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Only your attorney should be talking to the other attorney.
To change a statement into a question using tag questions, you add a brief question at the end that echoes the form of the statement. For example, if the statement is "You are coming to the party," the tag question would be "You are coming to the party, aren't you?"
If by the "other party" you are referring to the complainant and/or the juvenile's victim, yes, they (or their attorney) will receive this infomration.
Only if you obtained the divorce legally by following all the requirements of notice to the other party. If you don't know the other party's location you need to publish notice of the divorce action in the local newspaper and file a sworn statement with the court that you did so. Your attorney can advise you of the laws in your state.
It will typically have to be filed with each third party they are working with. Without a copy of the power of attorney, a bank will not recognize the rights.
The court has that ability. If the spouse has requested that it be changed, they are likely to do so. They are also likely to appoint a neutral party, such as an attorney or a bank.
Ask your attorney. If the actions are baseless then the attorney can take action against the other party.
The party affiliation of the attorney general can be whatever he wants. Generally, the president chooses his attorney general base on qualification and shared ideals. This quite often means the attorney general and the president are in the same political party.
You can ask for them as part of the underlying lawsuit. That doesn't mean you will win.
You would need to ask the other party or your attorney for a copy.
If the other party has an attorney I would say your chances are nil.
It would be considered an ethics violation.