If the father is on probation or the son? If the father is on probation, it's possible depending on the circumstances (nature of the crime, conditions of probation, ie, is the parent able to properly care for the child with probation restrictions taken into consideration, etc.). The mother's or legal guardian's cooperation would also be required.
Ultimately, the court would decide what is in the best interests of the child in determining custody and probation as a factor is decided on a case-by-case basis.
Depends on the nature of the felony, whether or not he is off parole , and any provable unfitness of the mother.
depends on who has more grounds but most likely yes and depends on what the father did
If He Have Full Custody Then He Doesn't Have To .
Sole Custody until ruled on otherwise. The Glass Ceiling for fathers.
It depends on your legal status before and after the father left. If you are married then he still has full parental rights until a court renders a custody order. If you have been divorced custody should have been addressed in the divorce decree. If you were never married and he has no previously established custodial rights then you have full legal custody.
You have the authority to get medical treatment for your son. If you have any doubts or if the father has already objected then consult with your attorney.
With his permission you can.
If the father has full custody, you can't do anything. If you have a custody agreement set up, that includes you having visitation -- take the father to court. If there is no agreement, take him to court, and get it settled. You failed to mention the jurisdiction where you live, marital status, whether there are any existing court orders, whether the father has legal custody and where the father got the authority to prevent you from seeing your child. You need to add details. See related question links.
well by law, he is now a adult, so he can make his own decissions, but i do not think his father can no longer get custody because he is 18, but im not 100% sure
see links
Yes, she can. All she has to do is press suit to have custody awarded, or convince him to give her custody.
That depends on the custody order, but she can file for a change of custody.
yes
Yes you can. The legal guardian decides.