Through the Bloodline
Released on: April 29, 2008, 3:32 am
Press Release Author: Christine L;ayug
Industry: Law
Press Release Summary: The ready availability of genetic fingerprinting allows men suspicious of paternity fraud to request a paternity test to make positive identification of the father.
Press Release Body: In law, Paternity is the legal acknowledgment of the parental relationship between a man and a child usually based on several factors. Under common law, a child born to the wife during a marriage is usually presumed to be the husband\'s child. Visit the Austin paternity for information about this. This concept is the \"presumption of lawful paternity\", and assigns to the husband complete rights, duties and obligations as to the child. The presumption, however, can sometimes be rebutted by evidence to the contrary, at least prior to a formal court ruling involving the putative paternity, which is often as a decree of divorce, annulment, or legal separation. Jurisdictions differ widely on whether, when, and under what circumstances a judgment establishing paternity or a support obligation founded on the presumption can be set aside on the grounds that the husband was not in fact the father. When this happens, a paternity fraud has occurred. Check out what the Austin paternity has to offer about this. Paternity fraud is the act of falsely naming a man to be the biological father of a child, particularly for child support purposes, by the mother when she knows or suspects that he is not the biological father. In cases of paternity fraud, there are many potential victims: the defrauded man, the child deprived of a relationship with his/her biological father, the biological father who is deprived of his relationship with his child. In particular, financial hardship may have resulted for the defrauded man\'s children and spouse in cases in which the man made child support payments for the unrelated child. Visit the Austin paternity about this. Statistics from the United States, Australia and other countries suggest that approximately 30% of all paternity tests exclude the putative father as biological father. These numbers do not reflect the overall incidence of paternity fraud in the general population, because the numbers are based on tests performed in cases in which the alleged fathers suspected they were not the biological fathers of the subject child. If you want more information about paternity law, then visit the Austin paternity for more details.
Web Site: http://www.amygehm.com
Contact Details: 6820173
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