Louisiana
Related: About this forumPeople adopted in Louisiana could get access to their birth certificates
A Louisiana lawmaker has proposed legislation that would allow adopted people to obtain copies of their original birth certificates once they reach age 24. It would follow a nationwide trend to reform decades of secrecy surrounding adoption records.
House Bill 450, filed by Rep. Charles Owen, a Republican from the Fort Polk-area town of Rosepine, proposes that an adopted person who is at least 24 would no longer have to petition a court to unseal their original birth certificate. They could instead obtain an uncertified copy upon request from the state registrar of vital records.
In a closed adoption under Louisiana law, most, if not all records, including the original birth certificate that often contains the identities of the biological parents, are sealed and not accessible to the adopted person. The state issues the adopted child an altered birth certificate with the legal fiction that the child was born to their adoptive parents.
Closed adoption records can only be unsealed with a court order. Such a process typically requires hiring an attorney and providing a compelling reason to convince a judge to make the records available, Owen said in an interview.
Read more: https://lailluminator.com/2022/03/09/people-adopted-in-louisiana-could-get-access-to-their-birth-certificates/
I wonder if Rep. Owen will receive unanimous support from his Republican colleagues? Would anyone be surprised if someone learned that a legislator was their parent?
no_hypocrisy
(48,638 posts)My friend discovered that he was adopted -- at age 59.
I helped him find his original documentation in New York City via Vital Statistics and from there, Ancestry registration, a few matches.
He flew from Israel to Alaska to meet his biological father before he died. And he was a dead ringer for his father, like "Me" and "Mini Me".
My friend has closure and an enlarged family.
Dan
(4,036 posts)TexasTowelie
(116,507 posts)it may also be helpful for the adopted to know the parents for medical reasons, but it isn't a certainty that the people that gave up an infant for adoption would have welcoming arms for someone they haven't seen in a quarter century.
Having an adopted child reveal themselves decades later could affect marriages and cause conflict with the biological parent(s) or siblings. Other than for medical reasons, I have my doubts about the law because of the potential to do harm to people who believed that they had closed that particular door in life.