Today, 1 July 2025, is a day of infamy in Indiana as the state legislature quietly enacted legislation restricting public access to birth and stillbirth records for 99 years—effectively sealing documents that genealogists, historians, and adoptees have long relied on to understand family histories and personal origins.
The bill’s sponsor? State Representative Gregory W. Porter.
On the surface, this might appear to be just another privacy-minded law. But scratch just a bit beneath—and a troubling pattern begins to emerge. Rep. Porter not only introduced the bill that passed, but he also authored an earlier version in January 2024 that died in committee. That persistence—combined with his background as he purportedly claims to be a Christian—might suggest strong moral conviction. But public records raise a different, more complicated possibility.
In May 2011, the obituary of George Warfield listed Gregory Porter as his son, while also naming stepsons and multiple relatives. In July 2024, S. Carmen Porter’s obituary—Porter’s mother—listed him again, alongside her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Together, these notices don’t just provide names. They hint at relationships that genealogists might recognize as misaligned: inconsistencies in surnames, generational overlaps, and unclear biological links. It's the kind of thing we encounter every day in family research—and often, the kind of thing that becomes clearer when public records are available.
But under HB1148, those very records are sealed.
Here’s the ethical problem: it appears that the person most eager to restrict access to historical birth records may have personal motivations for doing so. He may have been shielding sensitive information not just about constituents—but about himself. That matters, especially when legislative actions have statewide consequences. It's hard not to wonder whether this was about protecting Hoosiers—or protecting his legacy.
As genealogists, we don’t dig into family histories to shame people. We do it to understand them. But when lawmakers close off records that belong to all of us for reasons that appear to benefit only some of us, it’s our job to say: this is not acceptable.
Privacy has its place. But so does accountability. Here are the Indiana legislators who voted Yea for HB1148:
Sen. Alexander, Scott [R]
Sen. Alting, Ronnie J. [R]
Sen. Baldwin, Scott A. [R]
Sen. Bassler, Eric S. [R]
Sen. Becker, Vaneta G. [R]
Sen. Bohacek, Mike [R]
Sen. Bray, Rodric D. [R]
Sen. Brown, Elizabeth "Liz" M. [R]
Sen. Buchanan, Brian [R]
Sen. Buck, James "Jim" R. [R]
Sen. Busch, Justin [R]
Sen. Byrne, Gary [R]
Sen. Carrasco, Cynthia "Cyndi" E. [R]
Sen. Charbonneau, Ed [R]
Sen. Clark, Brett [R]
Sen. Crider, Michael "Mike" R. [R]
Sen. Deery, Spencer R. [R]
Sen. Dernulc, Daniel "Dan" E. [R]
Sen. Donato, Stacey [R]
Sen. Ford, J.D. [D]
Sen. Garten, Chris [R]
Sen. Gaskill, Mike [R]
Sen. Glick, Susan "Sue" C. [R]
Sen. Goode, Greg [R]
Sen. Holdman, Travis [R]
Sen. Hunley, Andrea [D]
Sen. Jackson, La Keisha [D]
Sen. Johnson, Tyler [R]
Sen. Koch, Eric Allan [R]
Sen. Leising, Jean [R]
Sen. Maxwell, Randy [R]
Sen. Mishler, Ryan D. [R]
Sen. Niemeyer, Rick [R]
Sen. Niezgodski, David L. [D]
Sen. Pol Jr., Rodney [D]
Sen. Qaddoura, Fady [D]
Sen. Raatz, Jeff [R]
Sen. Rogers, Linda [R]
Sen. Schmitt, Daryl [R]
Sen. Taylor, Greg [D]
Sen. Tomes, James "Jim" [R]
Sen. Walker, Greg [R]
Sen. Walker, Kyle [R]
Sen. Young, R. Michael "Michael" [R]
Sen. Zay, Andy [R]
Makes you wonder what they're hiding.
When a lawmakers choose to restrict the historical record—one that belongs to all of us—we have to ask why. And when the answer lies in public obituaries and genealogical inconsistencies easily found by anyone willing to look, the motive becomes hard to ignore. What's their next plan? Banning newspaper obituaries, online and published memorials, Findagrave/Billiongraves?
This isn’t about shaming a man for his family’s past. It’s about refusing to let personal discomfort dictate public erasure. Genealogists tell the truth even when it's messy. We believe every family—every person—deserves to know where they came from. We know the damage that sealed records cause, especially to adoptees, descendants of enslaved people, and those separated by law, war, or poverty.
I’m not writing this because I want to expose one man’s secrets. I’m writing it because he’s trying to bury ours.
And I won’t let him.
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