You can not refuse to do a DNA test on your son if there is a court order involved. If you refuse to obey a court order you can go to jail.
No. The real parents sign the birth certificate of their child unless they refuse, I think. So sorry if I'm wrong!
Your parents are generally the people who signed your birth certificate. They are generally the ones who call you for dinner and the ones who refuse to raise your allowance.
The authorized birth certificate may refer to the Original birth certificate rather than the Copy of the Birth Certificate.
I take it you have no established, legal relationship to the children. In that case, are you familiar with the term "kidnapping?"
Why would you want to sign a birth certificate?
No. Birth and Adoption certificate are different
Yes
It is a myth that the president hasn't released his birth certificate. He has. Many times. It has been verified (both the Certificate of Live Birth and the Long-Form Birth Certificate) and shown to be legitimate by officials in Hawaii, where he was born. Journalists have seen it. Fact-checkers have seen it. Politicians from both parties have seen it. But there are a group of people called Birthers who refuse to accept the fact that the president was born in Hawaii, no matter how much credible evidence and verification is presented.
There isn't one. This is another of those internet myths. There is, however, a birth certificate for his father, who has the same name and was in fact born in Kenya. But President Obama was born in Hawaii, and numerous officials, both Republican and Democratic, have seen his official birth certificate; this, however, does not seem to satisfy the people known as the "Birthers," who refuse to accept that the president was born in the United States.
You haven't explained whose birth certificate. If it's her biological child then she must sign the birth certificate. The biological parents of the child sign the birth certificate.
A birth certificate is a legal document showing that a person's birth occurred and has been registered within the jurisdiction of the agency issuing the birth certificate.