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The local medical examiner or coroner's office.
whoever made the original would have to change it. Doctor, coroner and they would need a good reason to do it.
The attorney will be notified by the family, usually by the executor of the will, which should have a death certificate from the local coroner or hospital.
This means that some authority, probably a coroner or medical examiner, has determined that a death was not by natural causes. suicide, or accident.
Death certificates usually get issued in the state you die by the coroner. However, the living relatives can request a copy in the state of the dead person's residence.Added: I do NOT believe the second sentence in the above contribution is correct. A death certificate is just that - a "certificate" issued by the authority in the jurisdiction in which the decedent perished "certifying" the cause of death. It is a legal document and cannot be "duplicated" by a coroner or medical examiner of another jurisdiction.
I believe that, in the United States, a medical doctor must sign a death certificate, as they are the only ones qualified to determine if someone is dead.
the physician who pronounces death has to sign the death certificate with information about the death, and it is registered with the vital statistics office where you live and the deceased's next of kin will be given a copy
Yes
your birth certificate and your death certificate
Any body related to the person who is dead.
If you mean that a person died at home, in the United States you call 911. They will send out the Emergency Medial Team (EMTs) who will call the police who will call the coroner. The coroner will come and declare that person is dead and issue the death certificate.
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