Generally, if you violate a court order at any time after it's issued, it's contempt of court and can land you in jail. Now, if a Protective Order was issued against you along with the court order telling you to stay away, you're looking at criminal charges.
There was a reason the Court told you to stay away. If you're an adult now, you should certainly be adult enough to do what the Court tells you. If you think the situation has radically changed, you must present yourself back before the Court to change the order.
If the placement was court ordered - YES.
no see links
Depends on what your divoce decree says, if it is a court ordered visitation and you kept the kids away then you are in violation of a court order, check with your state laws, but a court order is a court order.
In other words, you want to take the children away from their father? Do you have court ordered custody?
If the visits are already court ordered, see if the court can also provide a mediater so that you do not have to be anywhere near the "narcissist" when having the visits. If the court can not provide you with this nessesary service, find an agengy, a trusted freind ANYONE but yourself. Good Luck
extremely unlikely
How do I go about getting a court order for a DNA test when the mother lives in a different city about 3hr drive away? How can I keep the birth certifict from being signed until the DNA results come back?Who pays for a court ordered DNA test?
If there is a court order for visitation or custody it is illegal to not follow the court order. Child support, custody and visitation are 3 separate issues in court. Paying child support or not is not a reason to take away the child's right to see his/hers parent.
If they were ordered by the court (i.e.: child support - back taxes - etc) you must still honor them, bankruptcy will not do away with court ordered liens. . Liens placed by private persons or businesses will have to take their place in your long line of creditors. As soon as you file, you take the papers from the bankruptcy court showing that you filed to your employer and the garnishment will stop. There are some exceptions to this.
generally speaking the only way to stop paying court ordered support is to go to court and get the order changed.
Prove that it's not extremely detrimental to the children, plus offer to provide a $10,000 cash or certified bond, forfeited if you violate court ordered visitation rights.
A Beatles song called ' Hide Your Love Away'. It goes:- Hey Youve got to hide youre Love Away, in the Chorus.