Supreme Court sides with parent who fled with child in international custody disputes
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}FILE: 2013: The Supreme Court building, in Washington, D.C. (AP)
The Supreme Court has made it harder for a parent in a custody dispute to seek the immediate return of a child under an international treaty to deter child abduction.
The justices ruled unanimously Wednesday that a one-year clock begins ticking when a child is taken out of its country of residence, even if the parent left behind cannot determine where the child is living. In the one-year period, the Hague Convention on child abduction gives judges little option but to return the child to its home country.
After a year, judges have more discretion and must take account of evidence that the child is settled in its new home.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}At issue is not the ultimate custody of the child, but in which nation's courts the case will be heard.