Every Child
Has Two Parents
Goto CRN Japan Home 日本語 Español
Français Italiano
한국어
 Help Now...
list bullet Find My Parent
list bullet Child Abduction
list bullet Child Custody
list bullet Child Visitation
list bullet Marriage
list bullet Divorce
list bullet Adoption
list bullet Citizenship
list bullet Abuse
list bullet Prevention
 News
list bullet Personal Stories
list bullet Published Articles
list bullet Success Stories
list bullet Upcoming Events
list bullet Message Boards
Google



 Law
list bullet Japanese Law
list bullet Common Legal Forms
list bullet Your Rights In Japan
list bullet International Treaties
list bullet Non-Japanese Law
list bullet Discrimination
 Resources
list bullet Lawyers
list bullet Counseling
list bullet Private Investigators
list bullet Other Organizations
list bullet Parental Alientaion Syndrome
list bullet Translation
 CRN Japan
list bullet About Us
list bullet Our Issues
list bullet Membership
list bullet Get Involved
list bullet Donations

visit counter
Visitors

Family Law In Japan: Experiences In Parents' Own Words

See also: Success Stories

These essays are either written by parents or written based on published reports of an actual case, and each documents the bitter experiences of a real individual with family law in Japan. Contact information for the authors is available if you are a member of the press, government representative, or other qualified individual who could help us raise awareness of these issues or could help us enact change.  If you are a left-behind parent, please send your own personal story to webmaster47256 ( at] crnjapan.com for inclusion on this page.

In some cases, these stories contain actual names of a Japanese parent.  They may also contain names of friends, relatives, co-workers, workplaces, etc. This website is well indexed by search engines in both Japanese and English.  So this helps to bring attention to these otherwise silent crimes by applying pressure thru a person's workplace and social circles. In Japan, peer and internal corporate pressure can often be an effective way to encourage someone to address a problem they would rather hide from.  We believe this pressure is necessary in order to get the offending Japanese parent constructively involved rather than having them hide away with the child.

The names in a story will only be removed when the case is resolved satisfactorily.  Unfortunately, in Japan, legal resolution can take many many years.  So we encourage people who would like to have their names removed to get counseling with their partner and resolve the issues out of court.  If you are not the offending Japanese parent, please encourage that person to constructively resolve the problems in the story.

Found in Court Documents

There are many unreported cases where the left behind parent does not have the financial resources to pursue the abducting parent to Japan, does not wish to press criminal charges or does not actively publicize their case.  By their nature, these are nearly impossible to find out about, but they may turn up in court or other public documents.

  • Jonathan D. Mu vs. Noriko Ikeda - In what could easily have been planned from the beginning, several months after filing a DV claim in 2003 and getting a restraining order, the Japanese mother takes all belongings from their home and abducts the four children, Christopher K. Mu, Lilliane A. Mu, Marianne A. Mu , and Julianne A. Mu to Japan.  Unsurprisingly, she never pursues the charges.  The father apparently does not have an extra hundred or two thousand dollars to pursue her.

Reported In The Press

The following names and stories have appeared in the indicated press article.  If you know how to contact anyone listed here, please tell them that we would like to post a more detailed story on this website.

Steve Christie

Chris Kenyon

  • Part 1 of 4: Frustrated Fathers of Abducted Children Turn to Public for Support; (By Kirsten Brown Scripps Howard Foundation Wire) Washington, December 15, 2006.  Four fathers quietly filed into a theater to watch "Abduction: The Megumi Yokota Story," a documentary about North Korea's kidnapping of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s. If the names Walter Benda, Patrick Braden, Chris Kenyon and Paul Toland don't sound Japanese, it's because they're not. But their children are half-Japanese, and these fathers say Japan has committed the same crime against them that Japan accuses North Korea of committing.

Paul Toland

  • The Dana Pretzer Radio Show: Interview with CDR Paul Toland; February 15th, 2007. (MP3 download) - Interview starts at the beginning of the show. MSC, USN , Resource Programming Manager, Medical Readiness Platforms, Chief of Naval Operations. (Topic Pauls daughter was parentally kidnapped in Japan)  At about 18:45 in the MP3 recording, Dana reads an excerpt from an email letter from Paul's Japanese attorney which openly admits the widespread discrimination in Japanese courts:

    "As you point out, we are challenged by racism and discrimination of Japanese court every day, since we usually represent foreigners. But I know judges become furious if I point out his racism or discrimination. Racism is firmly rooted in Japanese society and even intelligent people refuses to see their own racism. Almost all Japanese believe foreigners are deteriorating the security of Japanese society, which is wrong according to our crime statistics. ...[he concludes his email by saying] ... Please understand your case is not a piece of case because of the racism and irrationalism of Japan. It may be something like defending Taliban in the US.”

  • Part 1 of 4: Frustrated Fathers of Abducted Children Turn to Public for Support; (By Kirsten Brown Scripps Howard Foundation Wire) Washington, December 15, 2006.  Four fathers quietly filed into a theater to watch "Abduction: The Megumi Yokota Story," a documentary about North Korea's kidnapping of Japanese citizens in the 1970s and 1980s. If the names Walter Benda, Patrick Braden, Chris Kenyon and Paul Toland don't sound Japanese, it's because they're not. But their children are half-Japanese, and these fathers say Japan has committed the same crime against them that Japan accuses North Korea of committing.

Mike Hebb

  • Crime and Punishment; Metropolis Letter to the editor; early 2006.  Mike writes in about his daughter being abducted from Manitoba by her Japanese mother.

Alan Kaneda

Walter Benda.

David Brian Thomas (co-founder of CRC Japan) David has not seen his son since his Japanese wife and her parents locked him out of their house in 1992. The divorce was overturned by the court on grounds that his wife doctored papers and forged his seal, but Thomas has been unable to see his son, Graham Hajime, who is now 13.

Sean Reedy. His Japanese wife took his sons into hiding that day, preempting custody of the boys by simple possession. Even as a tenured professor and taxpayer in Japan, Reedy found he could get no assistance from the Japanese courts in getting his children back -- or even seeing them regularly.

Das Pradip. gets to meet his two children once a month, for 30 minutes, at a Roy Rogers restaurant -- when his ex-wife bothers to bring them. She left her husband three years ago with the children, then 5 and 8, for a Japanese man. 

Engle Nieman.  "My wife is now hiding somewhere with my daughter. She doesn't show up for court. My lawyer doesn't know what to do," he said. "On schooldays, I go around to the various kindergartens in Tokyo to see if I can find them. It's terrible." 

Dale Martin. His wife, Tamie Kakuta kidnapped their 4-year-old daughter in 1992, but despite hard-won visitation agreement signed in family courts in December 1994, he has recently (according to the articles) been unable to see his six-year-old daughter because his Japanese wife refuses to allow it. He continues to make telephone calls and write letters.

Charles Talley. Wife Yumi, and daughter, Lea Talley, disappeared from their Palmdale (Los Angeles) apartment in 1993.

Margaret Leyman.  This American journalist living in Tokyo, says that her Japanese former husband prohibits her son from meeting with her. "My son, who is 12 now [in 1998], lives with my mother-in-law after the family court decided I was, as a working woman and foreigner, not a responsible mother,''   

  • Tales from Japan's Abandoned Foreign Parents; The Japan Observer; November 2003.  Mostly the story of Frans Pau, a French-Danish national whose wife is kidnapped their child Isabelle, abandoned her in a children's home, took her again after Frans got her into a school in Japan.  The mother has been sentenced to jail by a French court and is wanted by Interpol. A Japanese court allowed the mother to change Isabelle's name to Maki despite the fact that Frans had legal custody, even in Japan.  After that, a Japanese court inexplicably gave custody back to the mother.  (cached copy)

  • Foreign Spouses In Japan Seek Easier Child Custody Laws; www.oneworld.net web site; March 22, 1998.  (cached copy)

The information on this website concerns a matter of public interest, and is provided for educational and informational purposes only in order to raise public awareness of issues concerning left-behind parents. Unless otherwise indicated, the writers and translators of this website are not lawyers nor professional translators, so be sure to confirm anything important with your own lawyer.
 Last modified: Sunday, 05-Aug-2007 14:18:47 EDT Copyright © 2003-2006 Contact us 
 URL of this page is http://www.crnjapan.com//people/en/index.html