No, of course not. If the non-custodial parent is keeping the custodial parent from the child then the custodial parent needs to get moving and take the matter to court immediately. The custodial parent also needs to get some counseling so that she can assert her rights more effectively and be a better parent for her child.
Take him to court!
No, if they are married they have equal custody.
In most places, the father has just as much right to their child as the mother does, even if they were never married. If the mother wants to legally keep the child away, she will need to go through the family courts. In some states, if she tries to do this without a court order, she can be charged with interfering with child custody or other charges. If there are no solid reasons to keep the father away, the judge may not grant the mother's request.
no see links
If the boyfriend is not the baby's father, of course you can. If the boyfriend is the father, you can keep him from staying at your house, as you can with any other person, but he still has rights to see his child, in which case the transferring of the child from one parent to another may require him to stop by.
nope. if the father is indeed the biological father then he has rights that can not be taken away unless he willingly gives it up by sighning off his rights or it is cort ordered. but in no way can the mother of a child regardless of the age of the child keep the father from seeing his son/and of daughter.
Only if it has been approved by the court.
sounds like kdnap to me. does the father have custody?
Yes. The girl is legally the same as a 5 or 6 year old. She is still a child under the control of the parents.
Grant him supervised visitation. Your interpretation of unfit may be bias, and a fatherless child always does worse than one with an unfit father. see link
If it is the mother of the child that wants to keep the baby then most mothers would not let anything stand in the way of the child and herself. In this case she can tell the father to leave, but he will be paying child support. If it's the father that wants to keep the child then he has a chance to fight it in court and should seek legal counsel.
Depends on what is meant by abusing and how that affects the parent's ability to function.