A court order is supposed to create clarity. When it is ignored, parenting time, stability, finances, and trust can all be affected.

The problem

Court order violations may include missed exchanges, denied access, schedule changes without agreement, payment issues, or failure to follow decision-making terms. The frustration can be intense.

Why it matters

Professionals need more than a statement that the order was violated. They need the order, the specific clause, the date, what happened, your response, and whether the pattern repeated.

What to capture

Keep a copy of the order, identify the relevant clause, record each incident by date and time, attach messages or evidence, and note any impact on the child. Avoid threats or emotional escalation in your response.

How CustodyMate helps

CustodyMate helps you document violations, attach supporting files, flag incidents, and prepare reports that show a timeline instead of isolated complaints.

Practical next step

For the next incident, document it immediately: order clause, date, what was expected, what actually happened, and what evidence supports it.

Important note

CustodyMate is an organization and documentation tool. It does not provide legal advice, therapy, emergency support, or court-certified findings. Always consult qualified professionals for legal, safety, or clinical guidance.