AV Preeminent Peer Rated Attorneys
Winder Residents, consider several factors when selecting a lawyer including their experience, expertise, and reputation. AV Rated Attorneys represent a distinguished group of lawyers who have received top ratings from their peers for their exceptional ethical standards and an A grade (4.5 or higher).
AV Preeminent Peer Rated Attorneys
Winder Residents, consider several factors when selecting a lawyer ... Learn More
AV Preeminent Peer Rated Attorneys
Winder Residents, consider several factors when selecting a lawyer including their experience, expertise, and reputation. AV Rated Attorneys represent a distinguished group of lawyers who have received top ratings from their peers for their exceptional ethical standards and an A grade (4.5 or higher).
  • Serving Winder, GA and Barrow County, Georgia

  • Law Firm with 4 lawyers3 awards

  • Coleman, Chambers & Rogers, LLP is a full service law firm with our office in Gainesville, Hall County, Georgia. We serve our clients’ needs with extensive experience in... Read More

  • Divorce LawyersFamily Law, Child Protection & Advocacy, and 19 more

  • Serving Winder, GA

  • Law Firm with 1 lawyer3 awards

  • A Collaborative Approach With Your Family’s Future At The Center

  • Divorce LawyersFamily Law, Child Custody, and 9 more

John F. Lyndon
Divorce Lawyer
Compare with other firms
  • 31 South Center Street, Winder, GA 30680-2553

Your legal solution starts here.

Get professional advice by contacting an attorney today.

ADVERTISEMENT
  • 30 Laura Street, Winder, GA 30680

Ask a Lawyer

Additional Resources

Looking for Divorce Lawyers in Winder?

Divorce lawyers specialize in the legal dissolution of a marriage. They guide clients through the complexities of dividing assets and debts, determining spousal support (alimony), and resolving disputes through negotiation, mediation, or litigation when necessary. These attorneys advocate for their clients’ financial interests to achieve a fair and equitable settlement or court order.

About our Divorce Lawyers Ratings

The average lawyer rating is created by peers based on legal expertise, ethical standards, quality of service, and relationship skills. Recommendations are made by real clients.

CLIENT RECOMMENDED
76 %

47 Client Reviews

PEER REVIEWS
4.4

84 Peer Reviews

Commonly Asked Divorce Questions From Users Near You

This information is not legal advice and is not guaranteed to be correct, complete or up-to-date. It is provided for general informational purposes only. If you need legal advice you should consult a licensed attorney in your area.

Is there a possibility for me being deported and can I get married here with another guy once divorce is final?

Answered by attorney David Nabow Soloway
Divorce lawyer at Kennedy, Nalepa & Soloway, P.C.
Sorry to learn about the problems with your marriage and your consideration of divorce. A foreign national who has become a Conditional Resident through a marriage-based petition indeed may divorce. During the 90-day period when the foreign national is required to file an application to remove conditions, she may do so by herself with a request to waive the usual requirement that the couple file the application jointly. To succeed with that, the USCIS will require convincing documentary evidence that the couple lived together in a bona fide marriage notwithstanding that the marriage ended in divorce. If the petition to remove conditions were to become denied, it indeed would be possible for the foreign national to become married to another U.S. citizen and to commence a new marriage-based adjustment of status application. In that process, however, the USCIS can be expected to require proof that both the first marriage and the second marriage were bona fide and not entered just to seek immigration benefits. The details and circumstances you described, and their connection with immigration-related strategies, are complex. If you are unable to resolve issues in your present marriage - perhaps with the assistance of a marriage counselor or other professional - and you decide to become divorced, you should consult with an immigration attorney to address immigration-related eligibilities, options and strategies.
Sorry to learn about the problems with your marriage and your consideration of divorce. A foreign national who has become a Conditional Resident through a marriage-based petition indeed may divorce. During the 90-day period when the foreign national is required to file an application to remove conditions, she may do so by herself with a request to waive the usual requirement that the couple file the application jointly. To succeed with that, the USCIS will require convincing documentary evidence that the couple lived together in a bona fide marriage notwithstanding that the marriage ended in divorce. If the petition to remove conditions were to become denied, it indeed would be possible for the foreign national to become married to another U.S. citizen and to commence a new marriage-based adjustment of status application. In that process, however, the USCIS can be expected to require proof that both the first marriage and the second marriage were bona fide and not entered just to seek immigration benefits. The details and circumstances you described, and their connection with immigration-related strategies, are complex. If you are unable to resolve issues in your present marriage - perhaps with the assistance of a marriage counselor or other professional - and you decide to become divorced, you should consult with an immigration attorney to address immigration-related eligibilities, options and strategies.
Read More Read Less

How can I divorce if I don't know where they are?

Thomas Lee Maddox
Answered by attorney Thomas Lee Maddox (Unclaimed Profile)
Divorce lawyer at Tommy Lee Maddox, PC
You must do a divorce by publication.  Of course, you would have had to been a Georgia resident for six months prior to, and this kind of divorce does not address property or child issues.
You must do a divorce by publication.  Of course, you would have had to been a Georgia resident for six months prior to, and this kind of divorce does not address property or child issues.
Read More Read Less

My daughter is 18.5 and is having baby do I still have to pay child support?

George Nebbie Seide
Answered by attorney George Nebbie Seide (Unclaimed Profile)
Divorce lawyer at Shulman Family Law Group
If you mean does the baby extend the requirement to pay support until 18 and, if not graduated from high school the the earliest of graduation or 19, the answer is no, it does not extend your child support obligation.
If you mean does the baby extend the requirement to pay support until 18 and, if not graduated from high school the the earliest of graduation or 19, the answer is no, it does not extend your child support obligation.
Read More Read Less