Can a non-family member contact (whatever govt department) to find out where somebody (or some body) is interred?
Long story short: find out today that an old friend died two years ago. Have no idea of family connections to ask them…is there a department of whatever that can tell me where a body has been buried/cremated?
I’m asking on behalf of my son who was friends with the young girl when they were both teenagers. (She was the sort-of girlfriend of one of his mates). It seems she went right off the rails, became a street-prostitute, did major drugs, and was for all intents and purposes a lost soul. Her mother was a frequent-flyer at long-stay resorts (jail) and the original boyfriend is also incarcerated.
He’s just really concerned that she died alone in a back lane, and that nobody was there to see her off (so to speak). He feels (unreasonably) responsible for her fate because he lost contact with her, and wants to make amends at her last resting place. And coming from a card-carrying atheist, that’s pretty remarkable.
I remember her as the sweetest, shyest little girl back when she was 16 or so. Troubled fer’ sure, but looking for someone to love her.
Awww, damn, sorry Peter Morris. I should’ve mentioned that I’m not in the US (Australia actually), but I wish that first website was available to us Antipodeans.
In the US there is a Social Security Death Index which will list a person as deceased. I don’t know how timely it is. I would guess you show up there within a year or two after you buy the ranch but I can’t say for sure. I would imagine Oz has something similar.
In the US, no governmental agency (at any level) keeps track of where people are buried (or spread or displayed on a mantle). I doubt that it’s any different in Oz.
Unless they lived all their life in southeast Oklahoma but died in a Texarkana hospital. Or if they never received Social Security benefits because they died before retirement age or for some other reason. Or were in a parallel program such as Railroad Retirement or state-run pension program. Limitations of SSDI
Your best bet would be the health department in the county of death. They should have the death certificate on file, which usually lists the place of interment.
Do you have any mutual friends who might have known any of their relatives? Even if none of them do they might have mutual friends who do and you can just follow the web of relationships until you find someone who knows a living relative.
Do you know if the friend was involved with any past schools, employers, churches, etc.? If you know that they attended the North Side Baptist Church then you could visit the church and see if anyone there knows if the friend was married, had any kids, siblings, or if their parents are still alive.
This. We spread my Dad’s ashes near a local lake where he loved to go. There is no way that anyone in the future could find this information in any government documents.
The OP asked for a government agency that keeps records of burials/cremations. I pointed out that none do. I’m not being technical. I was answering the question posed.
Had we buried my father in Twin Oaks Cemetary in Anytown, USA, the government still wouldn’t have a record of that.