• FreeAdvice has a new Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, effective May 25, 2018.
    By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our Terms of Service and use of cookies.

What rights does bio dad have?

Accident - Bankruptcy - Criminal Law / DUI - Business - Consumer - Employment - Family - Immigration - Real Estate - Tax - Traffic - Wills   Please click a topic or scroll down for more.

BelizeBreeze

Senior Member
Kansas Courts said:
:eek:

I have been trying to be helpful to the original poster of this thread and I have read well enough to know what state they are in and to not quote them laws from a state that does not apply to them and I do know what I am talking about and I don't think I deserved that harsh response.

:cool:
You know how to read huh? Then Please show us where, in all of these posts, did the poster say WHERE the original papers came from?

I'll give you the fact that I may have gotten the original state wrong. But then you tell me where jurisdiction lies? In what state the woman who has the unborn child resides?

Don't ASSUME anything. And also, you never told me why my statement that jurisdiction resides with the state, NOT the county was wrong. Care to elaborate?
 


K

Kansas Courts

Guest
You know how to read huh? Then Please show us where, in all of these posts, did the poster say WHERE the original papers came from?

I'll give you the fact that I may have gotten the original state wrong. But then you tell me where jurisdiction lies? In what state the woman who has the unborn child resides?

Don't ASSUME anything. And also, you never told me why my statement that jurisdiction resides with the state, NOT the county was wrong. Care to elaborate?
I don't want to argue about it seriously. The poster never said where the original papers came from, that is my point, we don't know. However the original poster did put that the name of their state is Illinois. Good question, what state does the woman who has the unborn child reside in? I'm notorious for assumptions, I can't help that, sorry. And I never said your statement about jurisdiction residing with the state not the county is wrong, it is correct, I was just trying to defend myself for wording it wrong and not explaining my response better or asking more questions about it when replying to the original poster. And since the poster is interested, I think they should try to find out why it is in another county.

You're right, you're not wrong, I didn't say you were wrong, and I'm done arguing about it. :(
 

skale7179

Member
-To clear things up, both Cook County and Tazewell County are in ILLINOIS. The mother and father both live in Tazewell County. The court papers came from Cook County and we were just curious as to why and thought maybe it was because that is where the adoption agency was.


"I have been trying to be helpful to the original poster of this thread"

-And you have been Kansas Courts. We appreciate all that you have done. It has opened our eyes to many things and has made us look into all of this a little more. Thank You! :)
 

Find the Right Lawyer for Your Legal Issue!

Fast, Free, and Confidential
data-ad-format="auto">
Top