A parent may take their child without permission due to a variety of reasons, such as a custody dispute, concerns for the child's safety or well-being, or a breakdown in communication between the parents.
Yes, it can be for their own safety as well as other reasons. A person in custody, minor or adult, must be searched before they are booked. Seeing an officer does not need permission from a parent to arrest their child, a search without the parent's permission would coincide.
If a parent moves out of state without permission from the court or the other parent, they may be in violation of the visitation order. The other parent can file a motion with the court to enforce the order or modify it to accommodate the new living arrangements. The court may require the relocating parent to return with the child or make alternative arrangements for visitation.
IT is a good idea assuming the custodial parent has sole custody or sole legal custody of the child. Otherwise, most states will administer medical care to a child with either parent present and will administer life saving measures without anyone present though they would be unable to continue treatment beyond emergency stabilization without a parent or guardian consent
No; A youth must be 16 before a parent can diminish responsibilty towards the child. Legally anyway.
I would certainly question the violation of privacy rights by any school that used email correspondence. A "girlfriend" who is not the biological parent. Has no legal or ethical right to information of minor children. If the a parent gave permission, and the school released such information, the other biological parent has every right to object. And the legal right to have it stopped.
To take a Minor child abroad with intent to reside abroad without the consent of the non custodial parent would constitute kidnapping. A vacation is not a change of residence and therefore is not disallowed. Permission should be obtained from the non custodial parent in writing to prevent any misunderstandings later.
The parent would be charged with kidnapping.
It all depends on the circumstances, if a parent chose too press charges it can escalate too that. but say you told the other parent it was alright with your mom if you came, but they really didn't..the outcome may be diffrent. but there really is no definite answer of how far it can go.
By law, you must both go up to the location where they will issue a passport and both parents must sign a statement saying it is okay. If you have documentation that shows you are the custodial parent, you can have your child "red flagged" with the government and this way if he were to try to get a passport for your child they would have to notify you and then you can stop it. In the US the non-custodial parent can leave if they choose, they cannot however take a minor child with them unless a court rules otherwise. • This depends on your custody agreement, but I'm fairly certain a non-custodial parent needs permission. Just like a custodial parent will need permission depending on what the custody agreement states. I do know, however, that a custodial parent can get a passport without the permission of the non-custodial parent if he/she meets certain requirements. is that parent's name the only one on the birth cirtificate? Does that parent have sole LEGAL custody?
Yes because school teachers often do when they accompany pupils on overseas school trips. But they still need parental consent. Yes you can. You need to ask permission and get a letter signed by the child's legal guardians that allows you to take them out of the country and get it signed by the government.
I would check the local laws - In Minnesota, the custodial parent must have permission from the non- custodial parent to move out of state.
That depends. If a custody order is in place outlining visitation rights, yes, especially if you intend to relocate permanently or your absence would interfere with or present a hardship to the other parent's access to their child as outlined by the visitation order. Any modifications would not only need the parent's permission, they would need a court order as well to be binding.