elaine60 said:
The county is Marshall in Plymouth Indiana. Sorry for so little detail. My youngest will soon be 19. He knew he was getting a wage withholding. He went back to selling real estate after holding down his last job for 5 years. Can I file a an order of contempt or go to the county prosecutor. I know he will be coming back to Indiana at some time in the future. He is living in Florida and if I file an order of contempt and he does return will they place him in jail and make him pay the back support. I know he has it and he has said that he will not pay it. He owes 3700.00 in arrears and I never went after him for it because I did not want friction because of my kids. They do not care anymore if I try to go after him. He has spent very little time in their lives. If they do find him in contempt can they then issue a warrant for him. I think it stinks that all that time I never did anything. He was up to 7000.00. I do not want to spend a lot more money but wondered if I could file myself?
Right or wrong, this is how it works. First off yes he's in contempt and you can take him back to court if that is what you want to do. It's unlikely the prosecuter will get involved. First, have you ever used them to represent you? If not, basically you will probably be told too late now anyways because the children are no longer minors and because they hadn't handled your case. Rather then call, be put on hold, transferred to 10 zillion people try using this e-mail address for you local prosecutor in the child support division...
curt@co.marshall.in.us I found that I was less stressed when dealing with them in e-mail and usually got more answers.
Problem number 2 for you is that he's also out of state... and that state is Florida. Rumor is, I've been told by a few caseworkers, that Florida is one of the worse states to try to get to work with people to get CS. Regardless that just adds to the problems.
Thirdly, even if you were to file contempt charges on him it is UNLIKELY that he will serve one single day in jail. Once the children reached passed 18 your case went to a simple arrears case only (here's where Indiana is tricky.. the law says CS can be owed until 21, but good luck finding a judge to enforce that, and there would have to be proven needs). While the support was still owed he could be charged with 'failing to support a minor' or some other little trick they can find. If he's ordered to go to court and doesn't and it's proved he knew about it and was served properly, he can be charged with 'failure to appear' but to get him charged now and put in jail isn't going to happen.
You also need to understand that since this is now an arrears case only you won't receive the weekly amount of money that the original order stated. What I mean is for instance my original order was for $113.00 a week. My ex is/was over 24,000 behind. Once it became an arrears case only he pays $30 a week, now days enough for a tank of gas.
It's not fun, or fair... but in the end you need to ask yourself if it's worth the stress it will cause you since you will have to be the one to find out where he works, and report that as well as addresses... etc. They don't do this stuff for you. Oh and yeah, it's unlikely to get a hold on taxes also once it is arrears only because it becomes a simple debt owed to you. It sucks, that's all there is to it.