Yes, however it is not a good idea. The primary residential parent can still file in another state claiming non-payment. The states don't talk to each other to confirm whether the claim is valid. see links below
Yes the child support can be revoked since the parent receiving support is no longer legally supporting the child
no
In most adoptions, the rights/responsibilities of the biological parents are terminated.
The child support order can be modified or terminated if there has been a change in circumstances.The child support order can be modified or terminated if there has been a change in circumstances.The child support order can be modified or terminated if there has been a change in circumstances.The child support order can be modified or terminated if there has been a change in circumstances.
Terminating parents rights does not mean they don't have to pay for their child. If you as the grandmother is the legal guardian and have custody you have to go to court to petition for child support. If you don't have legal custody you have to get it first.
Only in the case that both parents agree to terminate parental rights and terminate child support and then a Motion to Modify SAPCR must be entered and a judge must agree to the terms of modification and sign off. In general, once paternity is established, the non-custodial parent must pay child support as order by the court. The amount of child support can be modified if there are matieral changes to the parent's financial circumstances, but not terminated prematurely. If parental rights are are signed over, child support must still be paid--otherwise, non-custodial parents could sign the rights away to avoid paying.
No as that would be considered child abandonment.
It depends on where you live. In the United States, the parent who filed for child support can file for modification or termination of child support, but needs to provide supporting documentation as well as good reasons why it should be modified/terminated. The court looks at the well being of the child and what would be best for him/her, not whether a parent has a change of heart and is doing this to cut the other parent some slack.
Typically, child support for the biological parents is terminated once the adoption is finalized.
no
no
The parents can agree to waive the unpaid support - the court must approve this after finding it to be in the child's best interest.