8620
. (a) (1) If a parent is seeking to relinquish a child pursuant
to Section 8700 or execute an adoption placement agreement pursuant
to Section 8801.3, the department, county adoption agency, licensed
adoption agency, or adoption service provider, as applicable, shall
ask the child and the child's parent or custodian whether the child
is, or may be, a member of, or eligible for membership in an Indian
tribe or whether the child has been identified as a member of an
Indian organization. The department, county adoption agency, licensed
adoption agency, or adoption service provider, as applicable, shall
complete the forms provided for this purpose by the department and
shall make this completed form a part of the file.
(2) If there is any oral or written information that indicates
that the child is, or may be, an Indian child, the department, county
adoption agency, licensed adoption agency, or adoption service
provider, as applicable, shall obtain the following information:
(A) The name of the child involved, and the actual date and place
of birth of the child.
(B) The name, address, date of birth, and tribal affiliation of
the birth parents, maternal and paternal grandparents, and maternal
and paternal great-grandparents of the child.
(C) The name and address of extended family members of the child
who have a tribal affiliation.
(D) The name and address of the Indian tribes or Indian
organizations of which the child is, or may be, a member.
(E) A statement of the reasons why the child is, or may be, an
Indian.
(3) (A) The department, county adoption agency, licensed adoption
agency, attorney for the prospective adoptive parents, or adoption
service provider shall send a notice, which shall include information
obtained pursuant to paragraph (2) and a request for confirmation of
the child's Indian status, to any parent and any custodian of the
child, and to any Indian tribe of which the child is, or may be, a
member or eligible for membership. If any of the information required
under paragraph (2) cannot be obtained, the notice shall indicate
that fact.
(B) The notice sent pursuant to subparagraph (A) shall describe
the nature of the proceeding and advise the recipient of the Indian
tribe's right to intervene in the proceeding on its own behalf or on
behalf of a tribal member relative of the child.
(b) The department shall adopt regulations to ensure that if a
child who is being voluntarily relinquished for adoption, pursuant to
Section 8700, is an Indian child, the parent of the child shall be
advised of his or her right to withdraw his or her consent and
thereby rescind the relinquishment of an Indian child for any reason
at any time prior to entry of a final decree of termination of
parental rights or adoption, pursuant to Section 1913 of Title 25 of
the United States Code.
(c) If a child who is the subject of an adoption proceeding after
being relinquished for adoption pursuant to Section 8700, is an
Indian child, the child's Indian tribe may intervene in that
proceeding on behalf of a tribal member relative of the child.
(d) Any notice sent under this section shall comply with Section
180.
(e) If all prior notices required by this section have been
provided to an Indian tribe, the Indian tribe receiving those prior
notices is encouraged to provide notice to the department and to the
licensed adoption agency, county adoption agency, or adoption service
provider, not later than five calendar days prior to the date of the
hearing to determine whether or not the final adoption order is to
be granted, indicating whether or not it intends to intervene in the
proceeding required by this section, either on its own behalf or on
behalf of a tribal member who is a relative of the child.
(f) The Legislature finds and declares that some adoptive children
may benefit from either direct or indirect contact with an Indian
tribe. Nothing in the adoption laws of this state shall be construed
to prevent the adopting parent or parents, the birth relatives,
including the birth parent or parents, an Indian tribe, and the
child, from voluntarily entering into a written agreement to permit
continuing contact between the Indian tribe and the child, if the
agreement is found by the court to have been entered into voluntarily
and to be in the best interest of the child at the time the adoption
petition is granted.
(g) With respect to giving notice to Indian tribes in the case of
voluntary placements of Indian children pursuant to this section, a
person, other than a birth parent of the child, shall be subject to a
civil penalty if that person knowingly and willfully:
(1) Falsifies, conceals, or covers up by any trick, scheme, or
device, a material fact concerning whether the child is an Indian
child or the parent is an Indian.
(2) Makes any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement,
omission, or representation.
(3) Falsifies a written document knowing that the document
contains a false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry
relating to a material fact.
(4) Assists any person in physically removing a child from the
State of California in order to obstruct the application of
notification.
(h) Civil penalties for a violation of subdivision (g) by a person
other than a birth parent of the child are as follows:
(1) For the initial violation, a person shall be fined not more
than ten thousand dollars ($10,000).
(2) For any subsequent violation, a person shall be fined not more
than twenty thousand dollars ($20,000).