Battered Women, Abused Children, and Child Custody:

"A National Crisis"

The Ninth Annual Battered Mothers Custody Conference:  BMCC IX
January 6th, 7th, and 8th, 2012      Friday evening through Sunday
Make your hotel reservations with Holiday Inn Turf, 205 Wolf Road, Albany, NY at the Special Conference rate of $99
Hotel Costs Are Separate From Conference Registration Fees
Registration fee includes Friday evening cookies/and coffee, lunch on Saturday, and bagels/coffee on Sunday morning
Holiday Inn has a restaurant; there are also several restaurants and stores close by

Updated Conference Schedule       Presenters       Online Registration       Announcement, Brochure, & Mail-In Registration

Home      Co-Sponsors      Support the Conference      Seminar Materials      Silent Auction
   The Conference in PBS' Film:  Breaking the Silence, Children's Stories   
  The Courageous Kids Network
Add your child's hand prints to the Children Taken by the Family Courts Hand Prints Project
Contribute a panel to the "Children Taken by the Family Courts Community Quilt"
Center for Judicial Excellence: Family Court Crisis Film and Photo Exhibit
Disclaimers and Terms of Use      About the Conference

Now Available:
 Domestic Violence, Abuse, and Child Custody:  Legal Strategies and Policy Issues
Edited by Mo Therese Hannah, Ph.D. and Barry Goldstein, J.D.

Family courts routinely render battered mothers destitute, homeless, and struggling to survive.
Please consider offering a space in your room or car to a battered mother who would otherwise be unable to attend.
Details will be emailed to confirmed attendees.


 

 

Conference Presenters

 

HOLLY COLLINS

ZACHARY COLLINS
childrenunderground@hotmail.com

 

The journey would take them to Indian reservations, Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, and finally to the Netherlands.  There Holly and her children would become the first American family to ever be granted political asylum by the Dutch government on the grounds that they were fleeing domestic violence and that their safety could not be assured if they were to be returned to the United States.

 

Once in the Netherlands, Holly and children were first sent to live in a refugee center, where they lived shoulder to shoulder in dorm-like quarters with a ragged collection of truly desperate souls from third world countries like Sudan and Somalia.  After two years of life among the refugees, Holly was granted full asylum and was sent to live in a housing project. She would live “below the radar” for the next 14 years.  And then, after all those years, the FBI finally found them and came knocking on the door.

 

But by now, Holly’s American children were over 18, and had “aged out of the system”. The Child and Family Court system back home in Minnesota, the one that had once ordered the minor children to go to live full time with Holly’s abusive ex-husband, no longer had any jurisdiction over them. And when the FBI interviewed the children they said that in their eyes, their mother was a hero who had saved their lives. The FBI dropped the case.

 

Holly obtained attorney Alan Rosenfeld back in the states who eventually arranged a plea bargain on the remaining state charges against Holly. If she would come back and plead guilty to contempt of court, all other charges would be dismissed. Holly agreed, saying that she did indeed have contempt for the court that ordered her children to live a life of abuse.

 

Despite her life on the run, Holly Collins was somehow able to preserve an enormous volume of court transcripts, medical records, news accounts and correspondence that support her account, and the accounts of her children and give vivid detail to each twist and turn.

 

In the end, what could have been a crushing family tragedy becomes a happy story. Holly’s has been exonerated. Her children thrive. And they look forward to returning home, to America. But none of it happened by accident. This story ends happily because of the singular character of Holly Collins, protective mother, kidnapper, international fugitive, and ground breaking asylum seeker. It ends happily because of Holly, a woman who is described by her Dutch Asylum lawyer, as “a lioness.” And that she is.

---Barry Nolan

Back to Presenters page

 

 


Please consider offering a space in your room or car to a battered mother who would otherwise be unable to attend.
Details will be emailed to confirmed attendees.

Updated Conference Schedule       Presenters       Online Registration       Announcement, Brochure, & Mail-In Registration

Home      Co-Sponsors      Support the Conference      Seminar Materials      Silent Auction
   The Conference in PBS' Film:  Breaking the Silence, Children's Stories   
  The Courageous Kids Network
Add your child's hand prints to the Children Taken by the Family Courts Hand Prints Project
Contribute a panel to the "Children Taken by the Family Courts Community Quilt"
Center for Judicial Excellence: Family Court Crisis Film and Photo Exhibit
Disclaimers and Terms of Use      About the Conference

Now Available:
 Domestic Violence, Abuse, and Child Custody:  Legal Strategies and Policy Issues
Edited by Mo Therese Hannah, Ph.D. and Barry Goldstein, J.D.

DISCLAIMERS AND TERMS OF USE - Information on this site or linked to this site is NOT LEGAL ADVICE ...  more
©Copyright 2002-2012 
Liliane Heller Miller.
 All Rights Reserved.