Child Custody A to Z: Winning with Evidence 
asked by samoan on November 22, 2006 6:23 PM
Help! is the first word a parent yells when dealing with a child custody battle. Author Guy White cuts through and captures the essence of how child custody cases are won and lost. Child Custody A to Z navigates you through the flawed system of justice. Evidence is the most overlooked aspect of a child custody case. This book explains and addresses:
How to choose an attorney
How to impeach court experts
How to gather evidence
How to expose a personality disorder
How to investigate your case
Child Custody A to Z is replete with case studies that tell the real story of the controversial game of child custody. There is no substitute for preparation. White reveals judges, attorneys and court experts for their bias and incompetence. The author takes you through the step-by-step formula for winning with evidence.
Reviews
This book tells you what you need to know in a simple, straight manner. If you situation is standard and you need a book to take you through the paces, this is what you need. Recommend resource.
reviewed by radar on November 27, 2006 5:17 AM
Expertly written. This is a very informative, play by play book. It outlines the real rules of the "Game". It provides detailed information for family members needing to understand the facts of how a custody case is decided, the players involved and who has the most impact on the case.
Guy White identifies how you should act, think, protect and live your child custody case. Clearly his 20 years experience has positively impacted the live of parents, children and grand parents which were on his side of the case!
Guy White identifies how you should act, think, protect and live your child custody case. Clearly his 20 years experience has positively impacted the live of parents, children and grand parents which were on his side of the case!
reviewed by vladi on November 27, 2006 4:42 PM
This is a handbook for divorce where child custody is involved. Well written, down to the basics advice. I have read several others and the author gives real instrucuctions, not theory. Mr. White understands the template of custody and demonstrates how to move the chess pieces. There's strategy and chronologies in this book I haven't found in other books.
reviewed by work on November 28, 2006 3:16 PM
