Any marriage which occurs while one of the two individuals involved in the marriage ceremony is still married is void ab initio (which means from the beginning), so the answer is no, you cannot get married while awaiting finalization of your Colorado divorce. In the United States, this is considered bigamy, and is further considered a criminal act, not necessarily requiring intent.
If you marry a man in Texas, you are married to that man until your divorce is final. So if you try to marry a man in Louisiana before your Texas divorce is final, the second marriage is invalid. In order to get a marriage license, you have to state that you are not already married. If you are, then you lied on the application, which will invalidate the license. You could also be charged with the crime of bigamy. You will have to marry him again after the Texas divorce is final if you want to be married to him.
You can apply for a new marriage license and get married again.
no you may not marry until the divorce is final
No, it universally illegal to marry if you are already married and until the divorce is final you are legally still married.
In some states you just have to wait for the divorce to be final before you can remarry.
Because you're still married until the divorce is final; to my knowledge, no jurisdiction in the Western world allows more than one marriage at once.
Yes.
No
There's not a waiting period to remarry in CO, but when you apply for your marriage license you have to show a copy of the divorce decree.
In Washington, once the judge approves the final dissolution, that is it.
Absolutely! The law applies to all 50 states. Well that is not quite, true. My husband and I married the same say his divorce to his ex was granted in Colorado. We were living in Oklahoma at the time, and in Oklahoma you have to wait six months after your divorse to marry again, that is why we chose to stay a few days in Colorado at his divorse hearing to then marry there, because the law in Colorado allowed us to.
You can get married as soon as your Divorce Proceeding is Final in California. There is no waiting period once your case is finalized.