Law Offices of Kathryn V. Fields

Law Offices of Kathryn V. Fields What we do: Family Law.

Parents who deny the other parent their court-ordered time with the children, and the children the time they are entitle...
04/25/2026

Parents who deny the other parent their court-ordered time with the children, and the children the time they are entitled to with that other parent, invariably believe themselves above the law. They have no respect for the other parent, their own children, the court, or the law.

Sometimes the only thing that will get their attention is a stay at the County "bed and breakfast" behind bars.

166K likes, 3.1K comments. "Mom DEFIED the Court ONE Too Many Times."

Interesting.
04/23/2026

Interesting.

Tiffany Score and Steven Mills sued the Fertility Center of Orlando after the birth of a baby who isn’t genetically related to either of them.

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=122277635366190621&id=61555718652345
04/21/2026

https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=122277635366190621&id=61555718652345

Denise Rossi won about $1.3 million in the California lottery in 1996 while married to her husband, Thomas Rossi. Just 11 days after the win, she filed for divorce after 25 years of marriage.

During the divorce proceedings, she did not disclose the lottery winnings, even though both parties are legally required to declare all assets when splitting property in court.

For a period of time after the divorce was finalized, the winnings remained undisclosed. The situation changed when a letter regarding a lump-sum payout option for the lottery prize was mistakenly sent to her ex-husband’s address.

After discovering the hidden asset, Thomas Rossi took the matter back to court, arguing that his ex-wife had committed fraud by failing to disclose the winnings during the divorce process.

The court agreed that the omission violated disclosure laws and ruled that the winnings had been improperly hidden. As a result, the judge awarded Thomas Rossi the full lottery amount.
Source: Los Angeles Times

03/21/2026

Parenting. You’re doing it right. 👍🏼💕

03/18/2026

When a Cherokee woman wanted a divorce, she just put her husband's belongings outside—and that was legally binding. No lawyers. No judges. No permission from male relatives. If she decided the marriage was over, she gathered his things, placed them on the doorstep, and he left. Because in Cherokee society, women owned the houses. The land. The food. The tools. Everything in them.

When European colonizers arrived in what is now the southeastern United States, they were shocked. They expected a world where men ruled, and women obeyed. Instead, they found a society where women held real power. Cherokee women sat in councils alongside men, debating war, treaties, and tribal policies. Some earned the title of "Beloved Women" or "War Women," a position of authority so great their words could spare prisoners’ lives or decide whether the nation went to battle. Nancy Ward, one of the most famous Beloved Women, negotiated directly with colonists and influenced decisions during the Revolutionary War era.

But power wasn’t only political. Cherokee society was matrilineal: identity came from the mother’s clan, children belonged to their mother’s family, and property passed from mother to daughter. When a couple married, the husband moved into his wife’s home. If he failed as a father or husband, her brothers—not his male relatives—held authority over him.

Irish trader James Adair, living among the Cherokee in the 1700s, was scandalized. He called it a “petticoat government,” unable to imagine a world where women weren’t property. Yet women weren’t just making laws—they ran the economy. They cultivated corn, beans, and squash, the “Three Sisters” that fed the nation. They wove baskets that held water, tanned hides into soft leather, built houses, and raised children. They preserved stories, dances, and traditions that kept Cherokee identity alive. Men hunted, fished, and fought—but the women controlled the distribution of food. Men might provide, but women decided its fate.

This wasn’t utopia. There was hierarchy, conflict, rules. But it worked on a fundamentally different principle: women and men were different but equal partners, each with authority over vital aspects of life.

Then came forced removal, boarding schools, and federal policies meant to erase Cherokee culture. The U.S. recognized only male leaders, imposed patriarchal laws, and taught women to be submissive. Yet Cherokee women resisted, preserving language, stories, and traditions. Today, Cherokee Nation citizenship is still traced through maternal lines in many families, keeping alive the principles of centuries past.

The power Cherokee women held wasn’t a quirk. It was proof that patriarchy is a choice, not inevitability. In the 1700s, Cherokee women owned property, divorced freely, and shaped government—rights most American women wouldn’t see for centuries. The next time someone says gender inequality is “just how things have always been,” remember the women who placed their ex-husbands’ belongings on the doorstep, on land they inherited, in a nation where their voices mattered. Different worlds are possible. We know because they existed.

First Woman on Washington Supreme Court, Carolyn R. Dimmick, Passes Away — December 30, 2025
12/31/2025

First Woman on Washington Supreme Court, Carolyn R. Dimmick, Passes Away — December 30, 2025

Former Washington Supreme Court Justice Carolyn R. Dimmick, the first woman to serve on the state’s highest court, passed away Dec. 24 in Seattle surrounded by her family. She was 96.

12/17/2025

Mariska Hargitay, renowned for her role in Law & Order: SVU, has joined the Purple Leash Project, an initiative dedicated to making shelters more pet-friendly. After learning that nearly 50% of domestic abuse survivors delay leaving their abusers to protect their pets, Hargitay decided to lend her voice to the cause. The project aims to ensure that victims and their pets are not forced to choose between safety and their furry companions.

This partnership brings much-needed attention to the issue of pet protection for those in domestic violence situations. For many survivors, their pets are not just animals—they are emotional support and family. This initiative recognizes that no one should have to leave behind a beloved pet in order to escape an abusive environment.

By making shelters more pet-friendly, the Purple Leash Project seeks to remove one of the barriers that prevent people from leaving abusive homes. Mariska's involvement has sparked hope for countless survivors who may now feel supported and safe in their efforts to leave dangerous situations. 🐾💜

Here's the thing, some people are a good fit for some types of jobs but not others.   Just like I don't have what it tak...
12/14/2025

Here's the thing, some people are a good fit for some types of jobs but not others. Just like I don't have what it take to be a fashion model or reality show star, neither is Ms. Kardashian suitable to be an attorney.

Her interest in passing the Bar is analogous to collecting a Girl Scout badge and not anything anymore serious than that. I will explain:

Ms. Kardashian is excellent at what she does and is famous for. But she forgets that to achieve that, it required not just all the modeling lessons, work and years she put into getting that level, but also all the daily work and commitment required to keep that. The moment she stops and, colloquially speaking, 'lets herself go', e.g., stops her workout regime, steps off her carefully managed food choices, lapses in her manicures, hair, grooming, or fashion choices, she would fall from her successful position.

Make no mistake, celebrities have to work--just like everyone else--to maintain their job. Their work is simply different than what might be required for another job.

The same holds true for practicing law. Ms. Kardashian has failed the Bar exam 4 times but promises to 'keep trying.' But she is approaching passing the Bar as if it's akin to a task one can simply check off your bucket list. You just keep trying until you eventually pass, and then magically, boom, you're a lawyer and no more work is required. Not only does this trivialize the nature of the work for which lawyers are responsible, this is not how the real world works.

Yes, a person who has passed the Bar does then have a license to practice law legally, but not the experience or the education one acquires post-Bar. Without years of daily practicing, a *minimum* of 8 hours a day, under the supervision of a senior attorney or experienced mentor, plus ongoing continuing legal education courses (which are mandated to keep one's license), a new attorney is a dangerous creature. It's like putting a teenager behind the wheel of a semi-truck, who's read the driver's manual, but never driven even a car on his own, and turning him loose on the freeway where the other cars on the road are driving at 60 miles an hour. ...And then assigning that inexperienced driver some cargo to deliver and unrealistically presuming there will be no accident, damage, injuries, deaths, or destroyed cargo in the process.

Even if Ms. Kardashian is able at some point to eventually pass the Bar, that will not make her "an attorney." I find it improbable that she would give up the income stream and public acclaim she presently receives through her existing career to devote the daily labor and punishing grind required to be actually qualified to practice law.

Also, this may be surprising to learn, but being able to Pass the Bar is not evidence of superior intelligence. It's evidence of being able to consume and memorize ungodly amounts of information, regurgitate that information in a meaningful way in an exam over the course of 3 days, and string it all together with common sense analysis in response to questions you aren't anticipating.

I know lots of attorneys that are, in fact, genius-level practitioners. But I also know a few who are so brainless I wonder how they survived to adulthood without electrocuting themselves with a household appliance.

So if Ms. Kardashian is looking for a piece of paper that proves to the world she's intelligent, a letter from the Bar announcing you've passed is not it. She doesn't need that. Instead, she should look at her bank account and take note of her accomplishment. Her success at what she does and is good at is a better indicator of her intelligence.

Kim Kardashian, who has been studying law for the last six years, explained why she made her failed bar exam results public.

This is an example of why social workers will never be suited to respond to domestic violence calls.
11/17/2025

This is an example of why social workers will never be suited to respond to domestic violence calls.

Four Kansas law enforcement officers — three Osage County deputies and a Highway Patrol trooper — were shot Saturday morning while responding to a domestic violence call. Link in comment below 👇

Rest in peace to an amazing human being and example for us all.
08/21/2025

Rest in peace to an amazing human being and example for us all.

Judge Frank Caprio passed away peacefully at the age of 88 after a long and courageous battle with pancreatic cancer.

Beloved for his compassion, humility, and unwavering belief in the goodness of people, Judge Caprio touched the lives of millions through his work in the courtroom and beyond. His warmth, humor, and kindness left an indelible mark on all who knew him.

He will be remembered not only as a respected judge, but as a devoted husband, father, grandfather, great grandfather and friend. His legacy lives on in the countless acts of kindness he inspired.

In his honor, may we each strive to bring a little more compassion into the world — just as he did every day.

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