Ashley Eilene Franklin v. David C. Bonfiglio, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedNovember 6, 2025
Docket1:25-cv-00425
StatusUnknown

This text of Ashley Eilene Franklin v. David C. Bonfiglio, et al. (Ashley Eilene Franklin v. David C. Bonfiglio, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashley Eilene Franklin v. David C. Bonfiglio, et al., (W.D. Mich. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

ASHLEY EILENE FRANKLIN, Case No. 1:25-cv-425 Plaintiff, Hon. Paul L. Maloney v.

DAVID C. BONFIGLIO, et al.,

Defendants. /

ORDER TO TRANSFER VENUE

I. Background Pro se plaintiff Ashley Eilene Franklin resides in Dowagiac, Michigan. She filed a verified complaint against defendants alleging 17 causes of action under federal and state law. See Order (ECF No. 11, PageID.176). Plaintiff named 16 defendants in Indiana, including a judge, a state court referee and a guardian ad litem (“GAL”). See Compl. (ECF No. 1). “Underlying all of the claims, Plaintiff contends a court in Indiana, acting without jurisdiction, without notice to her, and without an evidentiary hearing, terminated her parental rights.” Order at PageID.176. This federal lawsuit arose from a February 14, 2023 custody hearing in Elkhart County, Indiana, involving plaintiff’s minor child.1 See Compl. at PageID.9-10. Plaintiff alleged in pertinent part that: At the time of the February 14, 2023 hearing in Elkhart County, Plaintiff had sole physical custody of her son, who lived with mother and his 3 siblings. The father - Brent Fifer Jr. - filed a Verified Petition to Establish Paternity using Indiana Code § 16-37-2-2.1, a statute that applies only to children born in Indiana, based on an Indiana paternity affidavit. But Plaintiff's child was born in Michigan. The parties

1 Plaintiff’s child is not a party to this lawsuit. 1 signed a Michigan Acknowledgment of Parentage (AOP) at the hospital - legally establishing paternity and granting Plaintiff initial custody. Rather than filing a complaint for custody or parenting time, Mr. Fifer used the Indiana paternity statute to bypass due process entirely. Indiana never registered the Michigan AOP, never conducted a UCCJEA hearing, and never issued Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law regarding jurisdiction. No emergency existed. No transfer was ordered by Michigan. Nevertheless, Indiana courts treated the Michigan AOP as if it were an Indiana one and issued paternity, custody, and child support orders without legal authority.

At no point in this entire case, was a proper custody complaint or parenting time petition filed. Prior to the February 14, 2023 hearing, Mother filed a Motion to Continue, which was denied. At the February 14, 2023 hearing, Mother was given primary physical custody and joint legal custody. Judge Bonfiglio ordered hair follicle drug tests for both parents and a Guardian Ad Litem to represent the best interest of the minor child. The next hearing was May, 2, 2023, Mother filed a Motion to Relocate back to her domicile state of Michigan. This was denied without a hearing, Mother was threatened with losing custody of minor child if she moved back to Michigan.

The GAL filed a report with recommendations on July, 5, 2023. Father then filed a Motion to Implement GAL’s Recommendations. A hearing was scheduled for July 20, 2023, for Father’s motion. At the July 20, 2023 hearing, Indiana courts awarded sole legal and primary physical custody to the father-without change in circumstances, without evidence, and without evaluating the best interests of the child.

The hearing on July 20, 2023, lasted approximately 18 minutes. It was not an evidentiary hearing. No witnesses were called. No exhibits were admitted. The judge made his decision solely based on a Motion to Implement the GAL’s Recommendation-a report filed by Guardian ad Litem Mary Raatz, who had never met the mother, never met the child, or Father. She conducted no investigation and does not meet the legal qualifications of a GAL under Indiana law. Plaintiff had submitted proof of compliance with court orders, including, a scheduled appointment with court-approved psychologist Dr. Warren Sibilla, and a negative hair follicle drug test, a full psychological evaluation completed by her licensed provider.

Plaintiff tried to inform the court that she had complied with the court orders, however none of it was considered. In less than 20 minutes, a Mother lost her 1-year-old baby, without any finding of unfitness, without cross-examination, without the right to be heard and without Indiana having jurisdiction. After custody was transferred, Plaintiff was denied all contact for more than 70 days, even though a court order granted supervised visitation through CAPS or an agreed third party. 2 CAPS staff refused to schedule visits, later admitting they had been told by the judge and clerk’s office not to do so. The father refused to allow any third-party visitation. No justification was ever provided. No court order ever suspended parenting time. Plaintiff is now limited to just six hours of visitation per month, on weekdays only, supervised at CAPS, at her own expense. She must drive over an hour each way, missing work and pulling children out of school. She is not allowed to whisper to her child. Her other children- [the child’s] siblings- are prohibited from attending. Close to 100 CAPS visitation reports have been filed, each one describing bonding, affection, and emotional connection. Not a single one has documented a concern. Yet, no additional time has ever been granted. All requests for holidays, extended visits, family travel or reunification have been denied.

When Plaintiff attempted to follow the court’s psychological evaluation order, she requested a more affordable provider or use of her existing therapist. The judge refused, requiring her to pay $2,500 to see a specific psychologist. When she complied, the psychologist recused himself after learning she was seeking legal advice-as he had advised. The judge responded by ordering an even more expensive evaluation, with another specific psychologist charging $4,000, again ignoring Plaintiff's completed report, insurance limitations, and financial hardship. The court made it clear that Mother would not be reunited with her son until she completed an evaluation by ONLY the doctor that the Judge chose.

The court even held her in contempt for allegedly failing to complete a drug test that was ordered while she was not present, and mailed to her after the deadline had already expired.

And now, Plaintiff has warrants for her arrest for nonpayment of child support - on a child she is not allowed to see, whose custody was taken without legal cause, and for whom she never received support when she had custody. She cannot enter Indiana to visit her [child] without being arrested.

Id. at PageID.9-12. Plaintiff alleged that she “has exhausted every legal remedy available under Indiana law.” Id. at PageID.12. Having spent months contesting custody in the Elkhart Superior Court, plaintiff now seeks relief from the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan which includes: a declaration “that the custody and support orders issued by the Indiana court are void due to lack of subject matter jurisdiction and constitutional defects”; an injunction to “[e]njoin Defendants from enforcing any custody, support, contempt, or criminal orders arising from or 3 connected to the jurisdictionally void Indiana proceedings”; “Order the immediate reinstatement of Plaintiff's parental rights as required by the Michigan AOP [affidavit of parentage]”; award compensatory damages of $25,000,000.00; and, award special damages of at least $300,000.00 for medical treatment, supervised visitation costs, travel expenses, lost wages, and therapy for plaintiff and her children. Id. at PageID.68-69.

This Court denied plaintiff’s two motions for temporary restraining orders (TROs). See Orders (ECF Nos. 11 and 79).

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Ashley Eilene Franklin v. David C. Bonfiglio, et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-eilene-franklin-v-david-c-bonfiglio-et-al-miwd-2025.