Your State's child support agency can do this.
In the state of Florida, your driver's license can be __________ for failure to pay child support.
Yes, you can be legally required to pay child support even if you do not want to, as it is a legal obligation to financially support your child. Failure to pay child support can result in legal consequences.
Same as any as regards failure to obey a court order.
I doubt it - support and visitation are different matters.
The obligee would have to convince a judge that such action would be in the best interest of the child.
Provide? Child support? That's my guess.
Yes, failure to pay child support in Louisiana can be considered a felony offense if it is deemed intentional and willful. Offenders could face serious consequences such as fines, jail time, and a criminal record. It is important to fulfill child support obligations to avoid legal trouble.
You don't and Judge David Grey Ross, Commissioner of the Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement ruled that arrears cannot accrue. Courts will typically order Huber in child support cases, especially if they are in jail for failure to pay support.
Any non-custodial parent may be ordered to pay child support regardless of immigration status or, for that matter, whether he's in the US in the first place.
That depends on the circumstances. Indiana reserves the right to jail parents found in contempt of court for failure to pay any child support in arrears no matter the age of the child, or failure to abide by an extended support order (where support is modified by the court to continue past the child's age of emancipation, which is 19 in Indiana, recently lowered from age 21 ). In general, if no support is in arrears, Indiana child support terminates when the child reaches the age 19 although a provision remains for the "educational needs" of a child over 19 but doesn't spell out exactly what falls into that category.
Probably
In the United States, both parents are legally obligated to financially support their child, even if they are not married. This typically involves one parent paying child support to the other parent to help cover the costs of raising the child. The amount of child support is determined based on factors such as each parent's income and the needs of the child. Failure to pay child support can result in legal consequences.