Rebuilding the Parent-Child Bond
When one parent deliberately undermines your relationship with your child, California courts have powerful tools to intervene. We fight to restore what alienation has damaged.
When one parent deliberately undermines your relationship with your child, California courts have powerful tools to intervene. We fight to restore what alienation has damaged.
California courts recognize parental alienation as a form of emotional abuse that causes lasting psychological damage to children.
Alienation rarely happens overnight. It is a pattern of deliberate behaviors designed to destroy the bond between a child and a loving parent. California courts look for sustained conduct, not isolated incidents.
Constant negative comments about the other parent in front of the child, rewriting the narrative that the parent "abandoned" them or "does not care."
Verbal PoisoningRepeatedly canceling or "forgetting" scheduled exchanges, scheduling conflicting activities, or moving without court permission to make custody impractical.
Custody SabotagePreventing phone calls, FaceTime, texts, or other contact between the child and the alienated parent during time apart.
Isolation TacticFiling false reports of abuse or domestic violence with police, CPS, or the court, or coaching the child to make false statements to therapists or authorities.
Weaponized ClaimsMaking the child feel guilty for enjoying time with the other parent, forcing them to choose sides, or spying on and reporting back about the alienated parent.
Emotional ManipulationContradicting rules, allowing behavior the other parent prohibits, and creating a "fun parent vs. strict parent" dynamic to erode respect and discipline.
Parental UnderminingCourts will not act on accusations alone. Proving parental alienation requires substantial, credible evidence of a deliberate pattern to destroy the parent-child bond. Documentation is everything.
"California courts look for patterns of behavior rather than isolated incidents when assessing alienation claims. The burden requires concrete proof of intentional conduct, not speculation."
When alienation is alleged, courts frequently order a forensic custody evaluation under California Evidence Code Section 730. This neutral expert assessment often determines the outcome of your case.
The court appoints a licensed psychologist or mental health professional as a neutral expert. The evaluator interviews both parents, observes parent-child interactions, and reviews all relevant documentation including school records and therapy notes.
The evaluator conducts psychological testing (MMPI, Parenting Stress Index), interviews collateral contacts like teachers and therapists, performs home visits, and assesses whether the child's rejection is consistent with manipulation or a trauma response.
The evaluator produces a detailed written report analyzing family dynamics, identifying alienation patterns, and recommending custody arrangements. Judges typically give these recommendations significant weight, though they are not bound by them.
Based on the 730 findings, the court may modify custody, order reunification therapy, impose supervised visitation on the alienating parent, or award attorneys' fees under FC Section 271. In severe cases, primary custody may be transferred entirely.
California family law provides powerful statutory tools to address parental alienation and protect the parent-child relationship.
Public policy mandates frequent and continuing contact with both parents. The court prioritizes preserving the child's relationship with each parent.
The "Friendly Parent" factor requires the court to consider which parent is more likely to allow frequent contact with the other parent.
Sanctions including attorneys' fees may be imposed against a parent who frustrates settlement or acts contrary to cooperation policies.
Knowingly making false accusations of abuse during custody proceedings can result in custody limitations and modified parenting plans.
My ex had been turning my son against me for over a year. He refused to come to my house and repeated horrible things I never said. Downey Family Attorney helped me get a 730 evaluation that exposed the alienation. The court changed custody, and after reunification therapy, my son and I are rebuilding our relationship.
Every day of alienation deepens the damage. California courts can intervene, but only if you act. Our team builds evidence-driven cases to restore your parental bond.