It sounds like your son was a ward of the court or otherwise under the legal guardianship of someone other than you pursuant to a juvenile dependency proceeding. If so, you would require the court's permission to see anything to do with his health or welfare. If you think you have a need or right to the autopsy, you have to apply to the court that ordered the guardianship or whatever other dependency proceedings orders he was subject to at the time of his death.
It sounds like your son was a ward of the court or otherwise under the legal guardianship of someone other than you pursuant to a juvenile dependency proceeding. If so, you would require the court's permission to see anything to do with his health or welfare. If you think you have a need or right to the autopsy, you have to apply to the court that ordered the guardianship or whatever other dependency proceedings orders he was subject to at the time of his death.
It sounds like your son was a ward of the court or otherwise under the legal guardianship of someone other than you pursuant to a juvenile dependency proceeding. If so, you would require the court's permission to see anything to do with his health or welfare. If you think you have a need or right to the autopsy, you have to apply to the court that ordered the guardianship or whatever other dependency proceedings orders he was subject to at the time of his death.
It sounds like your son was a ward of the court or otherwise under the legal guardianship of someone other than you pursuant to a juvenile dependency proceeding. If so, you would require the court's permission to see anything to do with his health or welfare. If you think you have a need or right to the autopsy, you have to apply to the court that ordered the guardianship or whatever other dependency proceedings orders he was subject to at the time of his death.