Visit the court that has jurisdiction over your case and ask to speak with an advocate from your state Child Support Enforcement. You should also file a motion for contempt of a court order against the obligor. The advocate can assist you.
Visit the court that has jurisdiction over your case and ask to speak with an advocate from your state Child Support Enforcement. You should also file a motion for contempt of a court order against the obligor. The advocate can assist you.
Visit the court that has jurisdiction over your case and ask to speak with an advocate from your state Child Support Enforcement. You should also file a motion for contempt of a court order against the obligor. The advocate can assist you.
Visit the court that has jurisdiction over your case and ask to speak with an advocate from your state Child Support Enforcement. You should also file a motion for contempt of a court order against the obligor. The advocate can assist you.
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.
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.
yes
Public assistance recipients assign their rights to child support to the State which, presumably, will attempt to establish/collect support.
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.)
Take all written proof (paystubs, etc.) to the Child Support Services agency collecting the payments, or to the court where the judgment for child support was made.
Yes, if a parent owes back child support, they will have to pay it until it is zeroed out even when the children are grown. The age of the child does not affect back child support at all.
No, child support can only be taken from the birth parents.
To my knowledge, felons are not prohibited from collecting child support.
You sue the person for child support. Just because you pay child support for one child does not mean you can not receive child support for the one you have custody of.
You don't - You explain the benefits that support could provide for the child.
State child support agencies may intercept tax refunds to collect past-due child support.