The same you had before she moved out. She is still a minor and the law see no difference between a 17yo and a 14yo.
They can have you brought back. Until you are 18, they have all the say.
Nothing can be done until the child is born and paternity is established. If the male is not willing to acknowledge he is the father a paternity test will be necessary, before any litigation pertaining to child support, custody, visitation rights or the relinquishment of parental rights is possible. However, the issue of the biological mother moving to another state is not necessarily relevant; all states honor and enforce child support and/or visitation orders issued in another state.
Contact the MO child support agency for your county.
No.
If you're in the US, he has no rights to *her* at all--no right to see her or have contact with her. He has the right, after the child is born, to petition the court to establish paternity and request court-ordered visitation, which will allow him to see the child only. He also has the responsibility to pay child support (note: he is responsible for this, not his parents, so I suggest he find a job).
Yes he was a child when his parents moved to Australia
Yes, in the United States. The parents are still responsible for their child until they are of legal age which is sometimes 18 or 21.
Often the court prefers the child to be left with the mother (if she is fit to look after the child) and often there is joint custody between mother and father of that child. However when a parent is terminated from seeing their child or both parents here are some reasons: * The child is in a poor environment. The home is not up to standards (could be the family is poor and the home is not up to par according to Child Aid.) * Both parents are at work and don't have anyone there to look after the child or when the child gets home from school. * If one or both parents do street drugs. * If one or both parents party or are alcoholics. * Both parents argue too often (yelling and screaming.) * Both parents are abusive to each other either physically or mentally. This can make the child become depressed and do poorly in school if they are of age to go to school. * If there is abuse towards the child by one or both parents. * If both parents don't want the child they can seek legal counsel and either have the grandparents, another relative or put the child in foster care and sign their rights away. * If the child does not get medical help when needed. * If the child shows signs of malnutition. * If a neighbor has complained to Child Aid. If you are innocent then fight it in a court of law. Some people mean well, but sometimes they can misunderstand how a child may look (dress wise) or if the child is small in stature the neighbor may feel that the child is not fed well.
if the state moved to was Missouri or Texas, yes, as a 17 yr old is considered adult and cannot be brought back to parents if the child does not wish. It depends on state.
The existing court orders must be modified.
Type your answer here... That their parents were the ones who moved here
That's up to the interpretation of the judge. see link