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Posts Tagged ‘Obituary’

Obituary – Blood To Give (single 2009)

February 16th, 2010 No comments

WoW!!
A new OBITUARY single entitled “Blood To Give”. The track comes off the legendary Florida death metallers’ new album, “Darkest Day”, which is scheduled for release on June 30 via Candlelight Records.
OBITUARY will release a new concert DVD, tentatively titled “Live Xecution In Bad Berka 2008”, in June via Regain Records. The footage for the disc was filmed at last year’s Party.San Open Air festival, which was held August 7-9, 2008 in Bad Berka, Germany.
Enjoy!!

Duration : 0:3:36

Read more…

how can i find out about a homicide from 2003, happened in california.?

January 29th, 2010 2 comments

there was 1 newpaper article of when body was found and the ssi index shows the death with most details missing. cant find any obituary or any arrest record. not even coroner report. its like it never reallly happened. it was a brutal homicide.

after you go to the l library and look in the newspaper archives, copy the name of the officers, and call that police stations general line and ask how you can buy a police report (that is if its not a cold case.)

Performing a Death Records Search Online

December 24th, 2009 No comments

Performing a death records search online is easier than ever before. Public death records have been around for a very long time. In fact, history shows that they are one of the earliest public records ever kept and they were introduced over a hundred years ago. This means people have been keeping records of deaths for a very long time now and continue to do so each and every day. Today, death records are considered part of vital public records along with marriage records, divorce records and birth records. This means that this information is available for anyone from the public to get.

While it has been considered public record for a long time, it wasn’t always so easy to get. You had to go through a lot of “red tape” to get records from the past and you usually had to drive to the actual location of the death to access the records. Today, advancements in the Internet have made all of this a thing of the past. You can now get public death records using the Internet.

This means if you have a computer with a web connection, you can begin searching online for any record of almost anyone who has died in the United States. It’s fast and it’s easy to do. You don’t have to worry that you don’t have a lot of experience with the Internet or that you might not know how to do it. Good databases for these records are easy to use even if you have little or no experience with the Internet or computers. You simply fill out some basic information and allow the search to generate your results.

You can learn a great deal about a person from their death records, especially if there was also an obituary included with the record. You can most often learn the particulars of the deceased and their spouse and you will often learn about their children, parents and other survivors. You may learn about the death, the cause of death, the cemetery of burial and other burial matters.

Death records are important if you are searching for past family history and want to trace your heritage, especially since they often tell the parents, children and other relatives. Death records can sometimes also be helpful in background checks of people still living. Death records can help you in finding a long-lost relative or out of state friend.

Performing a search online takes all the mystery and stress out of finding your death records. You don’t have to worry about traveling to the location of where the death records are physically kept. In fact, you may not even know exactly where the death records are kept. You can begin your online search on nothing more than a single name.

Additionally, it’s all done confidentially from the privacy of your own home. You will never have to identify yourself or answer personal questions about why you want the death records. Because they are public, you have the right to look them up if you want and for whatever reasons you want, as long as they are not used to commit some type of crime.

Rose Quadee
http://www.articlesbase.com/relationships-articles/performing-a-death-records-search-online-705496.html

I need to find a death record/obituary for El Monte, California for my grandfather if anyone knows of anywhere

December 19th, 2009 3 comments

His name is Allan or Allen Shirley. I’m not for sure on the correct spelling. He died in 1985. I’m doing this for my mother so alot of help would be appreciated!
WITHOUT PAYING MONEY! because we all know it’s tight right now!

RootsWeb has a death record data base for California 1940 – 1995. They don’t have one for every state and they don’t have anything later or earlier for California.

http://vitals.rootsweb.com/ca/death/search.cgi

SHIRLEY, ALLEN
B. 02/14/1934 in COLORADO
Mother’s maiden name: MANQUIS
D. LOS ANGELES(19) 04/08/1985
[I don’t know what "(19)" means]

The corresponding SSDI says his LR was El Monte.

That is a death RECORD, not a death Certificate. The Certificate will tell you his mother’s full name and his father’s full name, if the person who supplied the data knew. His SSN application is $27, but he filled it out. 30% of the death certificates I see say "Unknown" for parents. 99% of the SSN applications I see have both parents filled in.

You would have to drive to the county library branch in El Monte, or send them a request and a check, to get the obituary. He was almost certainly not in the LA Times, unless he was famous or infamous. He may have been in the El Monte (News / Herald / Sun / Star) – whatever the local paper is there.

Search Online Public Death Records

December 11th, 2009 7 comments

Dead men tell no tales, but Death Records can sure say a lot. They have come a long way since their humble beginning back at the turn of the 20th century. Today, Public Death Records form the set of Vital Public Records jointly with Birth, Divorce and Marriage Records. Public Records are much like reputation, you own it but you don’t really have a say in it.

The details surrounding the death such as time and place of death, burial and funeral information, personal particulars of the deceased and some degree of his spouse’s, children’s and parents’ are found in people’s Public Death Records. It’s also customary to put up an obituary alongside the death notices especially if the deceased was a distinguished figure in his lifetime and obituaries often show up as part of death records.

Although some of the information contained in Free Government Death Records may be private and confidential to some degree, Death Records are Public Records nevertheless. This means that generally anybody’s death records can be retrieved by any member of the public as long as the required procedures are followed.

Public Death Records are useful in locating out-of-touch friends or relatives, criminal investigation, researching a late person by the attached obituary and tracing family trees. Death Certificates are required for some official and legal undertakings and a good place to look is the deceased’s death records. Public Death Notices are also an invaluable resource for Genealogy and other historical studies.

Different states have different laws governing the access and use of Public Death Records. Furthermore, the death record databases of the various states are not linked. That means if it is not known which state precisely is the subject’s state of residence, a state by state search would have to be conducted in order for the search to be exhaustive. Having that said, records within each state however are uploaded onto a central state repository.

Besides the state office, Public Death Records can also be requested from other local government agencies tasked with the function. Death Records Search can be done through the mail, telephone, fax, in person or online over the internet. As with other public services, Online Death Records is the most popular mode of retrieval and has thus become increasingly available.

Although we can Find Death Records essentially free of charge from public offices, the setback is it usually requires queue and waiting period. The format of records among different agencies is also not standardized so they can be potluck in that sense. For more purposeful searches, people would be better-served with fee-based professional information providers which are abundantly found on all major search engines.

Ben Dave
http://www.articlesbase.com/genealogy-articles/search-online-public-death-records-726729.html

Search Online Public Death Records

December 6th, 2009 7 comments

Dead men tell no tales, but Death Records can sure say a lot. They have come a long way since their humble beginning back at the turn of the 20th century. Today, Public Death Records form the set of Vital Public Records jointly with Birth, Divorce and Marriage Records. Public Records are much like reputation, you own it but you don’t really have a say in it.

The details surrounding the death such as time and place of death, burial and funeral information, personal particulars of the deceased and some degree of his spouse’s, children’s and parents’ are found in people’s Public Death Records. It’s also customary to put up an obituary alongside the death notices especially if the deceased was a distinguished figure in his lifetime and obituaries often show up as part of death records.

Although some of the information contained in Free Government Death Records may be private and confidential to some degree, Death Records are Public Records nevertheless. This means that generally anybody’s death records can be retrieved by any member of the public as long as the required procedures are followed.

Public Death Records are useful in locating out-of-touch friends or relatives, criminal investigation, researching a late person by the attached obituary and tracing family trees. Death Certificates are required for some official and legal undertakings and a good place to look is the deceased’s death records. Public Death Notices are also an invaluable resource for Genealogy and other historical studies.

Different states have different laws governing the access and use of Public Death Records. Furthermore, the death record databases of the various states are not linked. That means if it is not known which state precisely is the subject’s state of residence, a state by state search would have to be conducted in order for the search to be exhaustive. Having that said, records within each state however are uploaded onto a central state repository.

Besides the state office, Public Death Records can also be requested from other local government agencies tasked with the function. Death Records Search can be done through the mail, telephone, fax, in person or online over the internet. As with other public services, Online Death Records is the most popular mode of retrieval and has thus become increasingly available.

Although we can Find Death Records essentially free of charge from public offices, the setback is it usually requires queue and waiting period. The format of records among different agencies is also not standardized so they can be potluck in that sense. For more purposeful searches, people would be better-served with fee-based professional information providers which are abundantly found on all major search engines.

Ben Dave
http://www.articlesbase.com/genealogy-articles/search-online-public-death-records-726729.html