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In Title IV-D Paternity Court, the State will secretly steal your parental rights and might even trick you into giving them up. Here are 3 tips to stop them. Chapters: 00:00 – Introduction 00:24 – What is Paternity Court? 01:00 – What are your parental rights? 02:28 – Joint Conservatorship vs Sole Conservatorship 03:09 – The Bait and Switch to steal your rights 04:18 – How can you stop the State from stealing your rights? 04:41 – Here’s how you can fight. Also find our content on: Facebook.com/MatthewHarrisLaw Instagram - @Matthew_Harris_Law Google Maps – https://g.page/MatthewHarrisLaw Website - https://matthewharrislaw.com/ Blog - https://matthewharrislaw.com/paternit... It’s no secret that fathers end up paying child support in far greater numbers than mothers do. This is most especially true for fathers who find themselves in Paternity Court under Title IV-D while the State attempts to establish child support. What most fathers who attend Paternity Court don’t realize is that the State will steal rights to your child from you that you didn’t know you were entitled to and you won’t even realize it. What is Paternity Court? Title IV-D refers to the federal law that requires states to manage a public child support program. The Texas Attorney General is the Title IV-D Agency for Texas. In order for the state to establish child support, the state has to first establish paternity in Paternity Court. –See Title IV-D Services – Tex. Fam. Code Ch. 231 We’re not going to spend any time on actual biological paternity today. Just know that this is where you’ll either be asked to admit that you are in fact the father of the child, or you can demand a DNA test. As a result, you’ll be adjudicated as the child’s legal father. Except, the state can’t just get a court order for paternity and child support without also setting out your parental rights. What are your parental rights? Parental rights that are established in a Paternity Court generally fall within two different categories: • Basic rights to be informed about your child; and • Rights to participate in your child’s major life decisions. Your basic rights to be informed about your child are the sort of rights that you’d expect every parent to have. We’re not covering these in depth, but generally these are the rights to talk to teachers, doctors, dentists, etc., the rights to access your child’s medical and school records, and the rights to receive information and be informed. Even without fighting, you’re most likely to walk out of Paternity Court with these basic rights. Even in the most hotly contested custody battles, both parents get all of these basic parental rights. Here’s an excerpt from a randomly selected Paternity Court Order showing all of these basic rights: –See Rights of Parent at All Times – Tex. Fam. Code § 153.073 Your rights to participate in your child’s major life decisions are the rights that parents spend tens of thousands of dollars fighting for in Court. These are the BIG ones. These include the rights to designate primary residence (aka custody), to consent to psychiatric treatment, to consent to medical treatment, to decide education, and a whole lot of others. Here’s another excerpt from that same randomly selected Paternity Court Order showing all of these rights to participate in the child’s major life decisions: These rights don’t have to go to just one parent. Most of them can be shared equally between the parents or exercised independently. If the State is going to secretly steal your rights, then these are the rights being stolen. Joint Conservatorship vs. Sole Conservatorship For some reason, everyone thinks that their big goal is to get “joint custody.” If you’ve seen our Child Custody Myths blog, then you know that “joint custody” isn’t a real thing. Forget “custody” and think “conservatorship.” Here’s how you can fight: Now that you’re educated on your rights, you’re ready to fight for them in Paternity Court using these three steps: #1) Don’t agree to an Order in IV-D Paternity Court that does not give you equal conservatorship rights as the child’s mother. Insist on these rights either be via joint agreement, or independent to each of you. Primary residence is the exception as you both likely won’t have the primary residence of the child. #2) Object on the record in Court, and in writing, if the proposed Order does not apportion these rights correctly and only awards them to the mother. #3) Appeal the Order to a higher Court if the Judge signs an Order that does not apportion these rights correctly and only awards them to the mother. Appellate deadlines are very short so don’t delay even a day. Now that you know how the State will try to secretly steal your rights with Title IV-D, you’re ready to appear in Paternity... Music: Upside Down – Text Me Records Music provided via YouTube Studio Audio Library #PaternityCourt #FathersRights #ParentalRights