You have the visitation rights that were established in the divorce, and you have no custody rights.
He has the right to divorce and to an equitable share of the marital estate, and has equal right to petition the court for custody of the child.
If he is not married to the mother, he has no assumed rights to the child even if she were a citizen, so the same challenges would remain in obtaining custody.
Yes very likely since immigration status has no bearing on parental rights.
The rights your ex-husband will have once you divorce will all depend on what the judge rules. He could have joint custody or split custody.
Yes he does, such as custody, visitation and support issues. As for immigration, having a citizen child is no basis to get legal residency (at least not until the child is 21)
Custody issues are difficult enough for fathers. Throwing in a foreign citizenship only complicates this further. Certainly the court would not desire having the child removed from the jurisdiction of the US. This will need to be decided exclusively on the merit of the individual case. see links
If they are the parent and they jabe custody, yes, that is one of their rights. If they have shared custody, an agreement must be made with all persons that have custody as well. If they are not the parent, then they have no right to take the child anywhere, unless that permission is explicitly granted to them by the parent or guardian.
Well its called common marriage he would have to pay child support, illegal immigrants have many rights since her child is a u.s. citizen the government will help her raise the baby. You just have to find more info about it get educated about the subject so you don't become a fool of anyone.
yes they do even if they are an illegal citizen the ystill have a small amount of rights
Yes...
If no court order is in place stating otherwise, the biological mother has presumptive custody of her children.