Put together from interviews and legal and medical documents, this is the story of a ravaged girl fallen victim to maternal cruelty, judicial irregularities and feminism run amok.
Teddy was born in Los Angeles on September 28, 1993, to Photius Coutsoukis, a 46-year-old Greek immigrant, and Susan Samora Coutsoukis, then 43.
Teddy was a healthy, normal infant whose neonatal scores were above
average. She had no known congenital defects and subsequent tests showed no
genetic flaws.
Mr. Coutsoukis suspended a successful business career
where he had previously made a six-figure income to care for their baby girl.
He nicknamed her Houdini, because, he said, she was "extraordinarily
intelligent and athletic".
Within days of Teddy's birth, her
mother filed for divorce in California and then made preparations for a
move to Oregon, where she had accepted an executive position.
While
Mr. Coutsoukis had already made arrangements for the move and had procured a
beautiful new house for them, his spouse had decided to take Teddy and leave
the father behind, only to relent after his pleas to let him care for their
baby.
In November 1993 the family moved to Medford, Oregon.
In January 1994, Ms. Samora
left the house, taking Teddy, and then evicted Mr. Coutsoukis with a family
abuse restraining order. She placed Teddy in
day care. Mr. Coutsoukis denied that he ever committed any violence and Dr.
David Oas, the court ordered divorce evaluator, subsequently confirmed that in
testimony.
Ms.
Samora did not call back in response to my request for an interview.
Less than a month later (with the mother having rescinded the restraining order) Mr. Coutsoukis was reunited with Teddy, only to find her catatonic and ill.
According to Toni Hulse, (the Coutsoukises' housekeeper who saw her a week later) Teddy was withdrawn and not her normal self and she had a runny nose. She had also lost weight, she was very pale and she barely moved. "I had never seen her sick before" said Hulse. Mrs. Hulse continued that after Mr. Coutsoukis's return and under his care, Teddy became her usual smiling, babbling happy self.
Mrs. Hulse, who worked for the Coutsoukis family from November 1993 to
September 1994, said that she observed Mr. Coutsoukis making baby food for and
feeding Teddy, changing her diapers, bathing her, and playing with her. She
also stated that she could tell "he loves the child very much...He takes
excellent care of the child. He is a loving and very conscientious father."
The housekeeper also described Mr. Coutsoukis as Teddy's primary care
giver and she said that she rarely saw Ms.
Samora (who was pursuing a career outside the home). Mrs. Hulse testified
that she had never seen Teddy in poor condition before Mr. Coutsoukis left the
family home that January. She said that Mr. Coutsoukis nursed her back to good
health over the next few weeks.
Hulse described Mr. Coutsoukis's situation as a difficult one. Ms. Samora had been hostile to him since Teddy's birth but the housekeeper said he took it in stride, not complaining but concentrating on his job as Teddy's 24-hour caretaker. He sometimes looked tired and overworked from having to stay up at night when Teddy awoke. Mr. Coutsoukis made "the greatest food" for Teddy, his spouse, Susan, and their guests. He also decorated the house with his art work and tended the flower garden in the spring and summer. This was Mr. Coutsoukis's "role" as the quiet, obedient, husband.
"I have always said that Teddy is a lucky girl to have Photius as a father," Hulse concluded.
One of Mr. Coutsoukis's complaints about the poor manner that Teddy was
treated by her mother has to do with medical care. When Teddy needed a
pediatric ophthalmologist, her father took her to Dr. Laurie Christianson of
the Casey Eye Institute in Portland and to Dr. Craig Hoytt at the University
of California San Francisco. They examined her gently without touching her or
startling her. When her mother took her to a local ophthalmologist following
Mr. Coutsoukis's eviction, he put metal clamps on her eyelids and examined her
while her mother restrained then 3-month old Teddy. That ophthalmologist then
reported that the baby was "uncooperative."
When it was time for Teddy
to go to a dentist, her mother took her to one where she and two assistants
held her down while her teeth were cleaned (see Dentist's report). Her father
chose a dentist who let Teddy sit in Mr. Coutsoukis' lap while she was
examined and allowed several breaks during the exam when Teddy wanted. She
played in his office while she was there.
In July 1994 at 10 months of
age (while on a visit to Greece) Teddy was diagnosed with serious
developmental delays. Teddy was diagnosed by Dr. Helen Skouteli (a pediatric
neurologist) who recommended a battery of tests including an EEG. Ms.
Samora forbade her spouse to have the EEG performed, hampering early
intervention into Teddy's medical problems. Mr. Coutsoukis meanwhile was
reluctant to do anything that would antagonize his spouse, knowing the
potentially catastrophic consequences of being separated from Teddy.
Upon return from Greece, Mr. Coutsoukis sought and began physical
therapy for Teddy. Ms. Samora again asked him to move out. Mr. Coutsoukis
began caring for Teddy daily at his own apartment while his spouse worked.
On October 6, 1994 Ms. Samora filed a divorce petition in
Oregon.
While Mr. Coutsoukis begged his wife to negotiate an amicable
divorce, warning that a legal battle would be hurtful to Teddy and cause
financial catastrophe, she had already retained a local attorney (he referred
to her as a "child destroying slut") who refused all communication with him
unless he retained a lawyer himself. Mr. Coutsoukis said that the lawyer,
Christina Sanz, later on proceeded to "charm" his lawyer "into collusion".
While earning what amounts to an exceptionally high income for the
area, Ms. Samora insisted that Mr. Coutsoukis go to work or never see Teddy
again. While preferring to be a full-time stay-at-home parent, he started a
home based business and hired a staff. He cared for Teddy in his new home from
8:00 a.m. until Ms.
Samora picked up Teddy after work each day and oversaw her rehabilitation.
In August 1995 Ms. Samora observed three seizures in Teddy and finally had
the EEG done at Rogue Valley Medical Center.
Teddy began receiving
seizure medication prescribed by Dr. Helen Skouteli, the pediatric neurologist
who had first examined Teddy 13 months earlier.
A month later Ms. Samora unilaterally reduced the number of hours Mr.
Coutsoukis could care for Teddy in his home to every weekday from 10:00 a.m.
to 6:00 p.m. and just "his" weekends or in other words, when she so decided.
In November 1996 (after nine months of resistance) Ms. Samora finally
relented and the parties began a court-ordered custody evaluation of both
parents and the child by Dr. David Oas (a licensed clinical therapist, and a
clinical psychologist with 25 years of experience).
In February 1997 Dr. Oas indicated
that he would recommend that custody be given to Mr. Coutsoukis. He said that
he based his decision on "the strength of Teddy's biological and emotional
attachment to her father." He noted that "Teddy is an at-risk child who has
significant delays in development and that I believe Mr. Coutsoukis is the
best parent and best person to provide in-home parental care of Teddy with his
capacity to use specific skill-building strategies to offset the significant
behavioral deficits she exhibits." He added that such in-home care is
preferable to out-of-home care for a child with Teddy's needs.
Ms. Samora refused to
undergo psychometric tests and denied Dr. Oas access to her recent psychiatric
records.
In court ordered mediation, which Ms. Samora also resisted,
in December 1996, an agreement was signed by which Mr. Coutsoukis gave his
estranged spouse temporary custody of Teddy provided that she would spend her
days with her father as was done previously. The agreement also required that
she would discuss educational and medical decisions with the father before
implementation.