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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What Documents Should I Keep Track of for My Nebraska Divorce or Custody Case?

Divorce and custody cases in Nebraska often become easier to manage when the right documents are preserved, organized, and reviewed early. This article explains what records may matter in a Nebraska divorce or custody case, including parenting-time calendars, co-parenting communications, financial records, school and medical documents, and property-related paperwork. It also explains what not to do, including risky recording practices, unauthorized account access, involving children in evidence-gathering, or taking self-help actions that could backfire in court.

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Can Text Messages Be Used as Evidence in a Nebraska Divorce or Custody Case?

Text messages, emails, social media messages, and co-parenting app communications can become important evidence in a Nebraska divorce or custody case. This article explains when digital messages may be relevant, how Nebraska courts look at authentication and hearsay issues, and what parents and spouses should avoid when communicating during a family law dispute.

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How Can Social Media Affect a Nebraska Divorce or Custody Case?

Social media can play a larger role in Nebraska divorce and custody cases than many people realize. Posts, screenshots, text messages, direct messages, photos, videos, and online comments may become evidence if they are relevant, properly authenticated, and not excluded by another evidentiary rule. This article explains how online activity may affect custody, parenting time, parenting plans, financial claims, credibility, and litigation strategy in Nebraska family law cases, while also offering practical guidance for avoiding common social media mistakes during divorce.

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Family Law, Divorce, Child Custody, Mediation Zach Anderson Family Law, Divorce, Child Custody, Mediation Zach Anderson

How Should I Communicate During a High-Conflict Divorce in Nebraska?

Communication can become one of the biggest challenges in a high-conflict divorce or custody case. This Nebraska-focused article explains when a response may be necessary, when silence may be appropriate, and how to avoid escalating written communication that could later become evidence. It also covers Nebraska custody considerations, parenting-plan compliance, co-parenting apps, BIFF-style responses, and practical ways to protect your communication record while keeping the focus on your children.

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Family Law, Child Custody, Divorce, Mediation Zach Anderson Family Law, Child Custody, Divorce, Mediation Zach Anderson

Can I Use Secret Audio Recordings in My Nebraska Child Custody Case?

Nebraska’s one-party consent rule may allow a person to record a conversation they are part of, but that does not mean the recording is automatically lawful in every situation, admissible in court, or helpful in a custody case. This article explains the difference between Nebraska recording law, evidence rules, and the best-interests analysis used in custody and parenting-time cases

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