LD 1851
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Page 18 of 90 An Act To Implement the Recommendations of the Family Law Advisory Commission w... Page 20 of 90
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LR 2675
Item 1

 
may consent to an acknowledgement of paternity by a man who may
indeed be her child's genetic father, but is not her husband. Under
the new UPA, the mother's husband is the presumed father of the
child, see § 204, supra. By ignoring the real possibility that the
child will have both an acknowledged father and a presumed father,
Congress left it to the states to sort out which of the men should
be recognized as the legal father.

 
Further, PRWORA does not require that a man acknowledging
paternity must assert genetic paternity of the child. Section 301
is designed to prevent circumvention of adoption laws by
requiring a sworn assertion of genetic parentage of the child.

 
Sections 302-305 clarify that, if a child has a presumed
father, that man must file a denial of paternity in conjunction
with another man's acknowledgment of paternity in order for the
acknowledgement to be valid. If the presumed father is unwilling
to cooperate, or his whereabouts are unknown, a court proceeding
is necessary to resolve the issue of parentage.

 
Congress also directed that the acknowledgment can be
"rescinded" within a particular timeframe, and subsequently can
be "challenged" without stating a timeframe. Those procedures are
dealt with in §§ 307-309.

 
Finally, the related issue of issuance or revision of birth
certificates is left to other state law.

 
§1851.__Acknowledgment of paternity

 
The mother of a child and a man claiming to be the genetic
father of the child may sign an acknowledgment of paternity with
intent to establish the man's paternity.

 
Comment

 
(This is section 301 of the UPA.)

 
Source: 42 U.S.C. § 666(a)(5)(C), see preceding Comment and
Appendix: Federal IV-D Statute Relating to Parentage, infra.

 
PRWORA does not explicitly require that a man acknowledging
parentage necessarily is asserting his genetic parentage of the
child. In order to prevent circumvention of adoption laws, § 301
corrects this omission by requiring a sworn assertion of genetic
parentage of the child. A 2002 amendment provides that a man who
signs an acknowledgment of paternity declares that he is the
genetic father of the child. Thus both the man and the mother
acknowledge his paternity, under penalty of perjury, without
requiring the parents to spell out the details of their sexual


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