About the Author

Diana Shepherd, CDFA®

Diana Shepherd has over 30 years of experience as a marketing, branding, SEO, copywriting, editing, and publishing expert. As Content Director for Family Lawyer Magazine, Divorce Magazine, and Divorce Marketing Group, she oversees all corporate content development and frequently creates SEO-friendly videos, podcasts, and copy for family law and financial firms. The Co-Founder of Divorce Magazine and Divorce Marketing Group, Diana is an award-winning editor, published author, and a nationally recognized expert on divorce, remarriage, finance, and stepfamily issues. She has written hundreds of articles geared towards both family law professionals and divorcing people, and she has both performed and taught on-page SEO for 20+ years. Diana spent eight years as the Marketing Director for the Institute for Divorce Financial Analysts® (IDFA®), and she has been a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst® since 2006. While at IDFA, she wrote, designed, and published The IDFA Marketing Guide, and she also created seminars for CDFA professionals to present to family lawyers (approved for CLE), as well as to separated and divorcing individuals. She has represented both DMG and IDFA at industry conferences and events across North America, and she has given marketing as well as divorce financial seminars at many of those conferences.

1 Comments

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    M. Jepsen

    Both biological parents should have equal rights to their biological children, irregardless of the mother’s marriage to someone else . In this case the biological father is also married to someone else. Why should her marital status and her husband have priority over the biological father’s marital status and void his rights to be a parent to his child, or in this case, his children? It shouldn’t. If the biological father comes forward within the first two years of his child’s life and files a paternity action, then DNA should immediately be ordered. If the father is then proven to be the biological father, then subsequent court-ordered visitation and child support should immediately follow. CA statutes need to be updated to give a biological father all the same rights as the biological mother. This issue should not involve the biological mother’s husband or the biological father’s wife. It is about who the biological parents are and that their rights to their biological children are EXACTLY EQUAL UNDER THE LAW. The State of CA has basically made Neil, as with the biological father in the Dawn D. case, a non-person who has no rights to parent his children in situations like this. This is an abomination of the law, and is unequal and archaic in its thoughts and deeds against a man, a father, who comes forward and wants to be a parent and father to his child – all because he loves his child just as much as the mother loves her child. That right should never be taken from a biological parent, as long as they are not criminals of any kind, of course. The marital presumption law favoring the mother, which is basically what CA statutes are written to support, should not override a father’s love and devotion to his biological children and his desire to parent his offispring.

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