No.
In Louisiana, death certificates are confidential for the first 50 years and not available to the public, but may be requested by a surviving child, spouse, etc ...
You will have to submit a copy of a photo ID or other documentation proving your relationship (like your birth certificate) to vital records at the office of public health along with the proper form and fee. The forms should be available online.
If you believe that there would be a newspaper account of the incident in any one or more of the following newspapers sometime after the dates next to each title, I would be more than happy to download the archived article for you. I would need your moms name and the month and year she was killed.
Advocate, The (Baton Rouge, LA) (1986-Current)
Alexandria Daily Town Talk (LA) (3/29/1999-Current)
Daily Advertiser, The (Lafayette, LA) (11/5/2001-Current)
Daily World (Opelousas, LA) (2/9/2004-Current)
News-Star, The (Monroe, LA) (2/10/1999-Current)
Times, The (Shreveport, LA) (1/1/1999-Current)
Times-Picayune, The (New Orleans, LA) (1989-Current)
2006-10-29 07:55:36
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answer #1
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answered by BoomChikkaBoom 6
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no, it will not be online.
You can contact the police department that did the investigation and get a copy of the police report.
I will assume you already got her death certificate from the state
2006-10-29 16:11:43
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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IM SORRY TO HEAR ABOUT YOUR MOM BUT I DONT KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT THAT.........................................
2006-10-29 15:15:10
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answer #3
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answered by ♥Babe♥ 2
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