... expiration date .... No - the order is effective until/unless it is overturned. However, child support generally ends with the child's majority or emancipation.
Whether or not you can sue over a forced paternity test is usually a question of local law. The answer in this location is that you can not usually sue over a court ordered paternity test. Since court orders in this area are public record, it is stupid to let it get that far.
If the court orders you to do so, yes.
Longer than it will take to make your court date and drug test.
Justin Bieber's court date is not until December 2011. He is taking a DNA test before the court date to verify that he is or is not the father. The results have not yet been released.
Luckily no, however, once you have passed your theory test, you must then make sure you pass your practical test within 2 years. The expiry date should be on it but this is definitely true. But then again you know what this governments with like making changes!
You can always try it out, but I don't think you should use them past the expiry date. You may not get an accurate reading or any reading at all.
Yes, the court has a right to drug test you as part of the investigation or part of your probation
test are standardized they look back up to 3 months (1.5" of hair ) only court orders go back farther
Yes. If the court orders it, the results must be produced and then became a permanant part of the case file.
well if u say no then they cant but if they get a judges warrant then u have too.Added: The police do not have that authority . . ., but the court does. If the court orders you to submit to a DNA test you must do so, or be found in contempt of court and suffer whatever consequences that may bring, PLUS - they will wind up taking the sample anyway.
when a doctor orders an ESR he usually also orders a complete blood count CBC. but it is a different test.
Only a court can order a paternity test. The individual must petition the court first. The court will order the test, which is done under very specific conditions to assure that the right individuals are tested. The mother of a child has no obligation to subject a child to any testing simply based on the request of another person. When the court orders the test, the mother must then comply. The only paternity test a mother must submit the child for is one ordered by a judge. A court-ordered paternity test must be done under specific conditions to assure that the swabs are indeed from the individuals in question and that the results are processed by a lab certified by the courts. The father must petition the court for the test. There will be a hearing and the mother (or guardian) of the child will be instructed of the court order and told how to proceed.