It Depends Entirely on Whether a Custody Order Exists
If no custody order exists: Legally, yes — your spouse can take the children. Without a court order, both parents have equal custody rights. Either parent can take the children, and police will typically decline to intervene in what they characterize as a civil matter.
If a custody order exists: No. Taking children in violation of a custody order is contempt of court. You can call police, file a contempt petition, and potentially file for emergency modification.
The practical significance of the distinction is significant. The first parent to establish the status quo with the children often has the advantage. If your spouse takes the children and maintains that arrangement for weeks or months, that becomes the new status quo — and courts are reluctant to disrupt established arrangements that appear to be working for the children.
What to Do in the First 24–48 Hours
If your spouse has taken the children and no custody order exists, time is working against you. Every day the children remain in that arrangement strengthens the other parent's position. The steps:
- File a custody petition immediately — today or tomorrow if possible. Even filing without an attorney creates a timestamp that establishes you are seeking court involvement promptly.
- Request a temporary custody order — ask the court for interim relief pending the full hearing process.
- Document everything — when they took the children, every communication attempt, every refusal. Screenshots, call logs, written records with specific dates and times.
- Maintain contact with the children — phone calls, texts to the other parent requesting access. Documented attempts matter.
- Do not threaten or escalate — communicate in writing, calmly. Every communication creates a record. The parent who appears reasonable in writing has an advantage.
When a Custody Order Is Being Violated
- Call police with the custody order — officers may enforce the order on-scene, accompany you to retrieve the children, or at minimum document the violation.
- File a contempt petition — contempt is addressed in Motions Court. Which building depends on where the judge of record has chambers: either the City-County Building or the Family Law Center at 440 Ross Street. The petition should specify each violation by date and time.
- File for emergency custody modification if there is an ongoing pattern — violations serious enough to constitute a safety concern or sustained deprivation of custody may support emergency relief.
- Save every communication — texts showing refusal to return children, voicemails, emails. The record of violations is the evidence at the contempt hearing.
Police enforcement of custody orders is inconsistent across departments. Some officers will actively help enforce a clear, unambiguous order. Others will say "this is a civil matter" regardless of what the order says. Having an attorney who can call opposing counsel or appear on emergency motion is often more effective than relying on police enforcement alone.
Three Situations and What to Do
Spouse Left With Children During Separation
You came home from work and your spouse and children are gone. The spouse says they're staying at their parents' house. If no custody order exists, this is technically legal — but every day the children stay there hardens the status quo. File for custody immediately. Request a temporary hearing. Document that the spouse made a unilateral decision to leave with the children without discussion or agreement.
Spouse Won't Return Children After Scheduled Visit
Children were supposed to return Sunday night. It's Monday and the other parent won't bring them back. If a custody order exists, call police with the order and file a contempt petition on Monday morning. If no custody order exists, file an emergency custody petition — police will not help without an order, but the court can act quickly when the facts are clear.
Spouse Has Threatened to Take Children
During an argument, your spouse said "I'm taking the kids and you'll never see them again." Do not wait for them to act. File a custody petition before the threat becomes reality. A proactive filing — seeking court involvement before any crisis — signals to the court that you are the reasonable parent pursuing proper channels rather than self-help.
Realistic Expectations for Police Involvement
Police are more likely to help when: you have a custody order that is clear and specific, the order is recent, the violation is unambiguous, and you have the order in hand. They may accompany you to retrieve children, speak with the other parent, or document the situation as a civil standby.
Police will typically not help when: no custody order exists, the order is ambiguous or requires interpretation, both parents are claiming to be right, or the situation involves questions about which exchange was scheduled. In those situations, the answer is always "this is a civil matter — go to court."
This is why having a clear, specific custody order matters so much. Vague orders protect no one.
"He left no stone unturned when fighting for custody. He was the only one who answered on a Sunday afternoon." — George
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