David Heleniak

David Heleniak is a civil litigation attorney in New Jersey and Senior Legal Analyst for the True Equality Network.
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JD from Widener University School of Law, MA from Drew University

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Displaying Results 1 - 8 (of 8) for All Content
  • Mock the Vote
    Voting is not a sacrament. And as it stands today, when we only given a choice between two Establishment approved candidates, voting is a joke.
  • Gitmo at Home: DV Courts in America
    October is Domestic Violence Awareness Month. Domestic violence is a very real and significant problem in America. This month would be a good time to address the attempt of state governments to combat domestic violence through the issuance of restraining orders.
  • Nifong and HRES 590
    On September 25, 2007, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution, HRES 590, that stereotypes men as wife-beaters. With its passage, savvy prosecutors and judges will clearly perceive the political winds as blowing against men, as they have been for some time.
  • PC Feminism and the DV Courts
    Thanks to PC feminists, in contrast, we have the theory of the patriarchy and the PC conception of domestic violence (DV), two ideas that are responsible for widespread violations of the civil rights of men and pervasive damage to father-child relationships.
  • Judges and the Development of Parental Alienation Syndrome
    Dr. Richard A. Gardner, who coined the term "Parental Alienation Syndrome" in 1985, believed that family court judges, rather than impede the development of PAS, often facilitate it.
  • False Domestic Violence Accusations Can Lead to Parental Alienation Syndrome
    A domestic violence restraining order is a perfect weapon for a parent who wants to turn a child against the other parent.
  • Erring on the Side of Hidden Harm: The Granting of Domestic Violence Restraining Orders
    Just like FDA officials worrying about the headlines, judges deciding whether to enter domestic violence restraining orders have their careers to think about in addition to the merits of the particular cases before them. When in doubt, they err on the side of hidden harm.
  • Manhattan Prosecutors Declare War on Families
    In "Criminal Law Comes Home," Harvard Law School professor Jeannie Suk exposes a disturbing practice in Manhattan that has become routine in criminal cases involving alleged domestic violence, the imposition of de facto divorces regardless of the parties' wishes.

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