A friend of mine knows who her mother was, but not her father or birth city. Anyone know how she could find her missing US birth certificate with that much information?
I don't think the Freedom of Information Act is relevant, unless she's a government-created clone. It only governs federal documents, and birth certificates are a town-created document which is (at least in Mass) then recorded by the state.
If her mother says she was born in Mass, check out this site. If she can't get it from her mother, your best bet is to do a best guess and pick a state to try to research in.
Does she not have any ID at all? Maybe she could track something down by Social Security Number, though I have no idea how much information they're willing to give you there.
Federal documents often contain relevant information about birth. For example, your birthplace and date of birth on on your passport. If she could obtain a copy of her application for a SSN or a passport, it might well have what she's looking for.
Oh, and I forgot to mention, there is a state version of the Freedom of Information Act in Massachusetts (and probably in most states) that covers documents created by branches of the state government.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-10 05:05 am (UTC)If her mother says she was born in Mass, check out this site. If she can't get it from her mother, your best bet is to do a best guess and pick a state to try to research in.
Does she not have any ID at all? Maybe she could track something down by Social Security Number, though I have no idea how much information they're willing to give you there.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-10 03:00 pm (UTC)Oh, and I forgot to mention, there is a state version of the Freedom of Information Act in Massachusetts (and probably in most states) that covers documents created by branches of the state government.
no subject
Date: 2009-03-10 04:26 pm (UTC)