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Family Law Checklists

Arizona Family Law Checklist

Arizona Emergency Custody Checklist

Emergency custody issues are serious. Arizona courts do not treat every parenting disagreement as an emergency. A true emergency usually involves immediate concerns about a child's safety, health, welfare, or risk of harm. Examples may include domestic violence, child abuse, severe neglect, substance abuse around the child, threats to take or hide the child, or a parent creating a dangerous situation.

Before You Start

This checklist is designed to help Arizona parents organize urgent information before contacting an attorney, law enforcement, child protective authorities, or the court. If a child is in immediate danger, call 911 first.

Arizona legal decision-making and parenting time decisions are based on the child's best interests, and domestic violence or child abuse are specifically relevant to that analysis. If domestic violence is involved, an Arizona Order of Protection may also be available, and Arizona's protective order statute allows certain relief, including no-contact provisions and exclusive use of a residence in appropriate circumstances.

Work Through the Steps

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1. Identify the Emergency

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2. Take Immediate Safety Steps

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3. Gather Evidence

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4. Prepare a Clear Timeline

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5. Review Existing Orders

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6. Think Through Requested Emergency Relief

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7. Avoid Common Mistakes

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Common Questions

What qualifies as an emergency custody issue in Arizona?

Emergency concerns usually involve immediate risk to a child's safety or welfare such as a child coming home from a parental visit with stories of abuse or unexplained bruises. Ordinary disagreements about schedules, discipline, or communication usually are not emergencies.

Should I call police or file in family court?

If the child is in immediate danger, call 911. Before you go to court, you should consider consulting with a family law attorney. If you need an Order of Protection, do not hesitate. Family court can address safety issues on an emergency basis. Medical providers should also be involved if appropriate as they are mandatory reporters. Law enforcement may be needed for immediate safety.

Can an Order of Protection affect parenting time?

Yes, depending on the evidence you present. Protective orders and family court orders can overlap and dovetail so legal advice is very important.

What evidence matters most?

Courts often look for specific facts, dates, documents, reports, photos, messages, and witness information. A compelling narrative that is organized and detailed also helps.

Ready to Discuss Your Situation?

If your child may be in danger, act quickly and carefully. Our Arizona family law team can help you evaluate emergency court custody options and take appropriate legal steps.

Book Your Consultation

This checklist is for general educational purposes only and is not legal advice. Arizona family law can be fact-specific, and court procedures may vary by county. If you are preparing to file, respond, negotiate, mediate, or appear in court, speak with an Arizona family law attorney about your situation.