well..it depends on you. its your choice and if your the mother, well its your child. if you don't think that your child be seeing the father then you have to choices.
1. don't let the father see the child or pick up anything you would not feel comfortable
2. tell the court about the incident or just simply get a restraining order
No he does not because he is not the child's parent anymore.
Depends on how long the visit is. But if the father is the non-custodial parent in this case, then he will have to pay child support on this child. Different states vary in their laws. But typically a "visit" will not affect child support.
12.
Not if the child's caretaker has taken the appropriate action to protect the child from abuse and obtained a court order that prevents the child from being required to see the father. The caretaker should visit the family court immediately and ask to speak with an advocate or a representative from Child Protective Services.
The child may visit at any age if a court order for visitation is in place. If no such order exists or visitation has been terminated for any reason, the child can visit their parent when they reach the age of majority in their state, 18 in Colorado.
The father has the right to visit with his child unless the court issues an order to the opposite.
A minor can not legally choose. If there is a court order for visitation it has to be followed and if not you can lose custody. It's your job to see to that the child goes. If you suspect the child is being harmed you have to report this.
see related question
No, child support obligations and visitation or custodial issues are completely different matters.
The fact of being a pathological liar is not child abuse. However, if the lying results in emotional upset and stress for the child then that should be brought to court to try to modify the visitations with the father. For example, if the father repeatedly fails to show up after promising the child a visit that would expose the child to unnecessary stress and disappointment.
You can't. The child has the right to be supported by her father and they both have the right to a relationship with each other. The father should pay child support and also have a regular visitation schedule.
No. The court has no means to enforce that type of order.