Wisconsin Stipulation to Revise Dispositional Order is a process used in Wisconsin courts to modify a child’s dispositional order (court order that outlines the conditions of the child’s supervision). This process is used after a juvenile court has found a child delinquent and entered a dispositional order outlining the terms of the child’s supervision. The process is used to modify the original dispositional order if the court finds that it is in the child’s best interests. There are two types of Wisconsin Stipulation to Revise Dispositional Order: a motion to modify and a stipulation to modify. A motion to modify is a request made to the court to change the dispositional order. It must be filed by the child’s attorney or guardiaattemptem and must include evidence that the child’s circumstances have changed since the original dispositional order was entered. A stipulation to modify is an agreement between the child’s attorney, the prosecuting attorney, and the court to modify the dispositional order. It must be approved by the court before it can take effect.
Wisconsin Stipulation to Revise Dispositional Order is a process used in Wisconsin courts to modify a child’s dispositional order (court order that outlines the conditions of the child’s supervision). This process is used after a juvenile court has found a child delinquent and entered a dispositional order outlining the terms of the child’s supervision. The process is used to modify the original dispositional order if the court finds that it is in the child’s best interests. There are two types of Wisconsin Stipulation to Revise Dispositional Order: a motion to modify and a stipulation to modify. A motion to modify is a request made to the court to change the dispositional order. It must be filed by the child’s attorney or guardiaattemptem and must include evidence that the child’s circumstances have changed since the original dispositional order was entered. A stipulation to modify is an agreement between the child’s attorney, the prosecuting attorney, and the court to modify the dispositional order. It must be approved by the court before it can take effect.