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Raising Cain
February 8, 2010, 12:31 pm
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Raising Cain
Raising Cain (1992)

IMDB rating: 5.60

Plot: Jenny Nix, wife of eminent child psychologist Carter Nix, becomes increasingly concerned about her husband’s seemingly obsessive concern over the upbringing of their daughter. Her own adulterous affair with an old flame, however, causes her to neglect her motherly duties until a spate of local kidnapings forces her to accept the possibility that he may be trying to recreate the twisted mind-control experiments of his discreditied psychologist father.

Directors: De Palma Brian

Actors: Lithgow John,Lithgow John,Lithgow John,Lithgow John,Lithgow John,Bauer Steven,Henry Gregg,Bower Tom,Heyman Barton,Thriller,Horror,

Can my neice claim my daughter on her income tax return?
My daughter has been living with my niece since August 2008. I pay child support (not court ordered) to my niece for my daughter staying with her (their choice, not mine). Now she is raising cain and making threats about getting me in trouble with the IRS for using her on my taxes last year. She is also saying no matter what, she is claiming her on her income taxes this coming season. Can she claim her? Doesn’t she have to be her legal guardian or parent or have legal custody of her?


In 2008, your daughter did not live with your niece for more than six months, so your niece could not claim your daughter. If your daughter lived with you for more than six months, you would claim your daughter (I assume your daughter is under age 19 or under age 24 and a full-time student).

In 2009, your daughter lived with your niece, which I assume is the daughter of your brother or sister. This makes your daughter a cousin of your niece. In order for your niece to claim your daughter, all of the following must be true:

1. Your daughter lived with your niece all year.
2. Your niece provided over half of your daughter’s support.
3. Your daughter had income subject to tax of less than $3,650.

If the above is true, your niece can claim your daughter as a "qualifying relative" only for the exemption of $3,650 and no tax benefits such as the Child Tax Credit, Earned Income Credit, or Head of Household filing status.

I assume no other closer relative lives in the household with your daughter and niece. In this case, you can claim your child if you provided over half of your child’s support. You would claim your child as a dependent and could get the Child Tax Credit. You could not get the Earned Income Credit or Head of Household filing status based on your child because your child does not live with you.

ninasgramma | Dec 17, 2009


If your daughter lived with your niece for the ENTIRE year and your niece paid more than half of her support, your niece has the legal right to claim her.

You wouldn’t be in trouble for claiming her on your last year’s taxes, since she lived with you for more than half the year.
rtfm | Dec 16, 2009


The IRS goes by where the child is sleeping at night.

Since the child is NOT sleeping at your house, you can’t claim her as a qualifying child.

However, since your niece and your daughter are COUSINS, she can’t claim her as a qualifying child either (and yes, the IRS will ask for the birth certificates so they will figure this out).

In order for your niece to claim her as a qualifying relative (not for HOH, not for EIC and not for the child tax credit), your niece has to prove she had her all year *and* she personally provided more than half of her support. Your child support money is money YOU provided not her.

Have your neice do the support test in irs pub 501, page 20. if you paid more than half, you get to claim her; if she pays more than half she does–but only as a qualifying relative. Neither one of you gets HOH, EIC or the child tax credit.
the tax lady | Dec 16, 2009


Legal custody is irrelevant so let’s get that out of the way first off. The next point is that since your daughter did not live in your home for more than half of 2009, YOU cannot claim her at all under the Qualifying Child rule. Unless you can prove that you provided more than half of her support (unlikely but not impossible) you can’t claim her under the Qualifying Relative rule either..

Beyond that, it’s really irrelevant as to whether your niece can claim your daughter or not from your perspective. A cousin can’t be claimed as a Qualifying Child but if she provided more than half of your daughter’s support she can claim her as a Qualifying Relative.

The best bet is for you and your niece to sit down with a copy of IRS Pub 501 and run the numbers on the support worksheet on page 20. This will substantiate who provided what in the way of support and if anyone provided more than 50%, that’s the party who gets the exemption.
Bostonian In MO | Dec 16, 2009


if she lived in her household the ENTIRE YEAR, did not have income of $3650 and your niece provided more than 50% of her support, as well as your daughter not claimed on the return of anyone else, she can be a qualifying relative
in this case, I think the vital requirement here is the more than 50% support, and that may be difficult to prove since you are paying support too
tro | Dec 16, 2009



Fast Lane

Fast Lane
Fast Lane (2009)

IMDB rating: 0.00

Plot: A streetwise cop infiltrates a Los Angeles car-theft ring after a high-speed accident on the freeway reveals a violent turf war between two all-girl gangs. When Lieutenant Baynes (Stephen Bauer) assigns Brandy Martinez (Melina Lizette) the task of going undercover to gather evidence against notorious chop shop owner Mama (Olivia Brown), Brandy befriends a former car thief named Eva Strong (Kenyetta Letheridge). But Brandy soon discovers that the real menace isn’t Mama, but a dangerous criminal named Knight (Anthony Ray Parker). Knight owes a sizable debt to the international mob, and in order to pay them off he schemes to eliminate the competition. Fortunately for Brandy, she isn’t the only undercover cop keeping shady company; Carlo (Sevier Crespo) has been out on the streets investigating Knight, and when Knight makes his ultimate play for power the two desperate cops must rely on each other in order to survive.

Directors: Betances David

Actors: Bauer Steven,Crespo Sevier,Parker Anthony Ray,Palacios Ruben,Betances Daniel,Needles Frankie,Action,

cop didn't do anything for driving fast?
I was driving today, so someone passed me so quickly, and I can’t accept someone pass me like that so i push the gas and followed him it was like a hill in a town not a highway so the cop saw what happened and that we were switching lanes and like racing so he just standed on the street to stop us in the middle of the street and he only said ( " I saw you switching lanes and driving fast " ) and than he just left and let us continue driving as if nothing happened, does it mean anything ? he didn’t ask any questions it was weird, i was so happy, i was thinking that im screwed and the ticket will be bigger than the speed


Be happy you got lucky.
A stunt like that is treated worse than it was 20 years ago.
It meant a trip to the can back then.

Firecracker . | Nov 17, 2009


so..whats your question? don’t do it again.
Wylee_M | Nov 17, 2009


hears the deal cops are lazy. being a cop is a state job and a union so they dont have to do anything. + the amount of paper work he would have to fill out is a tone and unless he wants to spend like a week of work filling out sheets for some kids racing go 4 it but if he was an ass u could get your licens taken 4 2 years and 5g’s fine.
Jeff | Nov 17, 2009