Not usually unless he is proven to have abused the children. He may or may not get joint custody it just depends, and almost always father or mother have visitation rights.
Many states allow stepparent visitation rights
By including that in your divorce petition.
as the wfe is in prison, and may be a habitual jailbird , you can file for divorce in court stating you want a wife and companion at home and not in jail.
You have the visitation rights that were established in the divorce, and you have no custody rights.
Regardless of when a pregnancy or divorce occurs, both parents have equal rights to their children. In most cases, you can separate divorce proceedings from custody proceedings, but this will depend on the court system where you live.
The rights your ex-husband will have once you divorce will all depend on what the judge rules. He could have joint custody or split custody.
The m other has the sole rights till the divorce case is finalised .
viking woman had rights. Divorce rights: the woman was entitled to the land after divorce
Parental rights should take into consideration talking with the children if they are old enough to understand. Parents need to compromise and come to a mutual decision that is in the best interest of the children.
do federal prison visitation rights supersede states rights
Youll have to be more specific. What 'rights' you are referring to? What are the ages of the children? Who has primary custody of them while you are (presumably) in prison?
Of course, but how much depends on how the parents deal with each other, and access rights ect.