UPDATE: Message from a subscriber: In Colorado, any gain in a trust is subject as community property.  Living trust or irrevocable.  If the trust is out of state then the judge will seize all other assets within the state and give them to the wife.  If there are no assets in the state, then order maintenance/alimony in the amount of half that gain.  So if you gained $2M you would owe $1M.  The judge would cut that up into $8333 a month for 10 years plus the normal maintenance he would see you fit.
The only way out is to Decant an Irrevocable trust and put in power of appointment.  That means the person running the trust can name someone else to be the recipient.  So you need a close relative to handle that part and not a bank.  Therefore if you as a divorcee are not "named" as a primary or secondary beneficiary.  The judge can't do shit because you many never hypothetically do it.  For me my trust gained 10M since I was married but since I decanted it 3 years before we divorced, it could not be considered. 
Also a trust needs to be decanted 12 months prior to a initial filing for separation to hold water in CO family court"

A segment of the 7/19/2017 episode of TFM 42O.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4701776/Man-handed-175-000-ordered-ex-wife-100-000.html#article-4701776

Child Maltreatment 2015 (latest year)
https://www.acf.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/cb/cm2015.pdf
Page 75/248
Table 4–5 Child Fatalities by Relationship to Their Perpetrators, 2015
The top 5 abusers of children are (in order of percentage)
- Biological Mother Alone (26.7%)
- Biological Mother & Father Together (22.3%)
- Nonparents (All) (18.7%)
- Biological Father Alone (14.7%)
- Biological Mother & Nonparent Together (10.5%)

Intro Music: "Earthy Crust" by Jingle Punks. Courtesy of the YouTube Audio Library.

Monkey Image: "Male chimpanzee in business clothes - Stock image" by Lise Gagne. Licensed from Getty Images.

Animated Newsroom by rpancake. Licensed from Shutterstock.