Mom: Woman's Killer Shouldn't Raise Child
Custody suit filed against man who a civil court judge ruled killed his wife.
Dec. 10, 2008— -- The man a civil court judge found liable for the bludgeoning death of his wife should not be allowed to raise their young daughter, according to the dead woman's mother and sister.
Linda Fisher and Meredith Lynn Fisher -- the mother and sister of Michelle Young -- have filed suit in North Carolina seeking custody of Young's now 4-year-old daughter, Cassidy.
The two women claim in the suit to have "enjoyed a close and loving relationship with Cassidy since her birth" and detail how Linda Fisher, who lives in Sayville, N.Y., had visited her daughter monthly and bought a home in North Carolina to be close to her and help with raising her granddaughter and the baby boy Michelle Young was expecting when she was killed.
Among the reasons the suit alleged that Jason Young, Michelle's husband, should not have custody are the ruling that he "willfully and unlawfully killed" his wife, and that before her death he "engaged in a pattern of behavior that was degrading to Michelle, erratic and inappropriate."
Jason Young has never been charged with Michelle's murder, and according to Raleigh, N.C., ABC News station WTVD, has repeatedly proclaimed his innocence. Messages left with Roger Smith Jr. of Raleigh, Jason Young's attorney, were not returned and attempts to reach Jason Young or his family were unsuccessful.
A North Carolina civil court judge ruled last month that Young killed his 29-year-old wife, Michelle, in November 2006, even though no criminal charges have yet been filed in the slaying.
"Jason Lynn Young willfully and unlawfully killed Michelle Marie Fisher Young," Wake County Superior Court Judge Donald Stephens wrote in his ruling. He barred Young, 34, from receiving any life insurance money or assets from his wife's estate.
Young is still free and living in North Carolina with his young daughter.
The wrongful death lawsuit against him was brought by Linda Fisher in October, shortly before the two-year statute of limitations on such suits was to run out.