

Custody Battle, With a Twist(New
York-WABC, April 3, 2001) _ A custody battle in Dutchess County is
tearing families apart. A young single mother gave up her baby for
adoption, but the biological father says he never knew he had a son, and
now is demanding the child be returned to him. Lucy Yang talked to the
father and has the story.
This complicated case goes to court in two weeks
and will require Solomon-like wisdom to decide who gets to take the baby
boy home. No matter how the judge rules, someone is going to end up broken
hearted and empty handed. The question tonight what is best for a baby
named Shiloh.
Every time he sees a baby on a plane or in a crowd, flight attendant
Juan Campoverde wonders, is that my son?
Juan Campoverde, Biological Father: "I have a child out there, I want
to give him the best, mold him to become a success in life. Why is that
bad? I just want to be a dad, to do the right thing."
Except in this case, doing the right thing is not so easy. The 20 year
old and his lawyer are suing to get the 20 month old baby Juan has never
met. When he and Sabrina Morabito broke up two years ago, Juan says he
tried numerous times to stay in touch but that his ex-girlfriend never
took his calls and never told him she was pregnant. Shiloh is the fruit of
their short-lived relationship, and now the center of an emotional custody
battle.
When he was 7 months, Shiloh's mother handed him over to a Dutchess
County couple for adoption. Five months later, Juan learned the truth, and
now an appellate court has ordered the judge who handled the original
adoption to re-open the case and decide what to do with the baby.
Susan Chana Lask, Campoverde's
Attorney: "There's absolutely no reason why he shouldn't have the child.
He's a single father, but there's plenty of single mothers out there
that raise children too."
The attorney for the birth mother told us, "This adoption was lawful
and in the best interest of the child. It should be left undisturbed."
Campoverde: "I wish her the best, I thank her, actually, for giving me
a child. A lot of people say she didn't give him to you, she gave him to
up for adoption. I say she brought him to this Earth and that's a lot."
Juan will not speak poorly of the birth mother but will say he is
determined to bring his boy home.
Campoverde: "I'm going to win this. I'm going to see my son, raise him,
have him. And say, 'ladies and gentlemen, let me introduce you to my
son.'"
As for the adoptive parents, who have obviously bonded with the baby by
now, Juan Campoverde says this battle is not against them, it's about
uniting a father with his son. Tonight, it's anyone's guess where little
Shiloh will spend his 2nd birthday and every birthday thereafter.
Last Updated: Apr 3, 2001
|