In the state of Va, u will lose your section 8 voucher if u marry a convicted felon. I myself met a really nice guy,hard working, but had drug charges long before. When I inquired with our local housing authority about getting married they said due to his drug convictions, my voucher will be terminated. Hope this helps
No, you cannot receive Section 8 housing if you have a felony. If you are convicted of a crime while on Section 8 housing, you will lose the housing. you can get section 8 as long as the felony 3 years old am I a felon?
8 hours
If she has served her sentence and is lawfully married to you, yes, there is no prohibition against it. However, if she is still serving a term in prison, I don't believe she is eligible to collect it while incarcerated and it may have to be escrowed. Contact your military legal system and ask.
No!
It depends, but the basic answer is no. The more complicated answer is, the term "ex-felon" is almost always misused. Once you are a felon, you are ALWAYS a felon, unless the charged are reversed and removed from your record because you are later found to be innocent. Even if the charges have been expunged, you are still a felon. Expunged simply means the charges are no longer visible on your public record. If you went to prison and got released, you are still a felon. Felons can sometimes have their rights restored, but again, they are still a felon.
No, regardless of your age, you are emancipated by being married and therefor does not get child support.
yes, if you are eligible (ex. low income), but you have to list everyone in the household.
Not if the felony is still on your record. Once you are a felon, you cannot own or possess rifles or handguns. A felon can sometimes have his rights restored, but for information on that, you really should contact an attorney familiar with the process.
of course. unless they do not want gifts. but they are still happy to get married and to start a new life. they still should deserve a nice gift. even if it is small.
yesAnother Answer:You need to receive the sacrament of Confirmation before you can get married in the Catholic Church.If you did not receive your confirmation in grade 8, then you need to receive it soon in the near future.
Ex-felon is a widely misused term. Unless you've been acquitted of a crime you'd been previously convicted of, you're not an ex-felon - ex-convict, perhaps, once you're no longer state property, but still a felon.
No. Under the terms of the section "Common Disqualifications" in the Related Link below you could not.