If you have a Court Order awarding you parental and contact rights you can file a motion for contempt for the parents failure to abide by the Courts decision. You may also need an emergency child pick up order if the child is in harms way. If you have no order establishing your parental rights then you must first file the petition to establish these rights and request a contact schedule with the child. Unfortunately, if the parent and child have already relocated and have established residency you may be awarded a long distance contact schedule. If however, you and the other parent and child resided together for a long time and she has simply taken up and left without good cause, the Court may Order her back so that the contact you enjoyed all those years with your child may continue. Don't wait too long.
Yes. However, if there is a father around, he can file an injunction for the child to be returned.
Yes, however he should file an injunction to have the child returned.
He can file an injunction to have the child returned.
Yes, but he has up to six months to file an injunction requiring the child be returned. see long below
Yes, and you should file an injunction to have the children returned to the state pending a decision by the court. see link
Yes, but you can file an injunction to have the child returned. see link
Married parents have equal parental rights. File an injunction to have the child returned to the state as soon as possible.
If the mother has sole custody of the child, then yes -- the father doesn't need notification. With joint custody, the answer may vary, but in most cases the father must be at least notified. The permission would be from a judge, not the father.
The situation carries some risk depending on your relationship with the child's father and your marital status. An unmarried mother has legal custody of her child in most jurisdictions. An unmarried father must establish his paternity through court. The court in the jurisdiction where the child lives has jurisdiction over the child. You should consult with an attorney who specializes in custody issues if you have any doubts that your child will be returned at the agreed upon time.The situation carries some risk depending on your relationship with the child's father and your marital status. An unmarried mother has legal custody of her child in most jurisdictions. An unmarried father must establish his paternity through court. The court in the jurisdiction where the child lives has jurisdiction over the child. You should consult with an attorney who specializes in custody issues if you have any doubts that your child will be returned at the agreed upon time.The situation carries some risk depending on your relationship with the child's father and your marital status. An unmarried mother has legal custody of her child in most jurisdictions. An unmarried father must establish his paternity through court. The court in the jurisdiction where the child lives has jurisdiction over the child. You should consult with an attorney who specializes in custody issues if you have any doubts that your child will be returned at the agreed upon time.The situation carries some risk depending on your relationship with the child's father and your marital status. An unmarried mother has legal custody of her child in most jurisdictions. An unmarried father must establish his paternity through court. The court in the jurisdiction where the child lives has jurisdiction over the child. You should consult with an attorney who specializes in custody issues if you have any doubts that your child will be returned at the agreed upon time.
Yes, but he has up to six months to file an injunction ordering the child be returned to the jurisdiction of the state/county. I teach fathers how to do this.
Before or after he files an injunction ordering a return of the child?
Yes, however the father can still file an injunction which would require the child be returned to the jurisdiction of the court pending a full hearing. This can be done up to six months after the move.