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Interesting question... I would guess that the person paying the alimony could perhaps petition the court to suspend the alimony payments during the period their ex-spouse was incarcerated.
Yes, the felony conviction only bars the convicted felon from possessing one.
This is only an opinion. I feel that spouses of convicted felons should have the right to possess firearms. Why should a spouse lost their right to exercise the Second Ammendment. Should a spouse also lose voting priviledges? Driving priviledges if spouse drives drunk? NO! This is guilty before commiting a crime. With the state our system is in there is no way you could have any faith in "innocent until proven guilty." Why should a spouse be punished for being innocent?ANSWERYes, the spouse of a convicted felon has all the rights they would normally enjoy under the law. The only thing to keep in mind is that the handgun/long-gun cannot be in the care/custody/control of a felon at anytime. meaning: It must be locked up in a gunsafe or otherwise not accesable to the felon if the spouse is out or even at home. If the police should have reason to enter the shared home and locate the firearm in the open, they would have to fully believe that it was the non-felon spouse who had full care/custody/control of the firearm over the spouse with a felony. Having the firearm being in the open and able to be accesable to the felon would be a potential charge.Best thing to do in a situation such as this is to petition the courts through a lawyer to have the felony expunged from the record, or to petition the Govenor of your state for a pardon. In either method you'd be improving your chance of success by retaining a lawyer.ADDITIONAL NOTE: Even if the felony is expunged not all states restore full rights, including firarms rights. You will have to research your particular state laws to determine which course your state follows. ALSO: If it was FEDERAL CRIME you were convicted of you can NEVER regain your firearm possession rights. No means currently exists, at the federal level, that allows this.
You cannot petition them as grandparents do NOT qualify as a dependent relative/spouse. You can only petition a spouse, children, and parents.
NO.
An immigrant in the US can petition for his or her spouse who lives in a foreign country as long as he/ or she living in the US has already recieved their citizenship.
surely this can be tried as a felony if and if they are not operating it from joint account. forum.freeadvice.com/ If this in a state where its commenwealth, there is no felony. The only other factor is if the spouse had a POA.
Depends on whether the spouse was convicted.
Sue. This is a felony.
Not in USA. its not a criminal offence at all.
how long is the wait before a divorce take place if the spouse refuses to sign the divorce petition
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