You can almost bet they are still responsible for support. There are two different court rulings going on in this situation and one does not cancel out the other.
Not exactly. In Illinois, child support cannot be ordered past the age of majority but "education support" can be. One or even both parents may be ordered to pay education support, based on the child's academic expenses. Education support must also be ordered by a judge, separately from a child support order.
In general, 20% of the amount ordered for current support.
Yes, the revocation of parental rights does not exclude the parent from being financially responsible until the child or children reach the age of emancipation, or the age ordered in the child support petition.
When you relinquish your parental rights so the child can be adopted you are no longer responsible for paying child support. You are liable for support until/unless child is adopted.
If an order for support was entered when the child was a minor, he is responsible for any support ordered and not paid. Lacking such order, he could be responsible for current support only if the child is severely handicapped.
No. Relinquishing your parental rights means you are not the parent of the child any longer, therefore not responsible for its care and/or support.
Parental rights and child support are two different issues. Signing over your parental rights has no effect on your payment obligation unless the ending of the payment obligation is mentioned on the document.
Yup
In general, no.
No, a person will not be ordered to pay child support on any children that are not his. The only way a person would be ordered to pay child support a child who is not theirs is if they had legally adopted that child.
Child support is only awarded to people under court order by a judge. Only the person who has been ordered by the court to do so is responsible for the continued payment of child support, and only to the parent to whom it was initially ordered in court, unless that final decree has been modified within the court room and approved by the presiding judge.
Yes, unless/until the child is adopted.