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How do you legalize teenager alien found in the barn?

LupusDei 🚫

The general problem is indifferent to the extraneous person's origin, as long as the truth about it can't or shouldn't be used/revealed, but...

Suppose, a group of teenagers see a meteorite hit the ground and find an alien pod. They move it into one guy's barn. One way or another they interact with the pod; the pod grows and eventually use their DNA to birth what is essentially a group's daughter, who emerges as a fully formed teenage girl, the rest then wither into dust. For at least any superfluous examination she's a human, at least bodily.

If I would be writing this, I would make her a militant nudist just for kinks, and perhaps make very persuasive/manipulative (her true motivations forever suspect), but wouldn't endow her with any fully fledged telepathy or mind control powers, at most maybe suggestive influence upon skin to skin contact. Even as the pod should have some such to some extent, as it needs that to extract as a minimum language skills from the support group (and why not then the rest of their knowledge base and wider understanding of the world to an extent).

The lead guy is of course smitten by the alien girl, and the rest of the group adores her too, and there's of course valid question of how much under her influence they are.

That's all good, but there's the pesky problem, our new girlfriend can't forever live in the barn. At some point she has to be introduced to the parents. It would be fun to even take her to school, right under the nose of shadowy government(?) agents that may or may not be lurking around. But then she should be recognized as a person and gain some documentation upon her.

A possible cop out could be if she took appearance of a missing kid, presumed dead, or otherwise pretended to be a relative (what she somewhat is, technically), but either comes with it's own can of worms and requires a tailored pretext.

(Yes, I'm taking loosely inspiration from a movie titled Encounter, but that was... well if anything, it ended right where it became interesting, even if impossible to resolve in a not totally terrible way, and the take as described above has little resemblance left.)

CB 🚫

@LupusDei

Government part is easy. Take her to Texas and have her wade across the Rio Grande and back. After that the government will not do squat.

Dominions Son 🚫

@LupusDei

If you were talking about an alien in the legal sense (a human from a foreign country) there is a legal process for this, but of course lots of lawyers would be involved. It would also require appropriate documentation from the alien's home country.

Is this set in the US or another country with birthright citizenship?

Your description makes the alien sound like some kind of clone, so technically she was born there in the barn.

In this case, she's already technically legal, all you should really need to obtain is a birth certificate that reflects her apparent age to deal with cases where official documentation is required.

This could involve either someone who forges official documents for a living or bribing an appropriate government official (Someone in the county clerk's office in the US).

Replies:   LupusDei
LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Your description makes the alien sound like some kind of clone,

Only in the technically wrong but often used meaning of "clone" == "adult born," she's not a copy of anything, but creative and possibly fine tuned recombination having between two and six parents (it might be fun if she's primary daughter of two guys).

so technically she was born there in the barn.

In this case, she's already technically legal,

That's an interesting take, and true, technically. The only nitpicky detail that she was born from a stone scaled pineapple that fell out of the sky, so we do not go around advertising that, upon credible fear from agencies potentially wanting to dissect her.

Ideally we don't even say mom she's a grandma (ETA: and besides the newborn's word, the teenagers wouldn't have immediate means to prove that either, of course).

Remus2 🚫

@LupusDei

Much depends on what country you want this to happen in. At its root, legal citizenry is a construct of a countries laws. That construct amounts to words printed on recognized documents and electronic records of that country. More so the electronic these days. No citizen exist in a modern country that doesn't have a trail of records behind them. Birth certificates, school records, immunizations, so forth. Paper records only exist to initiate and support the electronic records these days. In theory the legal construct can exist without the paper.
Creating that trail would be the first step. If it exist, every agency that looks into the person later will assume the rest exist, even if they cannot find it. Cognitive dissonance will assure that. Conversely, if the trail doesn't exist, it's more likely those agencies would not believe drivers license, passports, etc are legitimate.

Replies:   LupusDei
LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@Remus2

Conversely, if the trail doesn't exist, it's more likely those agencies would not believe drivers license, passports, etc are legitimate.

Yup, for example locally here nobody trust physical driver's license as a legal document per se, the cop is supposed to call home and verify it on the system every time. That creates a practice you don't really need to carry it if happen to have any other picture ID on you (including not only passport* or the state ID card but slso student's card and even Riga city public transit ticket card) and the existence of driver license is verified on the network. It was already practiced unofficially upon goodwill of the cop, recently there was a motion to make it officiall in law, but I actually don't know what stage that is. Funny enough, I know a pair of twins who abused this for almost a year while only once of them had a driver's license. Well, if they got into some shit in two different parts of country simultaneously there could be additional shit though.

*pasports are rarely carried, but legally mandatory to possess and potentially shockingly for you Americans, a physical passport here is the only legal document for voting, and you get a fat, through-the-page-soaking wet stamp in the notes section of that to testimony you did, with a number, and different color each time. That system was introduced for the independence referendum from Soviet Union in environment of total distrust (both sides had credible suspicions it would be cheated or attempted to fix) even despite fears the mere participation could potentially be reason for repressions, and stuck at that since.

But well, I was rather thinking about it happening somewhere superficially resembling US. Although it's not necessarily so, that's where alien hunting government agencies are more prevalent in fiction.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 🚫

@LupusDei

but legally mandatory to possess and potentially shockingly for you Americans, a physical passport here is the only legal document for voting,

Not really shocking to me. I would support such a standard here, but I'm not holding my breath for it to happen. An effort like that would cause a general meltdown for multiple groups here.

irvmull 🚫

@LupusDei

The idea that a trail of records is available for every citizen is incorrect.

Nevertheless, a number of senior citizens often find out that their birth record was not duly filed with a vital records clerk after they attempt to obtain a certified copy of their birth certificate when applying for a passport or Real ID.

In other instances, people researching their ancestors cannot find their birth certificate and are met with a "no record found" when they order a birth certificate. Often, the necessary paperwork was not done for these birth records to be correctly registered.
-usbirthcertificates.com

Therefore, there are several ways to obtain one long after the birth.

One could claim that their grandparents and parents were "hippies" who dropped out way back in the '60's, and since they were all dead now, you want to return to "society".

A few forged documents or an elderly neighbor who "remembered" when you were born would serve as proof. An entry in the old "family bible" would be one acceptable piece of evidence, as would a record of birth on a now-deceased country doctor's letterhead.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 🚫

@irvmull

The idea that a trail of records is available for every citizen is incorrect.

As said before, it depends on the country. Any western country will have a trail for a young person as noted in the OP. School records at a minimum.

Replies:   irvmull
irvmull 🚫
Updated:

@Remus2

Home school. No records required, since no one outside the family knew of the birth.

It happens more frequently than I would have thought, since every state in the US has a list of ways to apply for and to validate a person's birth status without a birth certificate.

Remus2 🚫

@irvmull

Home school. No records required, since no one outside the family knew of the birth.

Have you ever actually home schooled anyone? Every state requires testing/records. We home schooled our son, there was most definitely records required.

Replies:   irvmull
irvmull 🚫

@Remus2

You just don't get it.

If a birth is not registered, exactly how do you think the state is going to require testing? They don't know the kid exists.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 🚫
Updated:

@irvmull

You just don't get it.

If a birth is not registered, exactly how do you think the state is going to require testing? They don't know the kid exists.

Actually, you're not understanding in context of the OP. No records = no legalization. I'll take your lack of response to mean you have not ever home schooled anyone.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@Remus2

Actually, you're not understanding in context of the OP. No records = no legalization.

It doesn't matter if they are no records, if they were born in the US, they are legally a citizen, no legalization required.

The only record needed is a birth certificate.

And what irvmull is describing happens, just not as frequently as he thinks.

Still today occasionally there are cases where anti-government parents deliberately conceal the birth of a child from the official records, home school with no records as you describe, the state can't require testing of a child that they don't know exists.

This tends to happen with anti-government people in highly rural states who are living on homesteads, possibly off grid.

The child is still 100% a legal US citizen. There is no requirement for legalization in such cases.

In the OP situation, the "alien" was technically born in the US. The only real documentation requirement is to obtain an official birth certificate. This can be difficult, but it's not impossible.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 🚫
Updated:

@Dominions Son

And what irvmull is describing happens, just not as frequently as he thinks.

I never said it didn't happen. It is however very rare.

As for technically being born here, the OP never specified America as the country of origin, therefore you've assumed. Given the original poster is from Latvia, that's an illogical assumption.

The story could be based in numerous different countries, all with their own peculiarities regarding citizenry and documentation thereof. I would expect in a former Soviet state for that to be especially true.

Since he's here asking the question, it's a logical assumption for it to be any native English speaking country, of which there are many. The American centric responses may or may not even apply.

ETA

But well, I was rather thinking about it happening somewhere superficially resembling US. Although it's not necessarily so, that's where alien hunting government agencies are more prevalent in fiction.

America is not the only place with such efforts. Canada, U.K. for instance both have their own variations of that.

Replies:   Dominions Son  joyR  LupusDei
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@Remus2

I never said it didn't happen. It is however very rare.

Agreed.

Since he's here asking the question, it's a logical assumption for it to be any native English speaking country, of which there are many. The American centric responses may or may not even apply.

My reply is dependent on birthright citizenship.

The US is not the only country with birthright citizenship, it's not even the only English speaking country with birthright citizenship.

joyR 🚫

@Remus2

As for technically being born here, the OP never specified America as the country of origin, therefore you've assumed. Given the original poster is from Latvia, that's an illogical assumption.

Since he's here asking the question, it's a logical assumption for it to be any native English speaking country, of which there are many.

Why is the second a logical assumption?

Just because the OP is asking the question here does not mean the story is set in an English speaking country, only that the story would probably be written in English. I've known authors to write stories and post them in different languages to different sites.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@joyR

Just because the OP is asking the question here does not mean the story is set in an English speaking country, only that the story would probably be written in English.

The OP is not a native English speaker, as he's admitted several times. But some people need a piece of 2 by 4 to educate them ;-)

AJ

Replies:   joyR
joyR 🚫

@awnlee jawking

I don't need a 2x4, I'll just use your cock...

:)

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@joyR

I don't need a 2x4, I'll just use your cock...

:)

2 by 4 is supposed to be in inches, not millimetres :-(

AJ

LupusDei 🚫

@Remus2

I probably wasn't clear not considering how the word "alien" is actually used. My concern about "authorities" is less about immigration services but rather Men in Black types, and that's what US with their alphabet soup agencies are famous for to be a plot point in an extraterrestrial landing story.

Replies:   Remus2  Radagast
Remus2 🚫

@LupusDei

My concern about "authorities" is less about immigration services but rather Men in Black types, and that's what US with their alphabet soup agencies are famous for to be a plot point in an extraterrestrial landing story.

ET hacking into government servers to manipulate the data has been used before. It would be easy enough to insert that in to make here legal.

Replies:   LupusDei
LupusDei 🚫

@Remus2

Out on herself she may be better at hacking brains than computer networks. One can be a tool for the other, if she can be maneuvered to have skin to skin contact with the right guy or girl (s)he may be willing suddenly to do almost anything for her. Or alternatively, if one of her initial donors had applicable skills already, perhaps they can link again and create a mini hive mind to enhance that. Or even combination therefore somewhere.

But I think it's important to not make her appear all powerful demigodesses succubus even if she might be or become one over time.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 🚫

@LupusDei

There had to be an alien intelligence behind her creation. Does that intelligence just dissappear upon her bodies creation?

Radagast 🚫

@LupusDei

Larry Correia used a variation as part of the world building for his Monster Hunter universe. Monsters / undead could be declared 'legally human' and taken off the kill-on-sight list if they served a term in three letter agency black ops.

Dominions Son 🚫

@irvmull

It happens more frequently than I would have thought, since every state in the US has a list of ways to apply for and to validate a person's birth status without a birth certificate.

Actually it's more often a problem for older people not because of home schooling and stuff like that but because these records (Birth Certificates) are still today primarily maintained on paper at the county level.

People lose their personal copies and then go to get a fresh copy from the county clerk's office only to find out that the official records were lost when the county clerks office moved 5 years back or were destroyed when the county clerk's office burned down.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@irvmull

It happens more frequently than I would have thought, since every state in the US has a list of ways to apply for and to validate a person's birth status without a birth certificate.

If we're talking modern day times in the US, then even without a birth certificate, children still have to have a social security number to be claimed as an exemption.

So if you've got a 14 year old, she's GOT to have a paper trail in the US. Whether it's her SSN, or her paperwork from the orphanage.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

So if you've got a 14 year old, she's GOT to have a paper trail in the US. Whether it's her SSN, or her paperwork from the orphanage.

Is that true? I thought I'd heard stories of kids growing up in cult compounds totally off the radar of the authorities because there were no records of their birth or education or health or dental treatment.

AJ

Dominions Son 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

If we're talking modern day times in the US, then even without a birth certificate, children still have to have a social security number to be claimed as an exemption.

So if you've got a 14 year old, she's GOT to have a paper trail in the US. Whether it's her SSN, or her paperwork from the orphanage.

Not if you are an anti-government nut living off-grid in a remote rural area. Then you may have no taxable income, so no need to claim an exemption for your undocumented children.

Replies:   joyR
joyR 🚫

@Dominions Son

Not if you are an anti-government nut living off-grid in a remote rural area. Then you may have no taxable income, so no need to claim an exemption for your undocumented children.

True

Which only leaves the age issue. If the alien is claiming to be less than 18 then it's likely to be off to a care home. To stay with the group and avoid that it's best to claim 18+

Replies:   LupusDei
LupusDei 🚫

@joyR

If the alien is claiming to be less than 18 then it's likely to be off to a care home.

That's the main hurdle that may deter from seeking the fully legal way.

She has a genetically provable relation to a family -- or several, to choose from, but making it count may not be trivial, perhaps. Making her direct part of one (like the shadow twin suggestion) may be an option, but may drive unwanted attention. Why someone, otherwise normal would keep one of their children undocumented? Rather, she's some kind of wayward cousin, ostensibly. Getting it all through formalities for adoption may be a problem still I imagine.

She might claim to be runaway from a non-existent, wholly invented branch of one of the families, or one of the families could have one suitable (in a tailored pretext approach), apparently supposedly cult or off-grid anti-government crazies. Something like that might be easier to sell to the families in the first place, even if it later doesn't stand for scrutiny

Also could explain why she should be worried about authorities.

The question is partially attempt of assessment, what appears to be less risky, to stay fully underground (what may be suboptimal for other reasons for the explorer), attempt to get a forged identity, or attempt to legalize trough official channels.

Even if the last may be most visible, it may be actually least suspicious if done right while the MiB types lurking may not yet be looking around for apparent humans popping into existence. That may change if one of the other pods they collected hatch a human too. Getting her legalized is partially excercise in trying to insure against her being screened for when something like that happens.

joyR 🚫

@LupusDei

There are a number of solutions, some already detailed.

If your alien was closed enough in looks to one of the girls then they could share one identity, perhaps take turns going to school etc.

You already stated that knowledge was transferred so it would be possible for the alien and her lookalike to fool others.

Once established thy could even present themselves as twins with very similar names, close enough to get a 'typo' corrected on an official document etc.

Mushroom 🚫

@LupusDei

A possible cop out could be if she took appearance of a missing kid, presumed dead, or otherwise pretended to be a relative (what she somewhat is, technically), but either comes with it's own can of worms and requires a tailored pretext.

Part of that would also depend on when it was written.

At one time, it was fairly easy to make a new identity simply by Looking through the newspaper, and finding a child that had died at about the time you wanted your "birthday" to be. Then you simply sent off for a copy of the birth certificate, and use that to get Social Security card and everything else to make a new "person".

But it just does not work that way anymore. Today, birth and death certificates are linked in databases, so if you try that they will immediately know that somebody is trying to create a fake identity and it will be flagged.

Also before the IRS required the social security numbers for everybody claimed as a dependent (even children), most did not even bother to get one until they were ready to start working in their late teens. But today, almost everybody over the age of 1 has one.

I got around that in one story by having the character go to Former Yugoslavia. A lot of records were destroyed during the conflict, and they just slipped into a refugee camp and claimed to be a new person.

Replies:   blackjack2145309  Remus2
blackjack2145309 🚫

@Mushroom

I got around that in one story by having the character go to Former Yugoslavia. A lot of records were destroyed during the conflict, and they just slipped into a refugee camp and claimed to be a new person.

I actually kind of like this idea, and i'll have to remember the premise.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom 🚫

@blackjack2145309

I actually kind of like this idea, and i'll have to remember the premise.

It is also accurate to real life today. Where a lot of people involved in terrorism are trying to slip through such detection by claiming to be refugees and having a fabricated background that is not who they really are. Knowing that any records to say that such a person as they are claiming to be does not exist is not there.

A lot of war criminals did exactly that after WWII also. Denying their involvement in some of the worst SS units, claiming they were just soldiers knowing that most records that said otherwise were destroyed in the war.

In fact, in "Disco Vampire", I had the main character explain how they were able to hide and make new identities every few decades for over 50 years. First with the death certificate trick,

Oh, back then it was easy. You go to the library, and start searching the obituaries. No, we do not kill people. You go through the papers, looking for a child that had died young. Around 4 or 5 is best. Even best, where the entire family had died. You take the information, and file for a copy of the birth certificate. In this case, it was Nancy Gail Harrison. She was born in 1969, and had died with her mom and dad in 1972 in a car crash. Get the birth certificate, get a Social Security Card, and move and set up a new life. It was just that simple.

Then later:

You see, in three weeks I am flying back to Croatia, where they are already making me a new identity. Yes, it is harder now than it used to be, all the security measures. But thankfully this pandemic has also made it easier, as less notice when we do move, and when I come back I simply say that is why I moved.

Oh, the easiest was probably my second one. By that time Yugoslavia had already imploded, and I flew to Italy and went to a refugee camp. That time I did not even need to fake the birth certificate, I just gave them the name I wanted to use when I arrived as a refugee, and a birthdate. I got all the paperwork created for me based on what I told them, and after being in the camp for about 9 months I applied for a maternal aunt to be my sponsor, and got an entry visa for the US.

Being a vampire that never aged meant making a new identity regularly. Closing right before making a new one, and using the strife in the old Soviet Union and underground connections to do the same thing.

This time? I have not decided, actually. With all that is going on in Europe right now, I might just stay there. Well, both Russia and the Ukraine have lots of opportunities to start over, and a lot of girls there reinvent themselves.

Who knows, I might even throw myself in as a mail order bride. That would certainly be an interesting way to return to the US, but I would have to then fool whoever my husband would be, as I would likely be older than he is.

Of course, I actually had the narrator born in the Free State of Trieste. An actual country created after WWII, then dissolved over a decade later and the land turned over to Italy and Yugoslavia. So although she had not lived there in years, she knew enough to blend in for that purpose.

Remus2 🚫
Updated:

@Mushroom

Agreed. Temporal placement would be important, especially prior to 1990.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@LupusDei

If you made a model of them out of plastic bricks, that would be legolizing them ;-)

Sorry, shaggers old chap - you snooze, you lose.

AJ

blackjack2145309 🚫

@LupusDei

Well since we're talking about the subject of false identification. One scam i always liked involved a "crooked" cemetery operation collect IDs of the people they bury with the right profile and make their bodies disappear and sell the identity. Which has been featured here and there, most prominently in the US version of "Being Human."

Replies:   LupusDei  Mushroom
LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@blackjack2145309

Kind of fat chance with a teen. Make a kid suicide or accident death appear to just been a run away? Might help with establishing history, but not necessarily with adoption in the new family. There's then the problem with matching the dead kid's profile and such a scenario may gather unwanted visibility if noticed. A genuine street child with not much data points of their unremarkable existence maybe. With a bit of handwaving may be useful.

Mushroom 🚫

@blackjack2145309

Well since we're talking about the subject of false identification. One scam i always liked involved a "crooked" cemetery operation collect IDs of the people they bury with the right profile and make their bodies disappear and sell the identity. Which has been featured here and there, most prominently in the US version of "Being Human."

Which until 2001 was basically how it was commonly done.

But after 9/11, they cracked down on that very quickly. All birth and death certificates linked. That is why in almost all cases now if you apply for a birth certificate for somebody that is already dead, they put a stamp on it indicating they are deceased (and a similar entry in all other databases from social security to drivers licenses). So it can no longer be used to create a new identity.

Replies:   blackjack2145309
blackjack2145309 🚫

@Mushroom

I admit you have a valid point, but i thought it would be all a matter of paperwork.....

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom 🚫

@blackjack2145309

I admit you have a valid point, but i thought it would be all a matter of paperwork

Before 2001, it was. I will neither confirm nor deny that I once had a fully legal second identity, complete with social security card and state issued ID card.

Back in the 1980's and before it was child's play. When they started to computerize the systems in the 1990's it got harder. After 2001 it was suddenly almost impossible.

Today, when somebody dies, their information is flagged in all systems to reflect that. There are also many cases of people who are alive but declared dead having their lives turned into a nightmare because of that. Passports, licenses, even real estate and bank accounts frozen because according to the system, they are dead.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@LupusDei

Coming in late (and not bothering to read the other 40 comments, this arises in my latest story, though the aliens aren't found in a barn. Instead, they arrive in their own warship, which is so much more advanced than any craft created on Earth, the various world governments can't even pick it out of the sky. So, of course, when a human previous chased by the U.S. government because he was trying to rescue crashed aliens returns with them, he's accepted as defacto foreign diplomat since the aliens won't weigh in since he's trying to convince them to give the humans a second chance (not to mention that, if they tried to limit his interactions, the aliens would most likely intervene on his behalf).

Granted, this option won't work with most stories, but it's a nice way to dance around the typical 'these people have no legal identification' issues. Beyond that, if the given alien is basically humanoid, getting a fake ID (say by researching who's died in the local community around the same time they were born) is your best options, since illegal aliens have been using that approach since time immemorial!

But the 5-year old precursor to my new story had the protagonist, with the help of his teenage friends, discover a sick shipwrecked alien, and they then seek to find the rest of his comrades before the authorities can track them down, so they spend most of the book trying to hide them in a variety of placesβ€”though of course, that's why the protagonist was eventually forced to abandon Earth and return with the aliens once they were able to reactivate their ship.

Thus, if you want to do it legally, it essentially requires an act of Congress (in the U.S.), otherwise they best they can do is to either hide him or conceal his non-human status.

irvmull 🚫
Updated:

@LupusDei

"It would be fun even to take her to school..."

The law guarantees undocumented students a free public education. The right to public education is for kindergarten through 12th grade. It terminates at the age of 21. Your child's immigration status does not matter for their school enrollment.

School Districts can't inquire about your child's immigration status. They can't use any documents that require legal residency when enrolling your child in school.

You do not need a Social Security number to enroll in school. To give a school your Social Security number is voluntary. If you don't provide a Social Security number a school cannot punish you. They cannot deny a child enrollment. They cannot deny a child any services or benefits. That is against the law. An undocumented student has a right to the same services and benefits as all other students.

- https://www.illinoislegalaid.org/legal-information/my-right-school-enrollment-undocumented-immigrant

Understandably, many "undocumented immigrants" - especially children - are just that: undocumented.

The country they come from may have no records, or be so war-torn or corrupt that "legal documentation" is meaningless.

And she can later apply for a taxpayer ID and a driver's license as well - without documentation, in many states.

So basically, this is a non-problem - there are about 1.1 million undocumented minors in the US currently, and those "shadowy government agents" aren't looking for them.

Replies:   Dominions Son  LupusDei
Dominions Son 🚫

@irvmull

What you quoted is specific to the state of Illinois. It may well be different in other states.

LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@irvmull

Thanks. In unrelated way I was wondering if a parent going to US for work could bring a child along and send to school, and supposed it should be possible. This clear it up as definitely so, no questions asked, at least in Illinois case.

If I ever get around to trying to write the space alien scenario... for now I kind of like the angle with her being pretended to be a runaway child from real or made up weirdo off-grid branch of one or two of the families of her support group.

Thus home born and home schooled till now, totally undocumented, and perhaps supposedly suffered some domestic violence, and need to hide from them (who will never seek her), but don't want police involved if it can be at all avoided (and thus the need to live with the guy who's may not be her supposed relative (although actually her father)).

The convoluted backstory that might not stand real scrutiny wouldn't be even a bug. It could showcase her persuasive power or blow up just for the fantastic truth to not be believed any either. But if she can go to school as just someone's cousin no questions asked, she can blend in either way.

That she has no legal guardian, just someone who pretended to be, may be a problem though?

Documents needed for school enrollment checklist

School districts must ask for a certified copy of a birth certificate within 30 days of enrolling your child. If a birth certificate is unavailable, then other proof of the child's identity and age is required. If you cannot provide a birth certificate, you will have to make a sworn statement explaining why the birth certificate can't be produced.

Schools can require proof of immunizations prior to enrollment. A list of the required immunizations can be found at the Illinois State Board of Education website.

Schools will also ask you to show documents with both your name and your address to prove residency. Schools can't require any one specific document.

...

A notarized affidavit from the parent or adult who lives with the child stating that the child eats and sleeps at the residence.

An Illinois State Board of Education affidavit can also be used as proof of residency.

(emphasis mine)

Although it seems to be implied in the language, nothing there seems to explicitly state that the person enrolling the child in school has to prove to be the child's parent or legal guardian.

Rather, it almost seems like the school wouldn't even necessarily weird out even learning she's currently living with her aunt's friends, as long as the adults go along with her legend.

irvmull 🚫
Updated:

@LupusDei

One thing to remember about US public schools: every student = cash (about $15,000 per year)

It's not in the school's best interest to find reasons to turn down a prospective student.

They are likely to overlook small problems like a lack of all the proper paperwork.

School officials are unlikely to be charged with any crime for allowing a student into school. The alternative is possible lawsuits, angry parents, bad publicity, and losing $15,000.

The choice is easy.

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