The CA agency probably has a computer entry reflecting an order which, of course, is no guarantee that such an order ever existed or that it hasn't been superseded. The CA agency should offer you a right to an account review/redetermination (the process might go by some other name) and/or right to administrative hearing. If not, I suggest you hire an attorney (we're talking about $54,000 here) and ask the courts for an order setting forth the balance.
I've often seen cases like this when mothers go to another state and claim substantial arrears. The move before confirming, than don't want to go through the effort the rescind the claim, especially after they have added it to their matching funds claim from the feds.
See link below for Dads House. I have members in California
Public assistance recipients assign their rights to child support to the State which, presumably, will attempt to establish/collect support.
Your custodial parent can collect unpaid support that accrued under an order. Support sometimes continues after the child becomes an adult if the child is disabled.
Reference to "seventy four percent" is unclear, but it seems unlikely that the child's mother could collect current child support in such a situation. (She can still collect past-due support, if any.)
No.
when results from the experiments repeatedly fail to support the hypothesis.
No, child support can only be taken from the birth parents.
To my knowledge, felons are not prohibited from collecting child support.
yes
If your child is not living with you, you are not eligible to collect child support. The child support should go to whomever is caring for the child.
Yes, but the "extraordinary remedies" available to collect child support (interception of Federal and state payments, liens on real and personal property, etc.) are not available to collect unpaid spousal support.
You don't - You explain the benefits that support could provide for the child.
No, your pension income is for supporting you and your family.