If this info is already known to the court that established the visitation guidelines, and/or the Dept. of Family Services (or whatever it's called in your state) there is probably no limitation. If this is new information since the visitation guidelines were originally established AND the custodial parent wishes to use this fact to limit the father's access, they will have to go to one of those two agencies and request it.
If the parents were having legal issues regarding custody and visiting rights to their children, one parent could argue that a felon was a bad influence on the child to get a judge to limit or withdraw visiting rights.
Depends on the violators home state and when the offense happend.. I have seen crimes in which my clients were charged with SEX OFFENSES and were still granted parental visitation...
If the other parent had a half decent lawyer then the convicted parent won't get custody.
Unless visitation rights for the non-custodial parent were allowed in the divorce paperwork, the custodial parent is completely within their rights to deny the non-custodial parent visitation....however, the non-custodial parent may sue for visitation rights.
No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.No. A parent has parental rights and rights under a visitation order until those rights are modified or terminated by a court order.
If the court has awarded you visitation rights, then you have those rights legally and they cannot be denied by the custodial parent.
What rights do you want?
It's not the parent who decide whether there will be visitation rights or not, that is the court and a parent is not obligated to petition for one. A parent can not be forced to have a relationship with their child. Apart from paying child support.
No. The non-custodial parent needs to have the visitation rights enforced by the court if necessary.
Not if the other parent has joint custody and/or visitation rights.
If the other parent have visitation rights you will need their consent as well as the courts.
Only the court has the power to deny visitation rights.
yes
The custodial parent is the parent in which the child resides with. My son lives with me and I am the custodial parent, his dad has visitation rights and pays child support.
Yessee link