No; however, the State can file a lien on the home which will have to be satisfied before ownership is transferred.
As soon as you deposit that inheritance in a bank or other form of savings, the State can place a lien on those funds to collect past-due support.
yes
Some states will make you make child support payments to the state.
No, but the State can file a lien on that property, which must be satisfied before it is sold.
No that person is an adult and child support stops at 18.
You don't. Once the child is an adult, child support is moot and the ex is home free.
The courts must approve any waiver or settlement of back child support. This is because, strictly speaking, the money is for the child, not you.
Back support is owed the obligee parent, however any continuing support can go to the child.
If the non custodial parent owes back support for the grown children then it may not change so that the back support can be paid. If there is no back support owed then yes the cs amount will be changed based on the way cs if calculated in your state
You will need to check with a lawyer in your jurisdiction, as the nature of failure to pay child support debt varies from state to state. At the very least, I suspect that you can have a lien placed against your property/home for the amount of back child support (i.e. liens indicate debt owed when the property is sold). I would find it very unlikely that a child support debt would allow for forced sale of a primary residence, though I could easily see that forced sale of "investment" property to satisfy a child support debt could be possible. Once again, please consult and actual Family Law attorney.
The court should be aware, but I would not think so. The child is no longer at home.
The idea was to enable parties to initiate legal action in their home state and the responding state would decide if the obligor (the person owing the money) actually had a duty to provide support. If so, the responding state would extradite the obligor back to the initiating state.
That is dependent on individual state laws and if child support has not already terminated at the time of the diagnosis. The child can still file for SSI.