Possibly, but your best bet is to work your your adoptive parents and convince them to allow you to visit with him. Work with your parents to find some way that they will agree that's safe and appropriate for you to visit with him. If you're still in any sort of therapy or counseling, talk to your counselor/therapist. If not, you may want to talk to a school counselor or priest about it if you don't know how to talk to your parents about it.
They may have good reasons to want to to stay clear of him; he may be in legal trouble, or be dangerous. It may, in fact, be in your best interest to stay clear of him.
Or they might just be afraid that you're going to "choose" him over your adoptive family. That's something you'll need to overcome as a family.
He probably will never tell. There are rumers though that He is the biological father of one of the twins and his boyfriend is the biological father of the other.
If they have a biological relative then no, a brother is a closer relative than an adoptive father is. Legally though, if you are the only guardian/ relative then you will be next of kin.
Yes, even though she is not biologically your aunt's daughter. Sometimes children that are adopted turn out better than the children that are biological.
A surrogate father is a person who functions like a father to someone who is not his biological or adopted child. In other words, a surrogate father plays the role of father where a legal parental relationship does not already exist.
Yes, if he's an identical twin
If you choose to let her.
Billy Garland is his biological father. He never knew him & always though he was dead until he got shot in 94. Then his father came to visit him at the hopital. His step father is Mutulu Shakur. A black panther incarcereted.
Unfortunately they don't, even when you are married. If the other parent has died, then you can apply to be guardian of the children, where you would then get rights. Or if the other parent couldn't look after then children, the same could happen.
no one knows, shes born to be a midget because shes got tiny family. She is from a country called Midgetland She was adopted, but not from "midgetland", she was adopted from Chile. It's possible though that her biological father was actually a midget, and around 4'6"\1.38 tall, and maybe her mother was around 4'9"\1.45 tall. (or maybe the reason she was put for adoption is the same reason that she is short.)
He has one daughter named Hailie Jade, but raises his neice Alaina.He has a daughter Hailie, his niece that he adopted Alaina, and another daughter Whitney that isn't biological his but he adopted her...she is Kim's daughter with another man. They all call him dad though.
You need to see a lawyer. Look for "Legal Aid" in your state as they offer free or low-cost legal advice. If someone is the "biological" father, he doesn't adopt the child, it is his child. He is legally obligated (in the USA) to provide support (money) for the child's needs. The only exception is if the mother was married to another man at the time of the birth, then legally the husband is considered the baby's father (even if everyone knows and admits that the other man is the baby's biological father). If you're asking whether the biological father can be forced to take care of the child in his own house, the answer is "no" he can give up his parental rights to the child. If you're asking whether the biological father can take the child away from the mother and her boyfriend/husband, the answer is "maybe" if he can PROVE to a court that the baby's mother is unfit and he (the biological father) is a better parent. If the father WANTS to be involved in the baby's life even though the mother has a new boyfriend/husband, the father MUST be allowed to have visitation with his child. Not allowing him to see the child may cause the courts to consider the mother not fit to raise the child. Again, GET LEGAL ADVICE from a lawyer.
A biological father can always sign the bc. But if you were below the age of consent in the state it was statutory rape so check your state laws.