The Observer wrote:
The situation with the minor being raped and then being dunned for back child support is one of the strange results of this policy. I would offer that because the teen willingly engaged in sex with the adult woman, the ruling is essentially stating he needs to take responsibility. He cannot enjoy the fruit and expect to walk away from the mess he left, regardless of whether he was a victim or not.
He was not of the age of consent, thus the issue with statutory rape. So, if he is not of the age of informed consent and not considered to be responsible in a legal sense, how can he be made responsible? Not sure I'm wording it right but that is one of my concerns.
One of my other concerns is this: if a man rapes a woman and impregnates her then he should be responsible towards the child, fiscally, without ever having any form of interaction with the child, IMO. In these cases we have the exact opposite, a grown woman seduces a young man, illegally, and then has a child. IMO since, in this case, the woman is the aggressor, the victim (which is what he is) should have the opportunity to have interaction with the child if he wishes and is paying child support. Yet none of the cases cited seem to allow for that possibility. In fact, the main case cited stated that the young man would gladly pay child support if he was allowed to be in his daughter's life, implying that he currently isn't. After going through I've been through and seen what other fathers have gone through I'm kinda big on father's right which, quite frankly, there doesn't seem to be many. And, also IMO, if the father turns out to be a better parent then the mother, would they allow the father to be the parent he want's to be? Again, doesn't seem so.
To be blunt, I don't see someone who seduced under age boys to get it on with, and they were indeed boys in every sense, to be a very good role model. Maybe the father isn't much better, who knows. And it doesn't seem likely they would allow that, not if they aren't even allowing the fathers in the child's life.
As far as the welfare of the child being put first all I can do is quote: "hornswoggle". That is what a court says, what it actually does can be 100% the opposite of what is good for the child. Too many times in too many different cases the courts have just handed children to the mother without any valid reason other then they are the mother. Quite frankly, if they are indeed doing this for the good of the child, then each case should have a custody evaluation done to see which parent is actually good for the child. Again, doesn't look like it is being done. If you are going to force someone to be a parent, including supporting the child, then they should be allowed the opportunity to be a parent. Especially if they are not the one that committed a crime to have the child.
edit: Again, all in my opinion. I feel that there would be a much better way to handle this and would even be better for the child in the long run. The one court stated that both parents should be in their children's life... yet the father isn't. And that's wrong.