Birth years for the individuals listed range from 1875 to last year.

Our EIN is 81-4985446. If the birth parents have consented to the release of identifying information, the court shall disclose the information.

As required by the DPPA, we will retain a record of your request, including your name and selected permitted purpose(s). Over the same records set? And those will probably be in the low six figures.

Barry 1872, Barton 1860, Bates 1861, Bollinger 1866, 1884, Caldwell 1860, 1896, Camden 1902,Cape Girardeau 1870, Chariton 1864, 1973 Christian 1865, Crawford 1873, 1884, Dade 1863, Dallas 1863, 1864, 18867, DeKalb 1864, 1878 Dent 1864, Douglas 1886, Dunklin 1872, Gentry 1885, Greene 1861, Harrison 1874, Hickory 1852, 1881, Holt 1965, Howard 1887, Howell 1866, Jasper 1863, 1883,  McDonald 1863, Maries 1868, Mercer 1898, Montgomery 1864,1901, Morgan 1887, Newton 1862, Oregon during C.W., Osage 1880, Pemiscot 1883, Pike 1864,  Pulaski 1903, Randolph 1880, Reynolds 1872, Saline 1864, Shannon 1863, 1871, 1938, 1893, Stoddard 1864, Taney 1885, Texas 1932, Vernon C.W., Wayne 1854, 1892, Webster 1863, 1881, Wright 1864, 1897 You know, the usual behavior you'd expect from a state government agency.The founder and president of Reclaim The Records, who originally filed the two Sunshine Law requests in this suit, gave her affidavit to the court......and our attorney Bernie Rhodes provided his own affidavit to the court, too.When we got a trove of their e-mails in discovery, we found one from the former Missouri State Registrar Garland Land, who blatantly advised DHSS to break the Missouri Sunshine Law by only responding with "mounds of paper" rather than the database version required by the Sunshine Law, and to also make us request each date individually, rather than a date range.

Write to the appropriate county clerk for records before 1910. But Missouri currently does not have a basic genealogical index available to the public for deaths that occurred in the state after 1965. We're gonna change that.That time we successfully appealed to a state Attorney General while waiting to board an international flightNew Jersey Birth, Marriage, and Death Indices, 1901-1903 and 1901-1914We acquired and published the first public twentieth century vital records indices for New Jersey.Why should these records be available if you're onsite at the state archives, but not available on the Internet?We acquired and published the first-ever data set of everyone married in the Garden StateWelcome to the single stupidest lawsuit we've ever had to file against a government agencyGeographic Index to New York City Births, late 19th to early 20th centuriesA new tool to find people born in New York City, especially if their birth records had spelling variants or poor handwritingIndex to New York City domestic partnership records, 1993-2017All people and all families deserve to have their genealogical records available to them.Index to New York City Marriage Licenses, 1908-1929What do you do when a city archive won’t share its records with the public? He talked to their General Counsel on the phone, who claimed to him that the Department’s IT staff simply could not do a single database dump as we asked, and would have to search each individual day’s worth of records, one by one.

Most divorce records can be obtained by contacting the appropriate circuit court clerk in the county where the plaintiff resided. Read about our pilot project that started it all.Index to New York City Marriage Licenses, 1930-1995Yes, you can fight city hall — and win! They also confirmed that the data existed in database format.But while we had initially made a records request that asked for all Missouri death index data for 1910-2015, their Department pointed out that However, we then ran into two problems with the agency:No, really, this is a screenshot of what they tried to tell us it would cost to get copies of these public records.At this point, in late June 2016, we sighed heavily and finally retained legal counsel, Bernie Rhodes of Lathrop & Gage, and we started conducting all of our communications with the Department through him.