File a motion for contempt, list all violations, dates, times and attached any exhibits, receipts, text messages, e-mails, etc, that you have to support your allegations. Get hearing time from the Judge, coordinate the hearing with the custodial parent, or her attorney, prepare your notice for hearing, send to custodial parent/attorney, and let her or him have it!! Good luck.
Yes. If the custodial parent is breaking the court orders the judge can give custody to the non custodial parent if he/she is fit.
Go back to the custodial court. Most custody orders and visitation orders etc have a provision against alienation of the child against the other parent.
What state created the support orders & how did the custodial parent cancel the orders & why would the same parent want to reinstate them after canceling them? Based off the way you asked this I'm a bit confused, but I'll assume you meant that the noncustodial parent canceled the orders in IL. In that case, there would've had to have been a reason for IL to cancel the orders, otherwise the state that issued the orders has power over the orders & IL would have to enforce them due to support orders reaching over state lines.
You need to review your court orders and the laws in your state. The custodial parent also supports the child. In some states the custodial parent has the legal right to claim the child. Massachusetts is one such state.You need to review your court orders and the laws in your state. The custodial parent also supports the child. In some states the custodial parent has the legal right to claim the child. Massachusetts is one such state.You need to review your court orders and the laws in your state. The custodial parent also supports the child. In some states the custodial parent has the legal right to claim the child. Massachusetts is one such state.You need to review your court orders and the laws in your state. The custodial parent also supports the child. In some states the custodial parent has the legal right to claim the child. Massachusetts is one such state.
I would assume that as long as there were not restraing orders or orders of protection against either the custodial parent or the child, the non custodial parent could live any where they wanted. As long as no ones rights are violated, and there is no danger to the child or either parent, I wouldn't think the law could do anything about where either party lived. Hopes this helps
It depends on the circumstances and related court orders.
The custodial parent form typically requires information such as the parent's name, contact details, relationship to the child, and any relevant custody arrangements or court orders.
The noncustodial parent would have to call the state's child abuse hotline and report this to them, and then await their instructions on how to gain custody of the child if they should be taken away from the parent.
Depends on how often the custodial parent is violating the court orders.
The non-custodial parent must review their court orders to determine what their financial obligations are.
The parents have to go back to court and change the custody orders.
Well if it's the opposing parent, i.e. the other parent who has visitation, then the custodial parent has to inform the court before they moved and visit that with the court, and if they didn't then the visitation parent should have issues with the court of the original jurisdiction.