Yes
No.
Yes
Child support for illegal children can be difficult. A court order is required to enforce child support payments, and this depends on the parent being a legal immigrant with a legal job to collect from. If a illegal child is born of a US citizen or naturalization, the child is no longer considered illegal.
No as he can't. see link
Each and every child brought into this world deserves, at a minimum, monetary support. He or she is human being and requires food, clothing and shelter. If you are the parent of this child, your behavior and choices created the child and the consequences fo that behavior is that you support the child. It would be best for the child if you took some interest and showed some love, but if you are not capable aat least keep the child at a survival level.
Yes if the citizen is the biological father of the minor child. The status of the foreign national person is not relevant when the issue is child support. However, the undocumented immigrant will be required to report their status to USCIS and follow the procedures that are required by U.S. immigration laws. A person who is within the jurisdiction of the U.S. is, regardless of the situation may be subject to deportation and/or imprisonment.
We would like to help you with the best answer we can give, but we do need more information. Is the father an illegal immigrant and does is he in contact with the child? Thank you
yes i think there is a law and that if the child was born in American then he has the right to file for who so ever he needs and the government sould be careful about the laws
No not an illegal immigrant but a legal one can. * If the couple were legally married the immigrant spouse can request spousal maintenance (alimony). Immigration issues are federal matters and have no bearing on domestic issues such as divorce. child custody/support which come under the jurisdiction of state not federal law.
No, marrying a US citizen or a permanent resident does not grant the illegal immigrant legal status regardless of whether there is a child involved or not.
The immigrant should still appear in court. If he does not, the court may cite him for contempt and/or enter a default judgment that he likely won't be able to afford.
No.