It depends on the type of information. Often, adoption records are sealed and can only be accessed by the adopted child and both sets of parents.
Most states due not allow even adopted siblings to be married. Legally they are considered no different then blood related siblings.
There is not enough information to answer this question. Who is he?
An adoptive sibling is a person who is not another person's biological sibling, but is raised legally and socially as if they are.
Generally, the status of a person as a "sibling" is not relevant. What is relevant is whether that sibling is or is not a beneficiary under the will. An executor has an obligation to give information to the beneficiaries of the estate as named in the will, not to all the decedent's relatives. If a sibling (whether it is a sibling of the decedent or of the executor) has no interest in the estate, he/she has no rights to information about the estate. In some jurisdictions, an executor might be required to simply give that sibling notice of the probate of the will, even if the will gives that sibling nothing, but only if that sibling would inherit some part of the estate in absence of the will. As with all legal questions, the specific answer may differ from state to state depending on that state's laws. So you must check those laws to get the precise answer.
No, the noun 'sibling' is a concretenoun, a word for a physical person.
Well either you had a child with your sibling or with your spouse's sibling.
Yes you can as long as that person has a driving liscense.
phishing
An older sibling can take custody of younger sibling in South Carolina by applying for it if the current person taking care of them is abusing them or he/she is on drugs.
FALSE
an adoptee, or adopted child
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