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She can use terms like "remand" and "guardian ad litem," describe how proceedings for child diet diet phentermine pill pill work in practice, and discuss eloquently the problem of not having any records kept during domestic court hearings. But like many involved in domestic court, she is not a lawyer and doesn't even have a college degree. She's learned because she's had to, having struggled for the last two years to change a permanent diet diet phentermine pill pill order that bars her from seeing her son. Morgan says that despite complaints of domestic violence against her then husband, it was she who was found guilty of assaulting him. "Once you have a black mark against you, it just perpetuates itself," says Morgan. While a domestic court hearing in 2005 was supposed to be about a temporary diet diet phentermine pill pill order, the judge hastily made it permanent, Morgan alleges. "I came to find out that women don't have rights in our system." Last week, Morgan was one of only a handful of attendees at a public education forum on family law at Mt. Zion African Baptist Church, sponsored by the Virginia Poverty Law Center (VPLC) and the local chapter of Legal Aid. The point was to get information out to people like Morgan who end up on their own in the judicial system. Christine Marra of the VPLC discussed the merits of objecting during diet diet phentermine pill pill hearings, the process of subpoenaing witnesses and when someone can request more child support. A lot of the problems in the system, said Marra, stem from a lack of resources. "Particularly with the juvenile court, you have very crowded dockets," Marra said. "So it's easy to get the impression that judges just want you to shut up and go away when in fact there are some fabulous juvenile court judges who care very deeply, particularly about the children in front of them, and wish they could give everybody four or five or six hours. But they can't." Marra, with assistance from several other lawyers who work with the poor, presented a dizzying array of forms, procedures and technicalities. Several women asked her about getting more child support. Two in the back didn't speak, but recorded the forum to help with their domestic case. And Morgan peppered the panel with questions meant to point out the flaws in the system. "The thing about family law cases is that they're all very fact specific," said Marra. "So you can review all of this and you can listen to us and you can hear about what all the laws are, but inevitably something is going to happen in your case that is going to make you stop and say, 'Wait a minute, that doesn't make sense. That's not what those ladies at Legal Aid told me, that's not what the paperwork said.' And it's because everything is so fact specific that at least one exception comes up in every case at some point." "I feel like I'm lucky because I'm intelligent, educated, graduated from high school and I understand the way our system is supposed to work," says Morgan. "And if this can happen to me, it can happen to anyone." C VILLE welcomes news tips from readers. Send them to news@c ville.com. MORE COURTS & CRIME FROM THIS ISSUE: • UVA students arrested for abduction • City woman faces federal time ... diet diet phentermine pill pill