I want to say yes, because you are only related to the military through your spouse. if you don't live on base then you really have no right to be on base in the first place especially if you are getting divorced. Now if you have children which are his, then it is a little different. If you two are no longer together, then you will have to give the id card to the base Law enforcement. Allot of people think that the ID is theirs, but its the governments, and can be seized at any time. What i was saying about the kids is that they are allowed to come on base for school, hospital, and visitation, but you will have to get a pass by a military sponsor.
2006-08-14 08:02:23
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answer #1
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answered by kram_7777 3
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Actually when the divorce is final you do have to return your id if it isnt expired by that time and the children will not be required to get an id until they are at least 11 yrs old but as long as you have the children then you should be entitled to all privledges still.
2006-08-14 12:04:17
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answer #2
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answered by CaliMa 3
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He can. You do have to get it to him when the divorce is final. But if you have children he has to provide a dependent ID for the child. You should talk to a lawyer that specializes in military divorce cases.
2006-08-14 07:55:29
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answer #3
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answered by darkemoregan 4
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properly it relatively is no longer the protection rigidity's fault on what a protection rigidity significant different does. possibly he don't have married her. no longer all protection rigidity spouses are like that. And what approximately those infantrymen who get deployed and take thier spouse off their checking or decrease value costs account and don't supply them any money jointly as they are deployed. it relatively is no longer purely the spouses, it is likewise the infantrymen or protection rigidity contributors. it works the two procedures. it relatively is no longer the government who marries theses spouses, it relatively is the soldier so he or she has some responisbility to this remember. i assume a lesson found out next time he gets married. and prefer all and sundry else stated, if it became right into a joint account, she has complete get right of entry to to that and there is rather no longer something he can do. If it became into an account purely in his call, then he has criminal steps that he can take. stable luck.
2016-10-02 01:54:18
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answer #4
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answered by balsamo 4
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Go ahead and give it up. When you left, you rejected him and all he has to offer. Including privileges. Got kids together? Then things get complicated. His kids have privileges, but you wont. Technically speaking you can keep the ID until the divorce is done. But you left him. *sigh*
2006-08-14 08:11:19
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answer #5
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answered by nitr0bike 4
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Yes
2006-08-14 07:59:13
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answer #6
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answered by Proud Army Wife 3
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technically, yes. the ID we carry is NOT ours and must be surrendered whenever requested. I know of a few spouses who got their base access/priviledges revoked for one reason or another.
2006-08-14 09:35:02
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answer #7
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answered by Mrsjvb 7
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Once the divorce is final, unless they have kids together. If they have kids then no.
2006-08-14 07:51:30
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answer #8
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answered by Stand 4 somthing Please! 6
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From my understanding yes.
2006-08-14 07:50:43
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answer #9
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answered by Tricia P 4
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no he can't because you have children it's diffrent when you divorce someone in the miltary when you have kids you and the kids have befifits for the kids and your self .i'm thirteen i knew that
2006-08-14 10:39:36
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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