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12 answers

only if you are rich!

2006-09-24 18:39:26 · answer #1 · answered by Dancingsun 3 · 0 0

I tried typing that into www.askjeeves.com... but can u further ur info? like what state... and how long ago did this process happen...?

***MAYBE this will work? call them and ask this question u asked here... maybe they can direct u further.. :
~ Contact Us!
Contact a domestic Adoption Consultant at
1-800-FOR-ADOPT
(1-800-367-2367) or via our contact form
Your information is confidential.

*** Found this on: http://www.adoptionnetwork.com/adoptiveparents/adoption-faq.shtml
Q. Is it true that a birth mother can change her mind and take the baby back?
A. With the many successful adoptions, our staff has attained the patience, integrity and experience necessary to guide both the birthmother and you through the legal intricacies of adoption. While there is a small percentage of adoption that are "disrupted" each year, we do all we can to protect you.

*** http://www.adoptionalternatives.com/?src=overture
We work with birthmothers throughout the United States!
1-800-892-4523
4. Can I get the baby back after I sign the surrender and the revoke period has expired? In most cases you would have to seek legal counsel at your own expense, and prove that the consents where signed under duress. Duress meaning that someone was either putting you under unjust emotional or physical abuse in order for you to sign the surrender.

That is all I can come up with... if I find more info. I'll gladly post it up here for you! GOOD LUCK!

2006-09-24 18:52:17 · answer #2 · answered by sweetsuezq4u 3 · 0 0

Sometimes....but that would be a horribly cruel thing to put the adoptive parents through. The birth mother has the right to change their mind, but once a child is legally adopted, it is a whole other story. A LOT of legal work is needed, and that is no guarantee that the birth mother would get their child back. It is not as simple as black and white, there is a lot of gray area to be covered.

2006-09-24 18:39:00 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

it depends on the state's laws, but i believe it's not only heartbreaking for the adoptive parents, but also to the child. many adopted children will grow up knowing, or will learn respectfully, about their adoption, and most are comfortable w/ the way their life was and grateful for the family that loved them. they may choose to find the birth parents, they may not. but, either way, if the birth mother decides it was a horrible mistake, and tries to take the child back, it would only tear their heart into, confuse and scar them. i'd opt for keeping an "open adoption" if at all possible, where the child gets to know the birth mother and she can be a part of his/her life. this seems as though it would be much easier to accept and a lot less hurtful.

2006-09-24 18:47:58 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not usually. It depends on how you adopted him out. If you went through an agency of any kind, probably not. They make sure their paper work is complete and correct. If you adopted to a random family through lawyers only, they may have left loop holes. It is probably not a good idea to rip a child away from the people he believes to be his parents, even if he is still young. You can do serious psychological damage.

2006-09-24 18:45:27 · answer #5 · answered by whatdoiknow 3 · 1 0

Most states allow 6 – 9 months (some a year) that a birth mother can change her mind.
So the answer is yes a birthmother can get her baby back if she wants too, but there is a time period in which she can do it, she cant decide 18months later that that she wants the child back and get him.

2006-09-24 18:48:43 · answer #6 · answered by Spread Peace and Love 7 · 0 0

i'm no longer surprised at how bitter some human beings will be. yet, they have their causes for being so, through the look of it. i'd suspect if a baby were followed through its grandparents, that the mother changed into doing the suitable she ought to lower than the situations. She would have given it up for strangers to undertake and that would were worse for the youngster. with her baby followed through her mum and dad, she will be continuously attentive to the shortcoming of the youngster, probable having to shop far off from them to stay away from grief, and any animosity over the upbringing of the youngster. both way for that mom, she would were dealing with hell! She would were bullied into letting the grandparents undertake her baby, rather of them helping her out financially, so she ought to shop a roof over both one in each of their heads. She would were on the run from a violent, alcoholic of an important different who threatened to take the youngster away. There ought to by no skill be any judgement without understanding the completed situations, and who's anybody to guage besides??? Derogative feedback, from bitter toddlers/adults who've been followed, are all too usual. clone of an abortion, a lady is improperly scarred through having her baby followed, no matter if it were the only selection she would have made on the on the spot. No mom supplies her baby up truthfully! I in actual reality wish this mom receives a danger to be the mother again, that she once changed into. There must be a fashion to get this innovations on line. If no longer, call an adoption organization who will be able to grant you the present guidelines in this.

2016-11-23 20:15:56 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Some states give you up to a year to reclaim a child. Personally I don't think that's right. Maybe a 30 day grace period, but not a year. You'd be breaking the heart of that poor couple who probably waited YEARS to get a baby. That's terrible.

2006-09-24 18:39:21 · answer #8 · answered by jenpeden 4 · 1 0

It would be even more cruel to the child, who has bonded with his or her adoptive parents; I think the child's best interests should be most important.

2006-09-24 18:45:10 · answer #9 · answered by The First Dragon 7 · 1 0

if the adoptive parents agree, once the child is adopted it is very hard, because of the fact that the state has terminated maternal and paternal rights

2006-09-24 18:41:27 · answer #10 · answered by crazeebitch2005 5 · 0 0

Unfortunatly sometimes yes. But the trama the child goes through isn't fair.

2006-09-24 18:45:05 · answer #11 · answered by Jim 2 · 0 0

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