See your social services bureau. The law provides for child support and it can be enforced. If the father is claiming the child on his taxes, then you can report him for false income tax filing. In certain states, the courts can garnishee his wages to provide a court ordered child support decree. Your attorney can help you.
Yes.
Yes, see link
No, as they do it.
no
When the baby is born the father will be required to pay child support if a case is opened.
no
If you mean that the mother changes the baby's surname, of course.If you mean that the mother changes her surname to the father's (the same as the baby), of course.
no because if you had a baby with another man your ex husband does not pay you with more child support because that is not his child
yes, yes he can!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
That's handled by child support enforcement.
No, but only gatekeeper mother would foster another fatherless child onto society. Besides, he can get access rights on his own. I teach fathers how to. You should let the baby go with its father whether you get child support or not. The other parent has a legal obligation to support their child. You have a state agency, the Department of Revenue that can assist you with this, but unless this is an abusive, or dangerous father, or you are afraid the father will take the baby and leave the State, yes by all means you should share the job of parenting with him without being paid to do so. The child support issue will work itself out, let him be a father. Your child will grow better for it.
Regardless of the situation, the obligated parent must adhere to the court order of support until the order is amended or rescinded by the court of jurisdiction. The father cannot arbitrarily stop child support payments, he will have to file a lawsuit (petition) in the appropriate state court to have the child support amended or stopped. Unless the young woman falsified the documents needed to obtain public assistance, the state's division of child support enforcement or social services would be aware that her father is paying support also, and that would in all likelihood indicate the support order now in place would hold up if contested.