Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would get the passport myself and keep it at MY house under lock and key. You may want to travel internationally with your child at some point! So tell him his request is reasonable, but that you're taking care of it yourself.
This one.
Also, neither of you can take the child out of the country without a notarized consent form from the other spouse anyway.
Technically you can't take the child out of the country without a notarized consent form but I have done so multiple times and they have never checked. I think you get flagged more if the child doesn't look like the parent.
Anonymous wrote:Troll. Your ex just so happens to be a notary? What a coincidence!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would get the passport myself and keep it at MY house under lock and key. You may want to travel internationally with your child at some point! So tell him his request is reasonable, but that you're taking care of it yourself.
This one.
Also, neither of you can take the child out of the country without a notarized consent form from the other spouse anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Easy solution Get the passport and you hold on to it.
This is really bad advice.
Once a passport is issued, it is easy to get a replacement by claiming that the passport was lost or stolen.
Anonymous wrote:He cannot get a passport without your consent. Document all this unhinged behavior so if he goes to court to try to compel your consent (possible) you have a clear argument against it.
Anonymous wrote:Easy solution Get the passport and you hold on to it.
Anonymous wrote:My ex is newly very interested in getting our child (shared custody) a passport, despite there being no plans in the foreseeable future of international travel.
This, coupled with some increasingly alarming things coming from my ex reflecting paranoia about the government, lead me to be very opposed to getting my child a passport.
I think my ex can't get a passport for my child without my presence and consent. However, it doesn't stop him from being verbally abusive while bothering me about it. The abuse stems from him believing that the government is going to get him and our child, and that I am some sort of dupe to not recognize it.
(Note: My ex is not some sort of security professional.)
I'm not entirely certain what I can do here, aside from suggest therapy (which he's in), and refuse to get the passport. Is there some other legal step I should take? There's presently no reason to call in the authorities or anything.
Anonymous wrote:Troll. Your ex just so happens to be a notary? What a coincidence!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He cannot get a passport without your consent. Document all this unhinged behavior so if he goes to court to try to compel your consent (possible) you have a clear argument against it.
OP again.
The unhinged behavior is just stuff he says. There's no action. So does that count in court? He says he will be killed by the government, and needs to flee to another country for political asylum.