• ContentConsequences of Kidnapping Your Own Child

    Disputes over the custody of a child often arise when there is a divorce or dissolution of a relationship between couples. The war over who gets what child and for how long often takes immense amounts of energy, time and legal assistance when the arguments cannot be solved peacefully.

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  • ContentCustody Battles in Same Sex Divorce Cases

    While custody battles are often messy, the same-sex divorce case may bring additional problems with it if one or both parents do not possess the legal parental rights for the child affected by the situation. This can cause further problems between spouses and lead to the loss of custody for one and little to no visitation rights as well.

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  • ContentAbusive Ex No Longer in the Home – Can I Get My Child Back?

    Once a spouse removes the abusive person in the home, it is often time to attempt to return children back to the house by contacting the correct authorities. This may involve the Child Protection Services, extended family members or a foster family that took in the youth for a short time while the abusive person is still on the property.

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  • ContentChildren Affected by Cult Actions

    Cults are led by fanatical leaders that charm and direct followers to various actions that may include violence against others. However, the actions of the cult may harm the children of parent members to the point of injury and abuse both physically and sexually, and this may eventually lead to criminal charges and the children taken away to foster care.

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  • ContentCustody of a Child Conceived by Artificial Insemination

    The circumstances surrounding artificial insemination and child custody are complex and difficult to resolve without the state supreme courts involvement in the matter. For the father, custody could happen depending on the situation and if the mother is either unfit or not the best parent to keep primary custody of the youth.

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  • ContentEmergency Child Custody to Protect Against Kidnapping or Domestic Violence

    When there is some type of threat of possible kidnapping or even domestic violence, the spouse or romantic partner can seek emergency child custody for any affected children in these circumstances. The individual will need to petition the courts and often file a restraining order or request an order of protection.

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  • ContentEmergency Hearings for Child Custody Matters

    In some situations, a concerned parent or other individual may petition the court for an emergency hearing to grant an order regarding custody or visitation rather than wait for the next available hearing date on the docket. However, such hearings are limited to those situations in which a true emergency is at stake.

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  • ContentFacts You Need to Know if Fighting for Primary Child Custody

    Fighting for the custody of a child is often a battle when facing a spouse that may appear to the court to be more suited and in a better position to offer greater nurturing. This means that the individual should seek all the information he or she is capable of finding to better his or her chances.

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  • ContentWhy Twins Should Not Be Separated in a Divorce

    In some custody cases, parents of twins may believe that it is equitable to allow each parent to have one child full-time. There can be practical reasons why this may make sense, such as being able to better support one child at a time and splitting up childrearing responsibilities in an equitable fashion. However, there can also be negative ramifications of splitting up twins in a divorce or child custody setting.

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  • ContentIncarcerated Parents and Enforcement of Child Visitation

    There are specific conditions necessary to force a spouse to bring children for visitation when one parent is in jail or prison such as an emergency visitation order or court order requiring this person to follow through. However, the other parent can use the incarceration to try to severe visitation rights until the parent is out of prison.

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  • ContentIncarceration - How Does It Affect Child Custody?

    Incarceration can affect child support, visitation and child custody for the parent who ends up behind bars. With this situation, the other parent can become the custodial parent even if only temporarily while the other person remains in jail or prison for the duration of the sentence.

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  • ContentFalse Allegations of Abuse in Child Custody Cases

    Child custody cases often face various complications, and among these are the false allegations that one parent or person is abusing someone in the household to include the children living there. The false accusations generally harm the parent wanting either custody or visitation rights, and the accuser could face serious consequences when the judge discovers the truth.

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  • ContentFalse Allegations of Domestic Violence and the Effect on Child Custody

    When the mother or father receives charges of domestic violence, he or she may lose temporary custody of the children in the marriage or relationship unless quick legal action prevents the activity. The possibility of losing all visitation with children is one outcome of allegations that succeed in disrupting the life of the father or mother.

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  • ContentFamily Abduction - What Is It and How It Affects Child Custody

    Abduction in the family usually affects the child because it is the parent that will take the youth without the permission of the mother or father that has custodial rights in these situations. The person that abducts the other can increase the severity of these charges if he or she inflicts harm, takes the person to another state or country or causes a loss of life.

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  • ContentFamily Challenges to Wills Designating Child Custody

    Family and adoption laws are often complicated in the United States. If there is no legal action taken for children to be adopted by a stepfather or stepmother, these cases may become even more difficult.

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  • ContentRestraining Orders and the Effect on Custody Arrangements

    After a divorce where the children proceed through a custody battle, the parent with the primary or joint custody may face additional complications from the other parent. If this occurs with a restraining order, it is crucial to contact a lawyer to help reverse the legal order to help with the custody issue and return the children to custody or visitation.

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  • ContentConvincing the Judge You Can Get Along with the Other Parent in Custody Cases

    Child custody is often one of the more contentious issues in a divorce. Each parent may feel that he or she will be the most responsible and caring for primary or total custody. The judge who will determine custody will need to be persuaded that the parents will have the child's best interests as a priority.

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  • ContentParents Who Lie at a Family Custody Hearing - Is It Perjury?

    If one of the parents lies during a family custody hearing when attempting to acquire custody of the child from the marriage, it is possible that this activity can cause severe detriment to the case before the judge. While the civil remedies are often at an extreme limit, the other parent’s case may gain strength because of the deception presented.

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  • ContentCustodial Interference - What Is It and What Are the Legal Consequences?

    Custodial interference happens when the non-custodial parent tries to disrupt the standard custody rights of the custodial parent to a degree that the disruption causes problems. Depending on the severity of the disruptions, the disruptive parent may face a number of legal consequences.

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  • ContentOther Parent Doesn’t Return My Child Back to Me on Time - What Can I Do?

    When one parent is difficult and does not bring the child back at the designated time specified in orders or the parenting plan, the other parent has a few options that start with communicating with the mother or father and end with the courts. These situations can happen often when one person does not respect the other, and it is important to enforce the rules.

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  • ContentGay Parent's Claim for Custody

    Custody of children for gay men is a matter often colored by discrimination, prejudice and ill feelings due to the nature of the relationship that may stop a child’s best interests in living with the two fathers. Understanding how these cases progress is important so that the best-fit parents have custody of the child even when the courts do not like it.

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