If you are a woman, and if this involves family services, they can find for a prenatal custody challenge every time you get pregnant. There is no such ability to sanction fathers which has created the social crisis in the United States of baby-fathers who impregnate numerous women, cause a huge increase in fatherless children and fail to support any of their numerous children.
If your parental rights have been terminated by a court, it is very unlikely that you would be able to have more children. Termination of parental rights is a legal process that permanently ends the legal relationship between a parent and a child, typically due to serious concerns for the child's safety or well-being. It is done to protect the child from further harm.
No. She has no parental rights regarding another person's children unless she legally adopted them.No. She has no parental rights regarding another person's children unless she legally adopted them.No. She has no parental rights regarding another person's children unless she legally adopted them.No. She has no parental rights regarding another person's children unless she legally adopted them.
no you won't be held for child support but you really need to think about signing your rights away cause once you sign the papers you will not have contact with the kids at all.
She didn't have kids.
Unless he has gone to court to get his parental rights, yes.
Only if the non-custodial parent give up his parental rights.
NO there parents were taken away and they had to live with other kids
Your daughter unless courts say other wise
yes
Court! and if you get your kids taken away you might not be able to get them back depending on what happened!
you sure do. take her to the court's. to find out more.
Of course you do ... signing away your "rights" only means that you do not wish to have any visitation or custodial responsibilities. You still are financially responsibly for that child and his/her upbringing. After all, they are your children, too ... takes two to make kids, ya know!
Yes, the right of a parent to be in his or her child's life has nothing to with whether or not he or she is paying child support. The court sees them as two entirely different issues.