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What Happens If Your child Is Taken From Your Home
What happens if your child is taken from your home. When children are taken into state custody, the best place for them to go is to a relative. Maybe grandparents, aunts and uncles, or even a distant cousin’s house. The point is to keep them with family while the parent gets on track to get the child back. Children can also go into foster homes. A form of custody required to remove a child from his or her home and place in out-of-home care. Law enforcement may place a child in protective custody based on an independent determination that the child’s health, safety, and welfare is jeopardized.
Waiver of Rights-Juvenile Dependency
Waiver of Rights-Juvenile Dependency
Waiver of Reunification Services-Juvenile
Waiver of Reunification Services
Visitation Attachment Parent, Legal Guardian, Indian Custodian, Other Important Person
Visitation Attachment Parent, Legal Guardian, Indian Custodian, Other Important Person
Visitation Attachment Grandparent-Juvenile-Family Law
Visitation Attachment Grandparent
Twenty-Four-Month Permanency Attachment Reunification Services Terminated
Twenty-Four-Month Permanency Attachment Reunification Services Terminated (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 366.25)
Twelve-Month Permanency Attachment Reunification Services Terminated
Twelve-Month Permanency Attachment Reunification Services Terminated (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 366.21(f))
Twelve-Month Permanency Attachment Reunification Services Continued
Twelve-Month Permanency Attachment Reunification Services Continued (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 366.21(f))
Twelve-Month Permanency Attachment Child Reunified-Juvenile Family Law
Twelve-Month Permanency Attachment Child Reunified (Welf. & Inst. Code, § 366.21(f))
Termination of Juvenile Court Jurisdiction – Nonminor
Termination of Juvenile Court Jurisdiction – Nonminor
Termination of Dependency-Juvenile Family Law
Termination of Dependency
Serious Emotional Damage – Juvenile Family Law
Serious Emotional Damage (§ 300 (c))
Intentional infliction of emotional distress is a common law tort that allows individuals to recover for severe emotional distress caused by another individual who intentionally or recklessly inflicted emotional distress by behaving in an “extreme and outrageous” way. In short, the law recognizes emotional distress as a state of mental suffering that occurs because of an experience caused by the negligence or intentional acts of another, usually of a physical nature. Bystanders or individuals who personally experienced the emotional trauma, along with their relatives, may be able to assert a civil lawsuit alleging emotional distress. In these cases expert witness testimony from a therapist or psychiatrist may be used to prove a plaintiff’s case of emotional distress, as well as evaluate the range of monetary damages associated with the injury.