You need a court order to change a birth record. You haven't provided much detail but you will need to provide an account of how and why the false information was provided for the child's official record of birth. You should visit the probate and family court and ask to speak with an advocate, if possible, or make an appointment with an attorney who can review the situation and explain your options.
No. The birth certificate should show the name of the natural father or the name should be left off the certificate. If you put a name on the certificate and you know that person not to be the father, then you have falsified a public record and in any country in the world, that is a crime.
Yes, but the father can motion the family court to stop the action, or have it changed back when he finds out.
Regardless of location the father is the father. So, yes.
If it's established who the biological father is, regardless what name is on the birth certificate, he will have to give up his parental rights in order for someone else to adopt the child. He can also go to court and have the name on the birth certificate changed to his.
He would have all of the rights that a biological father has. If he was not the biological father, then his name should not have been put on the birth certificate in the first place, unless he adopted her and the birth certificate was changed.
It is possible to legally establish paternity even if the father's name is not on the birth certificate.
Yes, it can be changed after paternity of the biological father has been established by the courts, you fill out a change of birth certificate affidavit and send it in with your court documents to the bureau of vital statistics stating who the real father is and the birth certificate will then be changed.
You can't remove a father's name from a birth certificate if he is the father, whether he's an illegal alien or not.
The man on the birth certificate.
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.
Yes if you want to have it changed you have to go to court and prove you are the father.
Generally, the man on the birth certificate is the child's legal father, unless/until proven otherwise.