Tenn. Judge Upholds Lazarides' Kidnapping Arrest the FBI Says

Tenn. Judge Upholds Lazarides' Kidnapping Arrest the FBI Says

Tenn. Judge Upholds Lazarides' Kidnapping Arrest NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Mar 11, 2009 The FBI says Hope Lazarides kidnapped her own daughter in 2003. She was arrested six years later in Dallas. Testimony at a hearing Wednesday showed that Hope Lazarides and her 14-year-old daughter were living in Dallas with a retired criminal court judge when the mother was arrested last month. The FBI says Hope Lazarides kidnapped her own daughter in 2003 The Associated Press did not identify the judge, but CBS 11 talked to udge Phil Barker, who as recently as Tuesday denied knowing Hope Lazarides. It's not clear whether he knew he was housing a fugitive. Lazarides, 46, is charged with custodial interference and faces a maximum of two years in prison if convicted. The mother left Nashville in 2003 in the aftermath of a bitter divorce and custody dispute with former husband Kostas Lazarides, known professionally as Kostas. Hope Lazarides and Kostas Lazarides were divorced in 2001. The father was awarded sole custody of Sophia Lazarides, Nashville attorney John Hollins Jr. testified. Kostas Lazarides has written songs that have been recorded by a number of country music artists, including the Dixie Chicks, Dwight Yoakam, Patty Loveless and Travis Tritt. The mother initially had unsupervised visitation with the daughter but that changed after she repeatedly accused the father of molesting the child, Hollins testified. An investigation revealed that the mother made up the allegations and was harming the child by coercing the daughter to say bad things about her father, a lawyer for the child testified. "It was parental alienation of extreme proportions," said Joy Davis Collier, who represented Sophia Lazarides. All the experts in the case, she said, believed the mother was falsifying the events. The mother, who has no criminal record, did not testify. According to testimony, the mother had been using multiple identities and Social Security numbers and was home-schooling the child. After hearing the testimony, General Sessions Judge Gayle Robinson sent the case to the Davidson County Grand Jury and increased the mother's bond from $25,000 to $100,000. The daughter has been reunited with her father and is living in Montana. .

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