FAIT, WISE & DILIMA, LLP

Family Law including Divorce, Child Custody, Visitation Rights, Child Support, Alimony, Premarital Agreements, Post Nuptial Agreements, Property Distribution, Retirement Assets, Monetary Awards, Voluntary Separation, Property Settlement Agreements, Post Divorce Issues, Alcohol and Drug Abuse Effects on the Family, Domestic Partnerships, Domestic Violence, and Tax Issues

One Church Street, Suite 800
Rockville, Maryland 20850-4158

Telephone: 301-251-0100
Fax: 301-424-7865 URL: http://www.faitandwise.com

Family Law Newsletter

Planning for a Divorce
 
Although no person wants to think about planning for a divorce, divorce occurs in almost 50 percent of all marriages. If one party is thinking about divorce he or she should plan prior to filing for divorce. One should especially consider the financial consequences of divorce.More...
 
Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003
 
In 2003, the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act was enacted. The Act authorizes fines and/or jail terms of up to two years for any doctor who performs a partial birth abortion. A partial birth abortion is defined as an abortion in which the baby is delivered past the baby's navel outside the body of the mother or after the entire fetal head is outside the body of the mother. Most partial birth abortions are performed between 20 and 26 weeks. More...
 
Financial Power of Attorney
 
A power of attorney is a document in which one individual gives another individual, the agent, the power to make decisions on their behalf in the event that they become incapacitated or if they are directed to perform. A financial power of attorney gives power over an individual's financial affairs. More...
 
Child Support
 
Every child, including an adopted child, has a right to be supported by their parents. Every parent, either custodial or non-custodial, has an obligation to financially support his or her child.More...
 
Right of Putative Father to Visitation
 
A "putative father" is a man who may be a child's father, but who was not married to the child's mother before the child was born and has not established the fact that he is the father in a court proceeding. When the child's natural parents have never married and the putative father is seeking visitation with his child, he must first prove his paternity before a court will entertain his petition for visitation. More...
 
 
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