Is there a penalty of perjury in family law?


Posted October 8th, 2009 by admin 1 Comment »
family law
K asked:


Me and my wife are in process of divorce. Next month is our discovery date. She didn’t disclosed two bank accounts when official disclosure notice was sent to her but I knew that she had funds in those accounts. I let my lawyer ask (on papers) if she does not have two extra bank accounts and funds in them. She finally replied that yes but she has not used them (which is a lie). She actually have taken the money out from them and transferred into a family friends account. She only agree to have accounts so far. Is there a penalty for lying under oath in family law? How when if the bank account searches bring the truth on table. How if the bank transfers will show up in the transaction records. How if she provided fake childcare receipts to collect more money from me? How if she is found lying for the first child care payment which she denies that she never received it? Is there some punishment/penalty?

why doesn’t family law court care about immigration status?


Posted April 9th, 2009 by admin 4 Comments »
family law
confused asked:


I posted a question yesterday about how can an illegal immigrant collect child support and I think every one misunderstood the question. I am not trying to collect child support I pay child support to an illegal alien and at the time we got married I had no idea he was illegal. It wasn’t until the divorce and we asked questions in the interrogatories that I found out all the information I addressed in the previous post. All discovery. So anybody have any answers for me different than I received as I am not crying over trying to collect child support, I have a job and do support my son. Just wondering why immigration status is not an issue for family courts, even the attorney generals office says he falls under immigrations jurisdiction and they can’t do anything about the social security fraud or tax evasion. He is not a U.S citizen. So basically illegal immigrants don’t have to abide my U.S. law.