The police can subpoena your ISP for information and you can argue the subpoena, but you probably are not going to win.
Yes they may unless the child is receiving some sort of welfare (federal and/or state aid). Normally, this is done by filing the appropriate paperwork with the agency in charge of child support enforcement in their jurisdiction, or filing a motion pertaining to the same in the court of jurisdiction.
You can find the charge(s) they were arrested for on the arrest book of the law enforcement agency that arrested them, or the court charges on file at the Clerk of The Court office at the courthouse they were tried in.
supreme court and high court
(in the US) Law enforcement agencies are not even a part of the court system. Law enforcement agencies are part of the EXECUTIVE BRANCH of the government. The court system is part of the JUDICIAL BRANCH of government.
Usually the division in charge of family or domestic issues in the jurisdiction where the order of support is filed and granted. Some locations have specific courts for this purpose. Other locations may assign such responsibilities to the circuit court or superior court. Contact the division in charge of child support enforcement in your location for more specific information.
The Court restricted the scope of the Fourteenth Amendment by leaving its enforcement up to the states.
Contact the child support agency in your area in charge of disbursement/enforcement. They can probably obtain that information.
Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.
You can't "erase" it, it never 'goes away." But, you can file a motion with the court to have your record 'expunged' so that the charge will not appear on the part of your record accessible by the public. Law enforcement and the courts will still have access to it, however.
the police and the court
The arrestin law enforcement officer will initially charge the arrestee with what they believe to be the proper offense. When the officer consults with the prosecuting attorney assigned to the prosecution, the prosecutor can agree, or disagree and alter the charge to what they believe to be the proper statute. THISis the charge that will be presented to the court at arraignment.
The person in charge of a county court - is a Magistrate.