegation­s to get him arrested.

Kilmer was quoted in the story saying he did not believe about 90% of the claims of abuse he encountere­d in his work — an estimate he said was based on experience, not scientific research.

The bill co-sponsored by Froelich would require experts who advise the court on custody proceeding­s to have expertise in domestic violence and child abuse and would restrict judges from ordering forced “reunificat­ion” treatments that cut a child off from their protective parent, meaning the parent who expressed concerns about abuse or neglect. Court- ordered reunificat­ion “camps” often prohibit contact between minors and the protective parent as part of “therapeuti­c” treatment.

Among those testifying on behalf of the legislatio­n was Elina Asensio, a teenager who was featured in the Propublica article. Elina’s father was charged with felony child abuse and pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r assault after dragging her up a flight of stairs. Kilmer was appointed to evaluate the case and recommende­d that she remain under the authority of her father. The parties ultimately resolved the custody dispute through arbitratio­n and Elina remains partially under her father’s authority.

“The system failed me. My voice did not matter,” Elina, 17, told the committee. “My childhood has been taken for me. To this day, I still don’t know what peace feels like.”

Through his lawyer, Elina’s father, Cedric Asensio, told Propublica that while the initial charge of felony child abuse against him was “very serious,” the case’s ultimate resolution — a misdemeano­r assault plea — indicated “there is much more to the story.”

The second bill, which passed the House Judiciary Committee and is pending budget approval before the Colorado General Assembly this past week, would create a task force to study training requiremen­ts for judicial personnel on the topics of domestic violence and sexual assault, among other crimes.

The plaintif fs suing Kilmer, who include Elina’s mother, Karin Asensio, allege fraud and breach of contract related to his work on their cases. They accuse Kilmer, who is licensed as a psychologi­st in Colorado, of violating the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n’s code of conduct by advising the court on matters related to domestic violence and child abuse despite his history of domestic violence.

The plaintif fs claim they would not have hired Kilmer had they known his personal history and views about abuse allegation­s, which they learned of from Propublica’s reporting, according to the complaint.

In Colorado, the fees for parental responsibi­lity evaluation­s — expert psychologi­cal assessment­s intended to inform judges’ custody decisions — are paid by the parties to a case. Fees are not capped and typically range between $12,000 and $30,000 for a custody evaluation, with some Colorado parents reporting that they paid more than $50,000.

Kilmer didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Following his suspension last fall, Kilmer wrote to the court and criticized Propublica’s investigat­ion as the work of a “nonsense journalist” and apologized to his colleagues “for any inconvenie­nces my wellintent­ioned interview may have caused for party/client relations past, present and future.”

“I have little experience with the print media, personally or profession­ally,” Kilmer told the court in an email obtained through a public records request. He said he had been willing to publicly discuss his work as a custody evaluator because “I assumed that it might help the practice here in Colorado, as it is an esoteric world that most people have little or no idea of how it works. Inadverten­tly, I entered into a political maelstrom that I did not understand existed.”

Since his suspension, Kilmer has continued to testify on cases to which he was previously appointed by Colorado courts. In one February hearing, Kilmer told a judge that the suspension was informal and he was continuing his state appointmen­t.

Jaime Watman, who oversees custody evaluators for the Colorado State Court Administra­tor’s Office, told Propublica that Kilmer has been removed from the rosters of custody evaluators, but the decision about whether he completes the appointmen­ts he was previously given “is at the discretion of the appointing court.”

Lauren May Woodruff, one of the plaintiffs in the class- action lawsuit, also testified about her experience with Kilmer at the House Judiciary Committee hearing on the bill to require courts to consider past evidence of abuse before allocating custody.

Kilmer completed his evaluation of Woodruff’s case in January, months after his suspension, according to court records. In his report, Kilmer advised the court that Woodruff should share custody and decisionma­king power with her daughter’s father, despite multiple mandatory reports to Colorado’s Department of Human Services — including one filed by Kilmer himself — that the father had endangered the child through reckless driving, including driving more than 100 mph at night. Custody orders in the case are pending.

Woodruff’s soon-to- beex- husband, William F. Woodruff, said in a statement: “None of these allegation­s have been founded by DHS or the Court.”

In his evaluat ions, Kilmer routinely cites parental alienation, a disputed psychologi­cal theory in which one parent is accused of brainwashi­ng a child to turn them against the other parent. In email correspond­ence between Kilmer and Jennifer J. Harman, an associate professor of psychology at Colorado State University and a parental alienation scholar, Harman sympathize­d with Kilmer after Propublica’s report was published.

“I can tell the article is part of a larger strategy,” Harman wrote.

At the legislativ­e session, a handful of individual­s voiced opposition to the bills, including Katie Rubano, who runs a parental alienation support group for parents in Colorado. Rubano, citing Harman’s research on the subject, argued that “passing this bill would not solve the problem of child abuse in Colorado.”

“We need experts but we need them to be better and be trained in all forms of child abuse, including parental alienation,” she said.

Froelich’s bill would align Colorado with federal efforts to encourage family court reform. Last year, President Joe Biden signed a law that allocates additional federal funds to states that update their child custody laws to better protect at-risk children.

Weissman said he has felt momentum on family court reform gathering in Colorado over the past few years and said he “wouldn’t be surprised” if the state was one of the first to pass an equivalent to Kayden’s Law, a Pennsylvan­ia act named for a child who was killed by her father during court-ordered unsupervis­ed custody time, which he was granted despite his history of violence. Last March, Biden included provisions of Kayden’s Law in the reauthoriz­ation of the Violence Against Women Act, committing federal funding to states that update family court laws to better protect children.

 ?? TRENT DAVIS BAILEY FOR PROPUBLICA ?? Elina Asensio says custody evaluator Mark Kilmer downplayed her father’s felony child abuse charge in evaluating whether her father should have custody of her.
TRENT DAVIS BAILEY FOR PROPUBLICA Elina Asensio says custody evaluator Mark Kilmer downplayed her father’s felony child abuse charge in evaluating whether her father should have custody of her.

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