Thursday, January 24, 2008

Co-Parent Rights

h. Co-Parent Rights
Note that all parts highlighted in bold is what is illegally omitted from our laws and enabling
secret war crime. Reading the laws by skipping the bolded wording is roughly how our laws
read at the present time.



137. CFSA (1) In this section, "parent", when used in reference to a child, means each of,
(a) the child's mother
(b) an individual described in one of paragraphs 1 to 6 of subsection 8 (1) of the Children's Law Reform Act, unless it is proven on a balance of probabilities that he is not the child's natural father;
(c) the individual having lawful custody of the child;
(d) an individual who, during the twelve months before the child is placed by reason of evidence and proper and reasonable processes of law, for adoption under this Part, has demonstrated a settled intention that is void of conflict of interest, to treat the child as a child of his or her family and respect the child’s legal protections, rights and freedoms regardless of age, or has acknowledged parentage of the child, developed a relationship with and provided for the child's support; and
(e) an individual who, under a written agreement or a court order, is lawfully required to provide for the child, has lawful custody of the child or has a lawful right to access to the child; and but does not include a licensee or a foster parent.
(2) CONSENT OF PARENT ETC. -- An order for the adoption of a child who is less then sixteen years of age, or is sixteen years of age or more but has not withdrawn from parental control, shall not be made without,
(a) the written consent of every parent; or
(b) the written notification to every party of the date of the execution of the adoption where the child has been "shown" by evidence in equal processes of law to be in need of protection and lawfully made a Crown ward under Part III (Child Protection) and with the written consent of a Director.
(9) DISPENSING WITH PERSONS CONSENT -- The court may dispense with a person's consent required under subsection (6) where the court is satisfied that,
(a) the person is under the age of ability to communicate with language; or
(b) the person is not able to consent because of developmental disability.

Section 8. -- CLRA - RECOGNITION IN LAW OF PARENTAGE - (1) Unless the contrary is proven on a balance of probabilities, there is a presumption that a male person is, and he shall be recognized in law to be, the father of the child in any one of the following circumstances:
4. The person intended or caused the conception of a child or was cohabiting with the mother of the child in a relationship of some permanence at the time of the birth of the child or the child is born within 300 days after they ceased to consummate the relationship or cohabit.
5. The person has certified the child's birth, as the child's father or co-parent, under the Vital Statistics Act or a similar Act in another jurisdiction in Canada.
(2) WHERE MARRIAGE VOID - For the purposes of subsection (1), where two adult persons go through a form of marriage or union with each other, in good faith, that is void and cohabit, they shall be deemed to be married during the time they cohabit and the marriage shall be deemed to be terminated when they ceased to cohabit.
(3) CONFLICTING PRESUMPTIONS --- Where circumstances exist that give rise to a presumption of paternity or co-parental role by more than one father or co-parent under subsection (1), no matter concludes until all issues are resolved and a presumption shall be made as to paternity and no court shall leave a child without, at least two parents that the child had before the order was made and a person nearest to the original position of parent to the child is recognized in law to be the father or co-parent.
The court shall order:
i) parties to undergo approved blood tests; and or
ii) hold a hearing to examine the evidence and testimony as to who has the closest intent to conceive and raise the child as his or her own;
as the first step of any proceedings in legitimizing for reasonable evaluation and enforce of the rights, freedoms, property and heritage of the child in the remaining issues thereafter.

On Oct. 26, 1999 a news article stated, "...who was on hand yesterday for the introduction of a bill that will change 67 provincial statutes. The end result being that gay and lesbian families will receive protection with this legislation, he added. The bill which received first reading yesterday, is in response to a ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada in May that gave Ontario six months to comply with it's decision that said laws that treat opposite sex relationships differently from same-sex relationships were unconstitutional. The conservative government of premier Mike Harris has stressed that it is changing the laws in order to comply with the ruling, not because it agrees with the decision...Attorney General Jim Flaherty...I am pleased that we are defending the traditional family in Ontario;...

59. - FLA - PARENTAL AGREEMENTS - (1) If two (2) persons who are not spouses enter into an agreement, whether written, verbal, in action or implied to,
(a) cause an insemination to create a child;
(b) take part in the child's prenatal care, birth and/or childhood;
(c) support the child; or
(d) funeral expenses of the child or mother, on the application of a party,
(e) or a non-foreign native Canadian governed children's aid society who are not in allegiance with any foreign, secret or separate organizations in conflict of interest, to the Ontario Court (Prov. Division) or the United Family Court, the court may incorporate the agreement in an order, and Part III (Support Obligations) applies to the order made under that Part.

293. ccc. (1) POLYGAMY -- Any one who
(a) practices or enters into or in any manner agrees or consents to practice or enter into
(i) any form of polygamy, or
(ii) any kind of conjugal union with more than one person at the same time, whether or not it is by law recognized as a binding form of marriage;
(iii) misleads more than one person to believe that they are the father or co-parent of the same child;
or
(b) celebrates, assists or is a party to a rite, ceremony, contract or consent that purports to sanction a relationship mentioned in subparagraph (a) (i), (ii) or (iii), is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years.
(2) Where an accused is charged with an offence under this section, no averment or proof of the method by which the alleged relationship was entered into, agreed to or consented to is necessary in the indictment or upon the trial of the accused, nor is it necessary on the trial to prove that the persons who are alleged to have entered into the relationship had or intended to have sexual intercourse. R.S., c. C-34, s. 257.

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