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Norma Tillman From Norma Tillman -- Private Investigator - Author
From:
Norma Tillman -- Private Investigator - Author Norma Tillman -- Private Investigator - Author
For Immediate Release:
Dateline: Nashville, TN
Friday, May 15, 2015

 
Norma TillmanWANTED!!! WOMAN BORN 7-14-1946, UNION COUNTY HOSPITAL, NEW ALBANY, MS.The Search for Marisol HillAdoptees Need to Know Their IdentityBirth Father FoundLiving In Fear of a StalkerVictims of DivorceResearching Your AncestorsFatherless ChildrenAdoption Records - Non-Identifying InformationAdoption Records - Obtaining Identifying InformationThe Rights of Unmarried FathersTennessee Children's Home - Memphis BranchGenealogyMissing Heirs4. Finding A Birth Father - Locating His Date of Birth3. Finding A Birth Father - Name Unknown

tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27386195728048142362015-03-26T00:02:19.931-07:00Norma Tillmannoreply@blogger.comBlogger30125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-32229085860312421962015-03-18T05:06:00.002-07:002015-03-18T05:10:13.432-07:00Searching for a woman who may be an identical twin that was taken at birth and given up for adoption without the knowledge or consent of the mother.  It is possible that this child was given to the Memphis branch of the Tennessee Children's Home Society (TCHS) for adoption.

For many years (1920-1950) Georgia Tann worked both in Mississippi and Tennessee with children who were adopted.  After being run out of Mississippi she became the director of the TCHS in Memphis and it was believed that  in order to have wealth and power she took children from their mothers anyway she could get them and then sold the children.  The children were victims of kidnapping and abuse, and most lived horrible, nightmare lives.  Their birth records and adoption records contained false information and the records were hidden and believed to be destroyed, but in working on many searches I was able to find the missing records.  They do exist even though some of the information contained in them is probably inaccurate or false.

Around 1950 Georgia Tann was under investigation for her adoption scandal but died of cancer before she was prosecuted.  After this investigation new adoption laws and regulations began in Tennessee.

Over the years I have worked on many adoption searches for adoptees and biological families and was hired to research the TCHS for a writer who published an article and a book about the TCHS.  The book was made into a movie.

It is possible that the woman I am seeking may have been one of these children.  Please share this information and if you know of anyone who was born on this date, at this location, please contact me immediately.

At this time I have found 40 women with this date of birth who lived in Mississippi.  Some are deceased, some have moved away, and some are still there.  I am in the process of contacting them.  Only 34 babies were born in Union County, Mississippi in July of 1946 so there is a slim chance that if this person exists, I will be able to find her.


Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-75535371931431847292015-02-28T21:27:00.000-08:002015-02-28T21:27:24.354-08:00Marisol Hill was born in the 1970's and lived in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.  

Gladys Hill was a screenplay writer, actress, and assistant to famous movie director, actor, and screenplay writer John Huston.  John Huston and Gladys Hill lived and worked in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.

John Huston directed 37 movies and was nominated for 15 Academy Awards.  Some of his famous movies were The Night of the Iguana, The Maltese Falcon, The Misfits, The Asphalt Jungle, and The Man Who Would Be King.

Gladys heard about a baby who had been abandoned by her mother and was staying in the home of a woman who had several children.  Gladys visited this home and saw that this baby was being kept in a box under a bed and was malnutritioned.  The woman who was keeping the baby didn't want her and gladly turned her over to Gladys, who took the baby to a doctor.  The doctor admitted the baby to the hospital and Gladys would go to visit the baby every day.  After a while the baby was showing signs of improvement and Gladys took the baby home with her.

Gladys was a divorced woman, 60 years of age, when she began caring for the baby that she named Marisol Hill.  As Gladys became more attached to the baby she referred to her as her daughter.

Marisol was about four years old when Gladys had to go to New York to work on "Annie" and left Marisol in Puerto Vallarta in the care of Maricela Hernandez, the "housekeeper" of John Huston.

Gladys was found dead in her New York hotel room.    It took a few years but finally the court determined that Marisol could inherit part of Glady's estate, but by then no one knew where Marisol was......that is no one would tell.  Apparently Maricela Hernandez knew what happened to her, but would not tell......she did not want Marisol to receive her inheritance.

Maricela Hernandez lived in Beverly Hills, CA and was contacted to ask for help in finding Marisol, but she refused and none of Maricela's family would help either.

Without a trail to follow, sadly, poor Marisol never received her inheritance.Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-81193613902486597332015-02-20T11:16:00.002-08:002015-02-20T11:16:34.292-08:00

Approximately 127,000 children are adopted each year in the U.S.  Adoptees have a need to know their identity.  Only six states have "Open Adoption Records" that allow adoptees to have their records open so they may know their identity, medical history, and heritage.
According to a study committed from the American Academy of Pediatrics, "It is vital for one to know their identity in order to develop normally."  Why aren't courts, adopted parents, lawmakers, and others made aware of this?  Why are adoptees denied the right to their own information?
Shame on the state lawmakers who deny adoptees the right to know their identity or have access to their records.  Because of antiquated laws and lawmakers who don't care or don't understand, adoptees must live with the "unknown" about themselves and this is unfair and unjust.  Adoptees are victims of the law.
And shame on any adopted parent who makes an adoptee feel guilty if they want to know about their biological family. Adoptees are victimized by their adopted parents when this happens.  Many adoptees feel guilty that they want to know their identity and many wait until the adopted parents are deceased to begin searching for their identity or their biological family.  Social workers, adoption agencies, judges, courts, and others should be required to explain to an adopted parent that their child may have a real need to know their identity so the child is not victimized.
Not only is there a need for an adoptee to know their identity but what about a birth parent who may live with guilt and regret over the decision to give up their child for adoption without ever knowing whether their decision was in the child's best interest?  Biological families often have to live with the unknown about the child.  This can be a traumatic experience.
Forcing adoptees to live with the "unknown" is like putting a curse on them.  Obviously they have a real need to know the truth, and regardless of what the truth may be, the truth will "set them free" from the "unknown".
Unless you have experienced being denied the right to information about yourself, you probably don't understand what this feels like and how this can potentially cause someone's life to become out of balance.  In some cases living with the "unknown" is like a cancer eating at you.  It causes a void in your life, and that can lead to your life becoming out of balance.
Adoptees had no choice in the decision for them to be adopted.  They have done nothing wrong and don't deserve to be victimized and punished by uncaring lawmakers.  What is the solution?  I believe nothing will change or be done unless someone takes action by becoming a lobbyist and making your elected officials aware of your concerns.  If no one complains it is assumed that everyone is okay with the laws the way they are.......but if enough people will start a petition, hold town meetings,  and invite lawmakers to listen to their concerns, laws can be changed.....and records can be open and availble to those who need this information.  There are many search and support groups in the country, but not many will actually take action to change the adoption laws of their state.
In the 1980's I became a lobbyist in the state of Tennessee and spent several months talking individually to about 140 lawmakers and explaining my point of view on the adoption laws.  The law was changed after that, but a few years later another group became lobbyists and spent a couple of years convincing the lawmakers to open the records and now Tennessee has some of the best adoption record laws in the country.  This proves that one person can make a difference.  If your state laws are unfair and need to be changed, why aren't you doing something?  If you are affected by these laws and don't do anything to change them, then you are part of the problem.





Norma Tillman
PI License #686
PI Co. License #846
www.NormaTillman.com
NT-007@hotmail.com
 
Norma Tillman
Author/Private Investigator / Speaker
Norma Tillman Enterprises
Hendersonville, TN
615-440-3836

Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-25261237765350884592015-01-17T19:50:00.000-08:002015-01-17T19:50:01.247-08:00It has been a very challenging search, but finally the birth father is found. A few years after his son was adopted the birth father married another woman and had another son and a daughter. He told his wife and children about the son he fathered but never met. He did not know about that son until after he was adopted. It was something he did not forget and something he wanted to share with his family.

Recently I found the birth mother and she met her son for the first time. He asked about the father and was given a name and very little information to work with. The birth father had been in the military and had a fairly common name, which makes it difficult to find him. The birth mother estimated his age and remembered where he was born.

So all I had to work with was a common name, an estimated age, and a state where the father was born. I searched and searched and found many men with that common name, but finally I found the right one.

Over the years I have helped many adoptees find their biological families, and many biological families find adoptees. It is one of the most difficult, challenging, and rewarding searches I have ever worked on. I have learned that there is a real need for an adoptee to know their identity. Their search is not necessarily for a relationship with the biological family, but rather a search for unanswered questions about themselves. In many states adoptees are denied the right to know their identity and many have spent their entire lifetime searching for answers.

It might surprise you to know that there are an estimated 127,000 babies adopted in the U.S. each year. Many are coming from other countries and I am afraid those kids may never be able to trace their identities.

Fathers are often denied rights to their children and this is a separate topic, but one that needs to be addressed, and the laws of many states need to change to allow fathers, adoptees, and biological families the right to obtain information and the right to know the "unknown". Living with the unknown can cause someone's life to become out of balance and it just isn't fair.
Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-46187748448597543712014-11-25T21:09:00.000-08:002014-11-25T21:09:14.921-08:00Recently someone asked me to locate a stalker.  In the 1970's the stalker had threatened her life and made her life so miserable that she moved far away from her hometown in hopes the stalker could not or would not find her.  When she moved, she left all her family and friends behind but now wanted to return home.  She has had some serious medical problems and is now all alone.  Before she can return she needs to know where the stalker is located.

It did not take me long to find a trail of the stalker, but was shocked to find that the stalker died in the 1980's.  The victim of the stalker had been hiding and in fear for many years.  Had she known the stalker was dead, her life could have been different.  She could have returned to her hometown many years ago.  She would have had less stress and maybe avoided a heart attack.  Maybe she was afraid of the unknown or in denial.....but it might have made her life better if she had checked on the whereabouts of the stalker sooner.

When I contacted the victim to tell her the stalker is deceased she was immediately relieved.  She is now planning to return to her hometown and will try to find some old friends.

If you or someone you know is living with the unknown or in fear of someone and you need to know where that person is, regardless of the situation or the outcome, I believe the truth will set you free. Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-49553280784722815922014-10-23T08:54:00.000-07:002014-10-23T08:54:09.195-07:00Sadly in the U.S. 50% of all marriages are ending in divorce and 50% of all children are being raised by a single parent.  50% of these children may never know the absent parent - primarily their father.

Fatherless children are at very high risk of becoming a statistic:

85% will more than likely have a behavioral problem
71% will more than likely become a high school dropout
63% will more than likely commit suicide
70% will more than likely be in a juvenile institution
90% will more than likely run away and become homeless
80% will more than likely commit rape, due to displaced anger
85% will more than likely end up in prison

Here is the problem:
2 out of 5 children in the U.S. do not live with their father.

What is the solution?



Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-51266239927014848542014-10-22T22:53:00.003-07:002014-10-22T22:53:53.524-07:00There is so much information available to trace your ancestors.    The search can be extremely time consuming and is sometimes frustrating, but when you find each piece of your family puzzle it is such a thrill.

Of course not everyone has much information to begin with......especially someone who was abandoned or someone who was adopted and is unable to obtain their identity.

Having a correct name to search for is vital.  Knowing that not everyone spelled their names the same way allows you to search by sound.  Soundex is a coding system that was developed so that you can find a surname even though it may have been recorder under various spellings.

If you are serious about searching for your ancestors you might want to sign up for a subscription to Ancestry.com.  Ancestry.com has some free searches, but more information is available if you are a member or subscriber.

Understand that census records are only released every ten years and the last one released was 1940.  Current census records are not available until they are seventy years old.

The Social Security system was originally The Social Security Act which was signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on 8/14/35.  Taxes were collected for the first time in January 1937 and regular monthly benefits started in January, 1940.  Not everyone paid into Social Security...there were other pension funds for people who worked for the government, people who worked for the railroad, and of course farmers and others who were self-employed may or may not have paid into Social Security.  There is a Social Security master death index available for those who paid into Social Security and their family received a death benefit when they died.  

Finding a death record can be helpful in tracing your ancestors.  It can lead to other information including their survivors.

Giving your family the gift of knowing about their history and ancestors is priceless.  If you have not done this, or don't have time to do this, why not hire a professional to do the search for you?







Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-17221501002579744222014-10-22T22:30:00.002-07:002014-10-23T08:58:03.032-07:00Have you ever thought that there may be a pattern to why kids turn to drugs or alcohol, or why kids have behavioral problems, or why kids run away or drop out of school?  Have you ever thought about crime statistics?  Have you ever heard of a cry for help?  Instead of trying to figure out who to blame for all the problems we need to figure out what to do to prevent the problems.

Some of the main problems with society today stems from the fact that 50% of all marriages are ending in divorce and 50% of all children in the U.S. are being raised by a single parent, and 50% of these children may never know the absent parent - primarily their father.  I don't mean that all children who are raised without a father will have the same problems.  But the chances are more likely that children being raised by a single parent will end up home alone while the parent works. Without a role model, discipline, or supervision, these children will more likely have some serious problems.  Who is teaching them about respect, religion, and responsibility?  Does anyone care what happens to these kids?

Kids don't run away from a happy home.  They run away because they are abused, unloved, or feel unwanted.

These statistics of fatherless children are alarming:

63% - Suicide
85% - Behavioral Problems
90% - Homeless & Runaways
71% - High School Dropouts
80% - Commit Rape due to Displaced Anger
70% - Juvenile Institutions
85% - Prison

Alcohol & Drug Problems
Greater and earlier sexual activity
Boys are more likely to have confused identities
Girls are more likely to become pregnant
Boys have more aggressive behavior
Girls have more anxiety and depression
More antisocial behavior
Poorer educational performance/school suspensions
2 out of 5 children in the U.S. do not live with their father

For information on how to find a father:

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDFXAxAvDEYlcUc7K0SnKxQ/feed

Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-90497392117661221182014-10-22T21:51:00.001-07:002014-10-22T21:55:26.110-07:00
*Norma Tillman is the author of:  "The Adoption Searcher's Handbook".  In the 1990's  she became a lobbyist at the Tennessee Legislature and was successful in having the adoption laws changed, however it was several years later that another group of lobbyists were successful in having new laws for Open Records.  Tennessee is one of six states that now have "Open Records".

Some jurisdictions are more restrictive about the release of information from adoption records. New York, Oklahoma, and Rhode Island require the person seeking non-identifying information to register with the State adoption registry. In Pennsylvania, non-identifying information is available through a 
registry or the court or agency that handled the adoption. Guam requires a party to petition the court before any information can be released.

Non-identifying information generally includes medical and health information about the child and the child’s birth family at the time of the adoptive placement. Alabama, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, and Wyoming statutes allow adoptive parents to request that the State adoption registry contact birth parents when additional health information is medically necessary.  In Georgia, any medical information about the birth family that is received by the department or placing agency must be provided to the adult adoptee.

Child Welfare Information Gateway.
Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-74795333565303171442014-10-22T21:36:00.000-07:002014-10-22T22:02:58.829-07:00
*Norma Tillman is the author of:  "The Adoption Searcher's Handbook".  In the 1990's  she became a lobbyist at the Tennessee Legislature and was successful in having the adoption laws changed, however it was several years later that another group of lobbyists were successful in having new laws for Open Records.  Tennessee is one of six states that now have "Open Records".

REQUESTING IDENTIFYING INFORMATION

Identifying information is information from the disclosure of adoption records or elsewhere that may lead to the positive identification of birth parents, the adopted person, or other birth relatives.

Identifying information may include current or past names of the person, addresses, employment, or other similar records or information. Statutes in nearly all States permit the release of identifying information when the person whose information is sought has consented to the release. (4)

 If consent is not on file with the appropriate entity, the information may not be released without a court order documenting good cause to release the information. A person seeking a court order must be able to demonstrate by clear and convincing evidence that there is a compelling reason for disclosure that outweighs maintaining the confidentiality of a party to an adoption. (5)


(4) New Jersey, the District of Columbia, American Samoa, and Guam require a court
order for release of identifying information. The Virgin Islands requires a court order for
release of information to any person other than the adult adopted person. Statutes in
Puerto Rico require a court order for release of any information from the adoption records
to interested parties.

(5) A compelling reason might include, for example, a serious medical condition requiring
a blood relative or genetic link, or access to medical records.

This article was originally published by the Child Welfare Information Gateway.Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-20329886241927537182014-10-22T21:15:00.002-07:002014-10-22T21:56:05.215-07:00The Rights of Unmarried Fathers

In recent decades, the significant percentage of births to unmarried parents (1) has led to an increased
focus on the fathers of these children. Referred to as alleged, presumed, reputed, or putative fathers, many of them seek recognition of their legal rights and expanded roles in raising their children.

Constitutional Rights

Historically, unmarried fathers have had fewer rights with regard to their children than either
unwed mothers or married parents. Over the past several decades, unmarried fathers have challenged
the termination of their parental rights under the Fourteenth Amendment in cases in which birth
mothers relinquished their children for adoption. In a series of cases involving unmarried fathers, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the constitutional protection of such a father’s parental rights when he has established a substantial relationship with his child. The court found that the existence of a biological link between a child and an unmarried father gives the father the opportunity to establish a substantial relationship, which it defined as the father’s commitment to the responsibilities of parenthood, as demonstrated by being involved or attempting to be involved in the child’s upbringing.(2)

(1) Births to unmarried women have made up more than 40 percent of total U.S. births
each year since 2008 according to the National Vital Statistics Reports from the Centers on
Disease Control and Prevention (see Table C, page 9, at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/
nvsr62/nvsr62_01.pdf).
(2) Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645 (1972); Quilloin v. Walcott, 434 U.S. 246 (1978)

More information:
https://www.childwelfare.gov/systemwide/laws_policies/statutes/putative.cfm

To find statute information (laws) for a particular State, go to:
https://www.childwelfare.gov/systemwide/laws_policies/state/

This article was originally published by the Child Welfare Information Gateway.Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-36812564779741584132013-12-30T21:20:00.004-08:002013-12-30T21:20:34.640-08:00

Adoptee From Black Market Ring Finds Family

Reported By Nancy Amons
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
More than 60 years ago, an adoption scandal rocked the state of Tennessee. In 1950, an adoption agency in Memphis was unmasked as a black market baby seller.

Years later, some of the children who were adopted from the Tennessee Children's Home Society are being reunited with their birth parents. They're finding answers to lingering questions that have haunted them for years: Where did I come from? Do I look like my parents? Do I have brothers and sisters?
Ann Sherman, a 63-year-old woman from New York, had no idea what secrets were about to be revealed when she asked to have her adoption records opened.
She remembers the day her records came in the mail.
"I cried. It was very emotional. When I got the envelope, I held it for half an hour. 'Should I open it? Am I opening a can of worms? Am I opening Pandora's box?'" Sherman said.
The clues in Sherman's adoption file helped private investigator Norma Tillman find Sherman's birth family. They're from the Chattanooga area.
"Ann was the oldest of 10 children by different fathers, and each of the 10 was given up for adoption, except the last one. She kept the 10th child," Tillman said.
The unsealed records show Sherman's adoptive parents in New York were misled. They were told Sherman's parents were high school graduates in their 20s of Jewish heritage. They weren't. They were Baptists, first cousins and 16 years old.
Misleading adoptive parents was a common scam by the Tennessee Children's Home Society. The parents were often wealthy couples from New York and Hollywood.
"It was reported that the babies were $5,000 and up. So these people paid for these children. And that's why they called it a baby-selling racket," Tillman said.
The woman who ran the Tennessee Children's Home in Memphis was Georgia Tann. She died while an investigation was pending. Tann's alleged accomplice was a judge who removed children from their homes and placed them with Tann, according to published reports from the time.
Many poor and illiterate mothers were tricked into giving up their children.
In 1990, Channel 4 News profiled one Nashville mother who said she was misled when she gave up her 5-month-old girl. Lucille Horton, unmarried and uneducated, signed papers she couldn't read.
"She told me it was temporary, for a foster home," Horton told Channel 4 in 1990.
It wasn't temporary. Her baby was sold to a couple in California.
Channel 4 found Horton's daughter in Los Angeles in 1990 and reunited them.
Sherman, the adoptee from New York, is still waiting for her reunion. She's talked on the phone to her biological half-sister, Sophia. They hope to meet in the fall.
For Sherman, the mystery has been solved. She knows where she came from.
"I'm very happy I found my biological family. I had been wondering about them a long time, for 63 years," Sherman said.
Most adoptees, Tillman said, are not looking for a relationship as much as they are looking for their identities.
"It's OK if she meets them; it's OK if she doesn't meet them. She's got her answers now," Tillman said.
Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-91916329304699351542013-11-12T16:27:00.001-08:002013-11-12T16:27:44.122-08:00Finding your ancestors can be a great gift to hand down to your children and grandchildren.  For me it was like a treasure hunt and nothing surprised me more than to learn my maternal great grandmother was listed on the Choctaw Nation in Oklahoma.  I found that my paternal great great grandfather ran a hotel in Illinois and his parents were from Hempstead, NY.  There are many family members that I never knew and I'm anxious to track down their decendents.

Now I want to physically go to those places and see where my ancestors lived.


Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-40863957668698742922013-10-14T22:13:00.004-07:002013-10-18T17:32:51.990-07:00


From the time we are born until after we die the average American citizen will leave a paper trail approximately seven miles long.  There are birth records, marriage records, divorce records, property records, voter records, driver's license, vehicle registration, employment records, credit records, educational records, professional license records, military records, asset records, liens and judgments, deeds, criminal records, utility records, death records, and many other records.

Some records can be accessed online, some records may be requested in writing, some records may be found with a phone call.  Public records are at court houses, libraries, and archive libraries.  Older records may be stored on microfilm and microfiche.  It takes time to search for records.  In some cases the records may be in a database. 

Information brokers purchase public records from various sources and resell the information in a database.  There are many online databases that charge a fee to access information, and no guarantee the information is correct or updated.   It is not uncommon for outdated or incorrect information to be online.  Years ago it was possible to purchase a disk that included every listed phone number in the U.S. 

There is no one source that is going to work on every search, however Ancestry.com is a good source for historical records including census records.  Census records are only available after they are seventy years old, so don't look for current information there. 

I can help find your missing heirs. 

Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-28177853235122996952013-10-02T09:23:00.004-07:002013-10-12T22:49:53.454-07:00


The next piece of information we need is a date of birth and that information can be found on a birth certificate, and that can be found at a state office of Vital Statistics.  The date of birth might also be found on a marriage license or a divorce record, found at local court house.  Those two pieces of information, the marriage license and the divorce record are public information, so you can go into a court house or you may call and ask and they may give you the information on the telephone.   But call first and make sure you know where you are going and what information will be there. 

Finding information can be time consuming and sometimes frustrating.  I have many years of experience and can cut the chase and find him for you if you need help.

Privacy laws protect certain information, but there are many public records available at public libraries, archive libraries, court houses, the internet, and many public offices.  Hiring a professional investigator can save you time and money because they have the knowledge and experience to know how and where to look for information.


Norma Tillmanhttps://plus.google.com/115751578142865836998noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2738619572804814236.post-4892037113038190192013-10-02T09:22:00.001-07:002013-10-12T22:49:07.210-07:00



What if the mother doesn’t know the name of the father or the full name of the father?  What if she only knew his first name, maybe she only saw him one time, one time only and she knew nothing about

Norma Tillman

PI License #686

PI Co. License #846

www.NormaTillman.com

NT-007@hotmail.com

 

News Media Interview Contact
Name: Norma Tillman
Title: Author/Private Investigator / Speaker
Group: Norma Tillman Enterprises
Dateline: Hermitage, TN United States
Direct Phone: 615-440-3836
Main Phone: 615-440-3836
Cell Phone: 615-440-3836
Contact Click to Contact