Absolutely. You just have to come back to this country to do it.
During the divorce proceedings, the wife got custody of the children but the husband still has visitation rights on weekends.
The two are unrelated unless there is a danger to the children.
Yes she regained 50/50 custody of them in 2009 after having visitation with them in 2008.
Not necessarily. Unless there is a restraining order in place barring the father from the children, he still has parental rights. If there is an order barring the step mother from the children, then the father still has visitation, but he cannot have them around his wife, nor can he speak about her to the children, or even so much as sign her name on a birthday card for the children.
In Illinois, if a court finds that the visits would be in the best interests of the child, then yes.
You have the visitation rights that were established in the divorce, and you have no custody rights.
If there is a Court Order requiring you to pay support and the Mother has violated your time-sharing and contact order by removing the children out of the Country, without your consent, you can request a modification from the Court to abate or modify the child support payments due to the exorbitant costs of visitation with the children. You could argue that the cost of visitation alone (air fare, hotels, car rentals, food for the children, entertainment while with the children, etc.) will well exceed the child support amount you pay. If you have no contact Order or she had permission from the Court to relocate, you will be required to pay support because regardless of where the children live they still need to be supported.
Visitation and child support are not related. Just because the children do not visit does not mean they are no longer his children.
In Ohio Child support and visitation are two diff court cases so yes he can still pick up the child
I believe that the wife can take you back to court for changes in visitation scheduling. She can take you back to court for obtaining clarity on the visitation which you have been granted.
Yes. The only way to legally prevent visitation is through court order.
Can, but the father can challenge it in probate.