The usual suspects accuse dad of parental alienation after his son refuses to go to school in Arizona
Judge Melissa Zabor and Kristyn Alcott are involved in another family travesty.
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I have often said that parental alienation is whatever each person wants it to be.
The recent ruling in a case in Maricopa County, Arizona in August 2023 further illustrates that point.
Until August, Shebli Geegieh and Muna Haddad shared custody of their son, including all decision making.
That created a conflict when Shebli and Muna disagreed on which school their son would attend.
As such- due to the infinite wisdom of our courts- that decision would be left to the judge. In this case, the judge presiding over their custody matter was Judge Melissa Zabor.
Judge Zabor sided with Muna.
Zabor sided with Muna and now their son attends Indian Bend Elementary School in Phoenix, Arizona.
Judge Zabor ignored the wishes of the child, who was adamant he did not want to attend: at least in part because other children call him a racist.
Judge Zabor was sending this child to a school he adamantly did not want to attend; she had a solution.
She appointed Kristyn Alcott to help him go to school. Alcott’s appointment began on August 3, 2023.
According to Alcott’s testimony from later that day, Shebli dropped off his son and left.
His son refused to go to school, so Alcott called his mom, Muna.
Muna called the cops who threatened the boy.
After those threats didn’t work, Muna apparently called her attorney, Kristina Matthews.
I reached out to Ms. Matthews, Ms. Alcott, and to Alberto Rodriguez, who is the communications director for the Arizona judiciary.
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None responded to messages for comment.
Ms. Matthews quickly turned the situation into an emergency. There was a status conference scheduled for later that day, but Ms. Matthews filed an emergency motion to temporarily switch custody.
Ms. Alcott, who only met the family that very morning, was the star witness.
Ms. Alcott has been accused of doing unethical things but a former employee.
She recently testified in favor of giving a physical abuser temporary sole custody.
In Judge Zabor’s courtroom, she was treated with deference. Her testimony considered an “expert.”
Alcott couched most of her statements by acknowledging that she really did not know what was happening. As such, she argued that other people should be appointed.
This is a trick that court whores like Alcott use. The identify a problem, and their solution is always to suggest the appointment of someone else.
A COBI and CAA are two of numerous court appointees like Alcott. People who charge hundreds of dollars an hour to supposedly fix things which are never fixed.
This is a scam throughout the country. It was the substance of the now infamous webinar. That webinar also laid out how to get as many people appointed as possible.
Shebli’s attorney, Ken Kelsey, argued that this was no emergency, and furthermore, since he received the motion only five minutes before the hearing, his client’s due process rights were violated. Kelsey further argued that Alcott was no expert.
Judge Zabor doesn’t care about due process. She thinks an emergency is when a child she’s never met refuses to bend to her will. That’s what happened in the story I covered in July, when Rachel Cardona’s children refused to go to an exchange with their father: who they said was physically abusing them.
She called that an emergency, and she issued a temporary order granting him sole custody.
Rachel was accused of parental alienation by Judge Zabor. She gave Shebli the same label.
Judge Zabor’s ridiculous ruling is even more absurd when you consider that Huna has been telling this child bad things about his father. Here are a couple emails.
There’s no rhyme or reason to parental alienation. If a child doesn’t want to go to school, that must be parental alienation. If a parent says bad things about the other parent, that’s nothing.
Check out my interview with Tori Nielsen, whose mother recently was in front of Judge Zabor. Angie Nielsen was also accused of parental alienation.