We Were Together for Years but Never Married: What Are My Rights If We Split Up in Nebraska?

If you lived with your partner for years but never married, a Nebraska breakup can raise difficult questions about the house, debt, children, pets, and estate planning. Nebraska does not create common-law marriage based on time together, so unmarried partners usually do not have the same property rights as divorcing spouses. This article explains how Nebraska law treats unmarried breakups, when custody and child support can be addressed, what protection-order relief may be available, and why clear documents matter before conflict starts.

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Is My Spouse Spying on Me During Our Nebraska Divorce?

Worried your spouse may be reading your messages, tracking your location, monitoring your home WiFi, or using cameras during a Nebraska divorce? This article explains what to do first, how to preserve evidence, when to avoid confrontation, and how surveillance concerns may affect divorce, custody, parenting plans, protection orders, and court evidence.

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How Do I Get a Protection Order in Nebraska?

Learn how protection orders work in Nebraska, including domestic abuse, harassment, and sexual assault protection orders. This guide explains how to file, what evidence courts look for, what happens at a hearing, how long an order may last, and how protection orders can affect custody, housing, pets, firearms, and related family law issues.

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A Judge, a Stalking Allegation, and a Career Gone Overnight: What the Bridget Robb Case Means for Nebraska Parents Facing Protection Orders

A single protection order can change everything overnight. Using the high-profile Bridget Robb case as a real-world example, this article breaks down how Nebraska protection orders actually work, how they impact custody and parenting time, and what you need to do immediately if you’re served.

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