Yes. The entire refund amount will be seized by the IRS and allocated to the appropriate state child enforcement agency.
If the non obligated spouse qualifies as an "injured spouse" under IRS regulations they are entitled to their share of the refund. The non obligated spouse should file form F8379 with supporting documents. Generally the IRS will schedule an interview to detemine if the injured spouse claim is valid.
If you file jointly you would need to file an injured spouse form (form 8379) to avoid that your share of the refund will be taken.
If you filed jointly and your tax refund was intercepted, you will have to file an injured spouse claim to recover your share of the refund.
Vacation pay is an income, child support is taken out of income.....
Child support remains.
no
No, child support can only be taken from the birth parents.
If it is a joint account yes.
Support is owed to the parent (or the State), not the child.
absolutely
Yes
yup
Yes since there is only so much money that can be taken for child support regardless of the number of children. The limit is 25% of a persons wage can be taken for child support. The courts can not take more then 25% of a persons income even if there are a hundred children.