
⭐ Mark Stephens – Parenting Services LLC
September 22, 2025
One Step Closer… To What, Elena?
September 23, 2025Today Mark is at it again, reposting a video from Meg Stand about the so-called Family Justice & Accountability Act. The video promises sweeping reform: recording every hearing, restoring jury trials, enforcing ADA access, and holding Family Court and CPS “accountable.” It sounds dramatic, almost revolutionary — but here’s the catch.
For someone like Mark, who has spent years dodging his own court-ordered evaluations and ignoring the very accountability mechanisms already in place, this post is pure theater.
The Irony of “Accountability”
Mark has had every chance to demonstrate accountability. Judges have ordered it. Doctors have recommended it. CPS has flagged it. Yet instead of showing up, completing evaluations, or repairing the harm he’s caused, he clings to posts like this — hoping a hashtag will erase years of documented abuse, neglect, and manipulation.
It’s not the lack of jury trials that put a No Contact Order in place. It was multiple doctors raising alarms about his treatment of his children. It wasn’t CPS failing to record hearings that forced emergency intervention. It was his own refusal to cooperate, to parent responsibly, or to show even the most basic empathy.
Shifting Blame, Dodging Reality
By sharing advocacy campaigns, Mark shifts the spotlight away from his failures:
- Refusal of Mental Health Evaluations
- Refusal of Domestic Violence Evaluations
- Chronic non-payment of child support
- Consistent undermining of medical care for his children
He positions himself as a victim of “the system” rather than a father unwilling to do the work. That’s not reform. That’s excuse-making.
A Challenge to Mark
So here’s the dare, Mark:
If you really care about accountability, be the first to model it.
- Take the evaluations you’ve dodged for years.
- Pay the support you’ve neglected.
- Follow the court orders you’ve tried to outlast.
- Repair the harm you’ve caused instead of reposting “solutions” for everyone else.
Accountability doesn’t start with Congress. It starts with you.
Until then, every hashtag you share is just another attempt at accountability theater — loud enough for social media, but silent in the places that matter most: your children’s lives.



