Should i use an alias
The names you must include are the following:. Even if a name was not a legal name, you still must include it on the form. For example, if your full name is Jane Roberta Smith but people have always called you Roberta, your friends call you Bobbi, you use J. Roberta Smith on legal documents, and your birth name was Jane Roberta Jones, then you must include the following names in the AKA also known as or alias section of the form if you have used them:. Sometimes, it seems redundant and irrelevant to include things like the nickname your friends call you, but it is nevertheless an alias.
Criminals have been known to use nicknames or different iterations of their legal name on their record or on legal documents, and therefore the entities that perform background checks and child abuse clearances must know every name you have gone by in order to be thorough and make sure the children in your care are safe. These background checks and clearances are so important for adoptions because a child is being placed into a home permanently.
Families who adopt must be thoroughly investigated so that the chances of a child being placed with abusive or criminal parents is minimized. If you have been arrested or convicted of a crime, you must disclose that to your agency when filling out your adoption paperwork.
People who have committed some crimes will still be cleared as adoptive parents, but if the crime was serious or related to violence or abuse they will most likely not be approved to adopt. Place An Order Pay Invoice. State Level Registration When forming or registering to do business, entities register their names with the appropriate state filing office. While states will often accept a scanned form, the states where a county filing is mandated require original signatures, meaning more time and trouble involved gathering those required signatures for submission.
Getting the correct form. Each county is likely to have its own specific form. As town and county websites are often less sophisticated than those at the state level, it can be challenging to even obtain the form needed to register.
Some California counties, for example, used to accept a generic form but those days are long gone. Other requirements possible. For example, there are publication requirements on initial fictitious name filings in California, Florida, Georgia, Minnesota, Nebraska and Pennsylvania. Multiple filings may be needed. In certain states, multiple filings may be required depending on the number of business locations. In Arizona, Connecticut, Georgia, Massachusetts, Nevada and Virginia, an entity should file its assumed name in every town or county where it is used.
Other states, like Texas and California, only require that the entity file in the location of its principal office in the state. If the entity does not have a principal office in Texas, the address of the registered agent is used. In California, if there is no principal office in California, the assumed name should be filed in Sacramento County. By changing your name through these institutions, all previous aspects of your life, like your Social Security records, debts, and birth certificate, will be transferred over into the new identity.
Consult your lawyer if there is any perceived issue with these aliases or pseudonyms. Your lawyer will be up to date with federal, state, and local laws concerning name changes. Also, your lawyer will be able to manage all of your aliases or pseudonyms and all related properties related to those names confidentially. Avoid confusing institutions and friends. Having multiple aliases control multiple aspects of your life will make it difficult to follow your life.
If your bank is in one alias, but your driver's license says another name, it will be difficult for friends, family, or claimants to your estate know what belonged to you.
It may also be confusing throughout your life if you have your alias applied to some aspects of your life more than others. You cannot use an alias or a pseudonym to escape debts or crimes.
We may use nicknames or aliases as long as our intent is not to deceive, I would be pretty confident to say. If we do no harm, no setting ourselves up as a catfish, with fake name, faux photo, false gender we would not break the law. Of course there is always the option of legally changing your name, but that's pretty permanent, and the probability of regrets is high. Changing identity certificates such as driver's licenses and passports is always illegal, unless you're a government spy, like James Bond.
Many parents just in fun have signed student papers as cartoon characters, probably, at least I know some who have done so.
0コメント