Hi Gerda, I'm only aware of a judicial review panel in one of the courts where I practice. Sometimes you can move to disqualify a judge, but usually that has to be before they're ruled on anything. Don't bother reporting the lawyer. It won't go anywhere (since you are an adverse party) and will take forever. It may also give him personal skin in the game to keep messing with you. At some point he will get sick of working in the hope of fees or the godfather will tire of paying for them. Look at your case schedule and see if you have a deadline that says something about mediation/ADR (alternative dispute resolution) or a similar deadline.

Dissipation of assets is referred to as marital waste and it can sometimes result in an award of some of the other party's community to compensate for the amount. I'm not licensed where you live and don't practice this type of law, so I can't tell you whether your state recognizes it. Generally though if you want to claim something you have to have pleadings on file and put the other side on notice of the claim, if you haven't done that, a motion to preserve the argument might not be a bad idea. The other side's dilatory tactics are sometimes referred to as intransigence. In my jurisdiction it can serve as an award of attorney fees, but since you don't have a lawyer, you wouldn't likely get an award to cover fees. Still, him refusing to agree to anything and filing meritless motions (and otherwise behaving vexatiously) while shirking employment and child support obligations (which are typically presumed in an unemployment situation), look very much like marital waste and intransigence.