I have sole-physical custody of my 11 year old, I don't think it matters where you live you will always need permission to leave any state because they want to make sure you are not going to kidnap your child and keep him/her away from the other parent. I live in Canada and for my child to go see his father in North Dakota I have to write a letter for his grandfather to take him across the boarder, include when and what time he's leaving and when he will be returning. I hope this helped.
From this moment means from this point forward. Nothing included from the past but focus on everything in the future. An example could be, "From this moment on no one will be allowed to leave their desk unless they are given permission."
If Mom has custody and you are under the age of majority (18 in most state, in some it's higher, but it's never lower) then you cannot leave home without her permission unless you have been emancipated. If there is abuse, then you need to report it to the authorities! If you are in a dangerous situation then they will remove you from the house and place you under state care.
Single mothers have sole custody and control in all 50 states, by default, as of the point of conception.
There is no exact year that Jews started going to Israel/Palestine when they had not been migrating before. Migration picked up immensely in 1919 because Jews finally had legal permission to migrate to Palestine, but migration has waxed and waned since that point and existed before that point.
yes
Not enough unfortunately. Usually, if the child is removed from both parents' care before legal guardianship is established, the child is remanded to the custody of the state. At that point, it becomes more difficult (and expensive) for grandparents to gain custody. There are heartbreaking stories all over the place of grandparents trying in vain to get custody of their grandchildren.
Yes. You are legally entitled to leave home at any point after your 16th birthday. Your parents/guardians still have some legal responsibilities for you until you are 18 and you cannot marry/enter into a civil partnership without their permission until then, but otherwise you are a free agent.
No, the Miranda Rights only have to be read when the person being taken into custody will be subject to what's called "Custodial Interrogation", that is, when they will be questioned against their will without the ability to freely leave.
No, they will not be able to drop out. Education is mandatory until the age of 16. At that point they can drop out, though it usually requires parental permission.
once you leave the starting point you cant go back
Soraya's mother thinks negatively of Amir talking to her daughter without permission. However, she reflects of mistakes she made as a young woman. Amir at one point asks Soraya's father for permission to marry her
if she has primary custody, from the point of the filing date.