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The SSDI has where he last resided. He did not die there in Whiteside County Info: Keith E Miller DOB 01/10/1958 DOD 09/21/2005 I need to know where or how he died. Can you help me? I have tried looking for obits but have found none. I have checked in all counties surrounding Whiteside and they have no record of his death. Father name Harold Mother Shirley Both dead.

2007-01-02 11:00:01 · 3 answers · asked by Annaandbrenna 1 in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

3 answers

Hey Anna and Brenna,

You can get a Death Certificate if you know where a person died. If not, you can do an Obituary Search. Death Certificates are issued by the town, City, County and transferred to the state. So, you should be able to get a Death Certificate from the state (which you did not mention). The Vital Record site below allows you to specify the State, then you follow the process to order the record. A death certificate would give the cause of death too.

Also, the Family Search site lists people by name, there are 19 entries but none with 9/21/2005. You should look there also.

2007-01-02 12:15:05 · answer #1 · answered by BuyTheSeaProperty 7 · 3 0

Get a No Cost Background Check Scan at https://biturl.im/aU3WB

Its a sensible way to start. The site allows you to do a no cost scan simply to find out if any sort of data is in existence. A smaller analysis is done without cost. To get a detailed report its a modest payment.

You may not realize how many good reasons there are to try and find out more about the people around you. After all, whether you're talking about new friends, employees, doctors, caretakers for elderly family members, or even significant others, you, as a citizen, have a right to know whether the people you surround yourself with are who they say they are. This goes double in any situation that involves your children, which not only includes teachers and babysitters, but also scout masters, little league coaches and others. Bottom line, if you want to find out more about someone, you should perform a background check.

2016-05-30 22:56:12 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Many states will search for a death even if you don't know exactly when or where they died (but has to be in that state). If you know enough other info about them (birth date, names of parents, etc) they can find them if they died within 3-5 years (different states will search different number of years for the fee). I'd try to get his death certificate through the state. I don't think you mentioned which state he died in. Here's a list of info for states vital records: http://www.geocities.com/heartland/hills/6354/Vital-Records.html/

2007-01-03 04:54:33 · answer #3 · answered by MIGirl 3 · 0 0

See - https://tr.im/BackgroundChex

2016-12-10 15:57:42 · answer #4 · answered by josh 3 · 1 0

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