no
no, changing the birth certificate requires adoption, and can only be done if the birth father's parental rights have been terminated.
Is he actually the father, or are you planning to commit paternity fraud?
Putting a father's name on the birth certificate does not make him legally the father if you are not married to him. You can put his name on the birth certificate, but realize that it has no legal impact. In order to have paternity established, it has to be done with a court order.
No, in order to have a step parent adoption, the birth father's parental rights must be permanently terminated.
There are a couple reasons. One make sure it a state certified birth certificate and not a Certificate of birth from the hospital, these usually have your foot prints on them. Two could be an adoption matter. In either case this is a matter that should talk to your parents about.
No. Birth and Adoption certificate are different
no, changing the birth certificate requires adoption, and can only be done if the birth father's parental rights have been terminated.
Except in an adoption, there is no such person as a "non biological father." The only man who should be signing a birth certificate is the child's biological father. Any other man who signs it is making an illegal statement.
It is possible to "reverse" the adoption if the child's mother is ready to assume custody and responsibility. You will need to engage legal counsel. It is not clear why you want to apply for a birth certificate and medical attention if you are no longer the boy's guardians. Discuss these matters with the attorney as well.
The biological father should have been put on the birth certificate to begin with so why would he have to adopt them. If he wasnt at birth, see if you can get the birth certificate to reflect the truth. You may need to get a DNA test results and bring it to the hospital where the baby was born. Adoption proceedings are costly and drawn out.
Is he actually the father, or are you planning to commit paternity fraud?
There are ways around this, but you need an attorney who specializes in adoption law.
She may not want to be found however, if you have your birth certificate try the names that is hers in the town you were born in and surrounding areas - its a start. Since she may also be looking for you, you can also try a mutual consent search. For California born adoptees, the free adoption registry is http://www.CaliforniaAdoptionRegistry.org
If the real dad does a paternity test you are in big trouble. You don't have to put the father down, leave the space empty. The adopting couple could get the child taken away if the adoption was proven to be done with false information. It would cause an awful lot of heartache to the child and the new parents.
It is possible to legally establish paternity even if the father's name is not on the birth certificate.
This is really confusing, can you reword it. If the biological father is giving up his rights, he's the only one who will be positive as a father for the said child in a paternity test. A new birth certificate, isn't the real birth certificate. Even if its a legal one, the child deserves to know who his / her biological parent is, even if he's chosen not to be in the child's life. In a step parent adoption, an amended birth certificate is issued. In all adoptions the original birth certificate is sealed and an amended birth certificate is issued with the new legal parents names.
Post in papers and contact the Russian embassy.