Response to Petitioner’s Motion for Sanctions – Child Custody
RESPONDENT’S RESPONSE TO PETITIONER’S MOTION FOR SANCTIONS
Stipulation Regarding Parenting Time & Decision Making
If you and your co-parent unanimously agree on the changes in the child custody, you will use a stipulation to ask the court to modify your responsibilities. Parents can put stipulations into the agreement or parenting plan to ensure that both parents adhere to certain standards and conditions whenever the child is in that parent’s care.
Summons-Child Abuse Case-Family Law
Form 10-7a (Summons-Child Abuse Case)
Support Order – Family Law Legal Document
Order of the Court to pay child support, alimony, spousal support, or some other type of family maintenance. The child support order is a document from a court that states when, how often, and how much a parent is to pay for child support. The support order is usually incident to an action for divorce, legal separation or paternity, and is generally paid on a monthly basis.
Verified Entry of Child Support Judgment
Verfiied Request for Entry of Child Support Judgment
Verified Motion to Enforce Parenting Time
Verified Motion to Enforce Parenting Time
Verified Motion to Modify Child Support & Parenting Time
VERIFIED MOTION TO MODIFY
Waiver of Rights – Juvenile Delinquency Case
A Juvenile Waiver occurs whenever a judge decides to transfer a case from juvenile court to an adult court. The juvenile will be tried as an adult and will be denied whatever protections may exist in juvenile proceedings. Juvenile waivers are allowed in nearly all states. The decision to “waive” juvenile protections and try the juvenile as an adult rests with the judge, not the defendant.
Warrant of Arrest – Child Abuse or Neglect
Child abuse is one of the more heinous of crimes because it involves harming some of the most vulnerable people in society. A warrant is a legal document that is issued by a judge or grand jury. The warrant authorizes law enforcement to engage in some activity that would otherwise violate your Constitutional rights.
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.