court's decision
You need to check your visitation order. You can obtain a copy at the court. It will set forth all your rights and the provisions (if any) that control your visitations. If there is no requirement that the mother must be present then you are entitled to spend time alone with the child unless the visits must be supervised. In that case, the order should specify who shall supervise the visits and where they should take place. If you don't understand the order someone at the court can explain it to you.You need to check your visitation order. You can obtain a copy at the court. It will set forth all your rights and the provisions (if any) that control your visitations. If there is no requirement that the mother must be present then you are entitled to spend time alone with the child unless the visits must be supervised. In that case, the order should specify who shall supervise the visits and where they should take place. If you don't understand the order someone at the court can explain it to you.You need to check your visitation order. You can obtain a copy at the court. It will set forth all your rights and the provisions (if any) that control your visitations. If there is no requirement that the mother must be present then you are entitled to spend time alone with the child unless the visits must be supervised. In that case, the order should specify who shall supervise the visits and where they should take place. If you don't understand the order someone at the court can explain it to you.You need to check your visitation order. You can obtain a copy at the court. It will set forth all your rights and the provisions (if any) that control your visitations. If there is no requirement that the mother must be present then you are entitled to spend time alone with the child unless the visits must be supervised. In that case, the order should specify who shall supervise the visits and where they should take place. If you don't understand the order someone at the court can explain it to you.
Yes. In custody court it can be established that the mother is unable to properly and safely care for the children due to her unstable psychiatric history. Supervised visits with the mother may also be court ordered.
not if you don't want them to If it's court ordered visitation, yes. If you have reservations about the boyfriend, ask for supervised visits. If the kids say he's mean, or too " friendly " , pay attention.
The mother must bring the father's drug use to the attention of the court in order to have him deemed an unfit parent or to curtail his visitation rights so the child is not endangered while in her father's care. The court can stop visits or require supervised visits.
If there is a court order yes. Then you have to work on this the both of you.
You must return it to the court or, if you are being supervised by a probation officer, to your PO, so that the court can determine that you HAVE carried out that portion of your sentence.
You need a lawyer and a court ruling. Not opinions from strangers.
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
No. The court order must be terminated by the court that issued the order. Behavior does not void a court order.
This is dependant on the reason for the supervised visits. You may have had things that you were required to do such as counselling for example in order to have your case looked at again. Your best option is to speak to a lawyer in your area to find out about petitioning the court to modify the custody and visitation arrangements.
Who ordered the 'supervision?' The use of the phrase, "supervised visitation" makes it sound like it has been ordered by the court. To have been ordered by the court you must have appeared before the court on SOME charge, or other. It would be extremely unusual for a criminal case to still be "under investigation" for three years. If you cannot find out the reason for the alleged continual investgation yourself, I suggest you retain an attorney to look into the matter for you.
You must follow the court mandated supervised visitation schedule. You should not allow your son to visit with his father alone. If you still have questions, you should visit the court and ask to speak with an advocate or social worker who can explain the rules and the reasons for them.