William
and Mary’s Courtroom 21 to Test New Technology-Based Solution
to Resolve International Child Abduction Cases
Released on
= March 24, 2005, 11:41 am
Press Release
Author = Tammi Flythe / Courtroom 21 Project
Industry = Law
Press Release
Summary = The 2005 Courtroom 21 Lab Trial is a proof-of-concept
experiment designed to show that multi-jurisdictional disputes,
notably international parental child abduction cases, sometimes
can be resolved by joint
hearings of the multiple courts involved in the case. We believe
this experiment is the first ever to attempt this method of technology-aided
multi-court hearing and
resolution. The joint hearings will be conducted by videoconference
with evidentiary exhibits available by Internet.
Press Release
Body = (Williamsburg, VA) – The Courtroom 21 Project has developed
and will test in April a cutting-edge technological solution to
help courts in different nations to jointly resolve many of the
difficult international child
abduction cases that take place every year.
Courtroom 21
-- a joint project of the William and Mary Law School and the National
Center for State Courts -- will test its solution Saturday morning,
April 2nd during an experimental Courtroom 21 Laboratory Trial.
In re Blossom & Blossom concerns a married couple—the
wife a citizen of Mexico—whose marriage has failed. Mrs. Blossom
returns home to Monterrey with her young son, leaving her husband
and daughter in their Williamsburg, Virginia, home. Both parents
seek custody of the children by retaining lawyers and bringing suit
in their local courts in Williamsburg and
Monterrey. The first case is filed in the United States in Williamsburg,
making the simulated Williamsburg Juvenile and Domestic Relations
Court the initial court to take action. Mr. Blossom attempts to
use the Hague Convention, which applies to both the U.S. and Mexico,
to obtain the speedy return of his son. However, in light of allegations
of spousal and child abuse by Mrs. Blossom, the Monterrey Court
refus
es to return the Blossoms’ son to the United States and instead
schedules a full hearing on the issues of custody and parental access.
With the assistance
of Monterrey, Mexico, in this simulated case Courtroom 21 will use
modern videoconferencing technology to permit the Virginia and Mexico
courts to
hold joint hearings, meet together, and to issue joint or parallel
court orders to resolve the custody and access issues. In doing
so, Courtroom 21 also hopes to pioneer an approach for use in other
forms of multi-jurisdiction cases. Ordinarily, cases are heard by
a single court. When multiple courts try to deal with cases that
cross boundaries, they are limited by the simple fact that the power
of any single
court is limited by its jurisdictional limits. This is especially
true in international child abduction cases said Professor Fred
Lederer, Director of the Courtroom 21 Project. “With spouses
often at war with each other and children sheltered by the courts
of one nation while immune from judicial action in the
other, resolution of such cases often is enormously difficult,”
states Lederer.
While many nations
are signatories of the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of
International Child Abduction, which mandates return of abducted
children, allegations of abuse and other matters can limit the application
of the Convention’s remedies. In such a case, a court in one
country, Lederer explains, has no meaningful way to communicate
with a court in another and no useful way to jointly reach a custodial
resolution that can be enforced in both nations. Courtroom 21 believes
that its state-of-the art technology may provide a new procedural
solution for some of these demanding cases.
Courtroom 21, www.courtroom21.net, is the world center for courtroom
and related technology and has in William & Mary’s McGlothlin
Courtroom the world’s most technologically advanced trial
and appellate courtroom. The Courtroom 21 approach builds on a number
of years of experimental work. In 2003, for example, Courtroom 21’s
Lab Trial involved an al Qaeda financing case in which three courts
met to determine the admissibility of the testimony of a potential
attorney witness. Last year, Courtroom 21 hosted an experimental
international construction contract mediation with participants
in four nations meeting together via modern technology.
The results
of those cases set the stage for the 2005 lab trial in which Courtroom
21 has had the assistance of the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children and the State Department’s Office of Children’s
Issues. The U.S. portion of the hearing will be presided over by
the Honorable John J. Specia, Jr., of the 224th Civil District Court
of Bexar County, Texas. Specia will participate from Courtroom 21’s
McGlothlin Courtroom in the William and Mary Law School. The Courtroom
will be connected through videoconferencing with participants in
Mexico. All documentary evidence will be made available on the Internet.
A limited number
of seats will be available in the Courtroom for journalists interested
in covering the trial in Williamsburg. Courtesy of CourtroomConnect,
a multimedia court record webcast will also be available by prior
arrangement.
Web Site = http://www.courtroom21.net
Contact Details
= P.O. Box 8795
Williamsburg, VA 23187-8795
Phone: 757-221-2494
Fax: 757-221-3708
ctrm21@wm.edu
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