I am in the process of filing for my fiancee, here is the info I have found: see related links
The rest of the information needed can be found at the courthouse in the county where his trial was held. I have went and received copies of the court reports from his sentencing, and all other information I needed off of the court docket.
My advice is to have a lawyer proof the papers prior to filing, luckily I have an attorney in the family, but any lawyer, paralegal, or even law student can look over then to make sure you have not left anything out or screwed anything up. The packet says that only one hearing can be held, so you want to be sure you have everything right and ALL the information correct and complete.
Go to the prison library and ask for a judicial release form. the form is easy to fill out. Include a list of all the programs that you finished.
There are a couple of different things that you can do to get yourself or someone else start on this motion.. 1st you can go to the prisons library and ask for the standard judicial release form, from there your best bet ( if you have limited resources) is to find someone has done this before around you ( prison attorney) and ask them some questions or have them do it for you ( be careful, some institutions frown upon this practice) but you have to do what you have to do. There will also be books to help you with sentencing guidelines and what to do next.
You file it in the Circuit Court of the County where the property is.
You must file in the county in which you currently reside and you have to have lived in that county for six months!
There should be no reason to file for emancipation. The age of majority in Ohio is 18.
That would be a civil case. In Ohio you have two years to file the suit.
My mom has a w2 for spouse how is in prision how can she file tn taxes she has always filed joint
If a judge denied his original request, that WAS the state of Ohio (in the person of the judge) who denied his petition. This time around, with an attorney submitting the petition, it might have a better chance of being reviewed, but it is no 'slam-dunk' simply becauise an attorney is handling the case.
You will have to file it in the same country you come from.
If you only worked in Ohio, AND were employed in that state's base period (Ohio would be the "liable state" owing any benefits), and were otherwise qualified under that state's requirements, then you'd file with Ohio. Alternatively, you could file in Indiana and under the interstate unemployment act Indiana would help you get the benefits from Ohio.
you file a divorce in new york
one year