Only if you can collect Welfare. Child support cannot be collected from, or arrears accumulate on, a person in prison according to Judge David Grey Ross, Commissioner of the Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement.
Hopefully you have legal counsel and you should be talking to your lawyer about this. Your husband is incarcerated and has no rights! Your lawyer should be finding out what your husband owes to others and how much of the monies or any property is left to fight over. I suggest you get another lawyer or start communicating better with your lawyer.
The husband has an obligation to support his family. If there are no court orders you need to consult with an attorney or other legal advocate.
Child support orders cannot be modified retroactively, but the court might give your husband credit of some sort toward future payments.
Active Duty Operational Support orders
File a motion to enforce the court orders.
Only a judge can overturn a judge's decision. That said, however, the State is not obliged to follow decisions in cases to which it was not made a party. Please resubmit your question with more specificity.
He doesn't - child support orders, like any other court orders, are modified or terminated by the courts.
If the court orders it.
Yes.
I suggest that you contact your State's child support agency. When you get an interview with them, bring all the papers relating to your child support: birth certificates, acknowledgments of paternity, court orders, payment records, etc. Be polite but persistent. Good luck!
The spouse is not responsible for her husband's child support obligation. Not yet, but things may change as states are attempting to address the volume of motions to reduce support orders by laid off fathers. It will require a legislative change.
Possibly, but this will not, in itself, produce any payments. I suggest that you contact your State's child support agency. When you get an interview with them, bring all the papers relating to your child support: birth certificates, acknowledgments of paternity, court orders, payment records, etc. Be polite but persistent. Good luck!