8919.
(a) To protect the welfare of children, the state shall recognize and give full faith and credit to a foreign adoption decree, so that the rights and obligations of the parties shall be determined as though the order of adoption had been entered by a court of this state, and The state shall recognize as full and final a foreign adoption decree so that the child shall receive United States citizenship pursuant to Section 320.1 of Title 8 of the Code of Federal Regulations, without the need for readoption or any other legal proceeding, if all of the
following are true:(1) The child was born in a foreign country.
(2) The child was not a citizen of the United States at the time of birth.
(3) The child was adopted by a citizen resident of this state in a foreign proceeding in which the adoption was finalized pursuant to the laws of the country from which the child was adopted.
(4) As a result of that foreign adoption, the child was granted lawful entry into the United States as an immediate relative of the adoptive parent or parents.
(b) In order to establish a record by which an adoptee can prove the facts of the foreign adoption that resulted in United States citizenship, each state resident who adopts a child through an intercountry adoption that is finalized in a foreign country shall, within the sooner of 120 60 days of the adoptee’s entry into the United States or the adoptee’s 16th birthday, file a petition to obtain a formal court declaration to domesticate the foreign decree of adoption. adoption and shall provide each adoption agency that
provided the parent with adoption services with a file-marked copy of the petition within five business days of filing.
(c) The petition to domesticate the foreign adoption decree shall be granted if the petitioner supplies the court with copies of all of the following documents:
(1) The foreign decree, order, or certification of adoption that evidences finalization of the adoption in the foreign country.
(2) The child’s foreign birth certificate.
(3) A certified translation of all documents described in this subdivision that are not written in English. The court shall accept the certified translation, if any, that was completed abroad for purposes
of obtaining the child’s visa. visa or passport.
(4) A report from at least one in-home postplacement visit.
(5) A copy of the home study completed as part of the adoption process.
(d) If at the hearing the court denies a
the petition for domestication of the foreign judgment, the court shall summarize its state the reasons for the denial on the record. record, and shall take any actions necessary to protect the health and safety of the child, including, but not limited to, an immediate referral to the county child welfare agency. A denial of the petition, or any party’s failure to file the petition, shall not affect the state’s automatic recognition of the foreign
judgment pursuant to subdivision (a), with all of the attendant benefits of that recognition.
(e) Within 10 business days after domestication of the foreign judgment, the clerk of the court shall submit to the State Registrar the order domesticating the foreign adoption. Upon receipt the State Registrar shall issue a delayed registration of birth in accordance with Section 102600 of the Health and Safety Code that lists the adoptive parent or parents as the child’s legal parent or parents.
(f) (1)If a person who has adopted a child through an intercountry adoption that is finalized in a foreign country fails to complete any
legal process necessary to obtain United States citizenship for the child within one year
file a petition to obtain a court declaration to domesticate the foreign adoption decree within 60 days of the child’s entry into the United States or the child’s 16th birthday, whichever is sooner, any and fails to provide a copy of that petition to each adoption agency that provided the adoption services to the parent, then the adoption agency that placed the child for adoption shall file a petition to domesticate the foreign adoption decree within 90 days of the child’s entry into the United States, and shall provide a file-marked copy of the petition to the adoptive family and to any other adoption agency that provided services to the adoptive family, within five business days of filing. The adoptive parent or parents shall be liable to the adoption agency for all costs and
fees incurred as a result of good faith actions taken by the agency to fulfill this requirement. If the adoption agency fails to file such a petition as required by this subdivision, the State Department of Social Services shall take appropriate disciplinary action against the agency, up to, and including, suspension or revocation of the adoption agency ’s license.
(g) (1) If no petition has been filed to domesticate the foreign adoption decree within 90 days of the child’s entry into the United States, then any interested party may file a petition to domesticate the foreign adoption decree of any adoptee residing in this state. The requirement of standing to file a petition under this subdivision shall
be liberally construed in favor of allowing the action to proceed at any time during the adoptee’s life, whether minority or adulthood, in order to protect the best interests of the adoptee. The court may cause the order domesticating the foreign judgment to be entered nunc pro tunc, and shall also have the authority to join any necessary persons or entities in order to require production of any documents necessary for the court to make the appropriate determination.
(2) For purposes of this section, subdivision,
“interested party” includes, but is not limited to, the adoptee, whether minor or an adult, an adoptive parent, whether acting with or without the consent of the other adoptive parent, a legal guardian or conservator of the adoptee, any relative of the adoptee within the second degree, any adoption agency that provided services to the adoptive family or the adoptee, and any public child welfare agency that has taken the adoptee into protective custody.