Lori J Guevara's Answers

Lori J Guevara
Seattle Family Law Attorney.
Contributor Level 4

4

Attorney answers:

  1. Lori J Guevara
  2. Joy Anne Bartmon
  3. Peter Christopher Lomtevas

Can I regain primary child custody if my parents have 3rd party custody

Asked by a user in Washington - over 3 years ago.

Hi, I have not been retained by you so I do not represent you individually. Thus, this does not constitute legal advice and is meant only as a broad primer on the topic of third party custody modification. Generally speaking, it is important to know why/how a party obtained third party custody. A parent who signs a form similar to a power of attorney so that a non-parent can keep a child and enroll the child in school, get medical care for the child, etc., is much less formal than a court...

3 people marked this answer as helpful

4

Attorney answers:

  1. Patricia Paul
  2. Lori J Guevara
  3. Tessa Cohen
  4. Albert Robert Rhoan Jr

WA state tribal, native american indian law

Asked by a user in Raymond, WA - over 3 years ago.

I have not been retained in this matter and my comments are not legal advice but rather a primer on the topic of the power to exclude from tribal lands. The citizenship status of the Administrator is most likely insignificant so long as the tribe has granted the Administrator the authority to exclude . The Administrator may have also exceeded his or her authority by attempting to exclude a tribal citizen from the Council meeting, especially if the Council meeting is held in a location...

4

Attorney answers:

  1. Lori J Guevara
  2. Joy Anne Bartmon
  3. Peter Christopher Lomtevas

Can I regain primary child custody if my parents have 3rd party custody

Asked by a user in Washington - over 3 years ago.

Hi, I have not been retained by you so I do not represent you individually. Thus, this does not constitute legal advice and is meant only as a broad primer on the topic of third party custody modification. Generally speaking, it is important to know why/how a party obtained third party custody. A parent who signs a form similar to a power of attorney so that a non-parent can keep a child and enroll the child in school, get medical care for the child, etc., is much less formal than a court...