I assume you to mean after the child has resided there for six month, and jurisdiction has been transferred?
It would require a custody challenge like any other. see related links
No. You need to contact the state that has custody to determine your rights. If you go and get the child you may be guilty of custodial interference.
You have the same chance you had before. Child support and custody are 2 different cases in court.
That depends on whether the non custodial parent has any legal custodial rights and whether those rights are sole or joint. If the non-custodial has sole legal custody, probably. If not, then no, not for a minor child, not without the permission of the parent with sole or joint legal custody. There are different types of custody, physical and legal. Check your custody order before you proceed to get an answer, or contact an attorney.
The non-custodial parent should petition the court immediately to change the custody order.The non-custodial parent should petition the court immediately to change the custody order.The non-custodial parent should petition the court immediately to change the custody order.The non-custodial parent should petition the court immediately to change the custody order.
If the parents share physical and legal custody equally then whoever the child is with at the time is the custodial parent. Both have equal parental/custodial rights.If the parents share physical and legal custody equally then whoever the child is with at the time is the custodial parent. Both have equal parental/custodial rights.If the parents share physical and legal custody equally then whoever the child is with at the time is the custodial parent. Both have equal parental/custodial rights.If the parents share physical and legal custody equally then whoever the child is with at the time is the custodial parent. Both have equal parental/custodial rights.
Yes. If the custodial parent is breaking the court orders the judge can give custody to the non custodial parent if he/she is fit.
Joint custody is a court order whereby custody of a child is awarded to both parties. In joint custody both parents are "custodial parents" and neither parent is a non-custodial parents, or in other words the child has two custodial parents.
No. The court is the only the one that can change a custody order.
The non-custodial parent can file for custody.
You cannot have sole custody without physical custody. If your ex has physical custody, you are the non-custodial parent.
Read your support order. You can't usually be joint custody and non-custodial at the same time.
They need to file for custody