It depends on the circumstances. It may be possible but laws vary in different jurisdictions. He should speak to his lawyer.
It's not the parent who decide whether there will be visitation rights or not, that is the court and a parent is not obligated to petition for one. A parent can not be forced to have a relationship with their child. Apart from paying child support.
Not custody rights but you can have a chance to visitation. Speak to your lawyer.
Possiblysee link
The custodial parent is the parent in which the child resides with. My son lives with me and I am the custodial parent, his dad has visitation rights and pays child support.
Yessee link
In most cases the parent who has the child doesn't have to pay child support. The parent who does not have the child pays child support if they want visitation rights. In most jurisdictions, the non custodial parent must pay child support even without visitation rights.
In Illinois, if a court finds that the visits would be in the best interests of the child, then yes.
A stepparent that has established a parent-child relationship can file for visitation eright, but it's up to the judge.
With visitation rights? Yes, if it's court ordered.
Not if the other parent has joint custody and/or visitation rights.
Absolutely not. Child visitation rights are granted by the court, not by you. It is illegal to prevent someone with legal visitation rights to see the child.
No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.