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1->''"Even a manufactured identity requires lots of paperwork. All these contacts from a past I never had."''
2-->-- '''Catherine Aura''', ''Webcomic/KevinAndKell''
3%%
4%% One quote is enough; put any new one on the 'Quotes' page.
5
6When a {{masquerade}} of an extranormal person (whether spirit, {{time travel}}er, dimension-hopper, RobotGirl or in some cases, immortal) is able to suddenly enter society and seamlessly pose as a normal human despite the major record gaps, lack of official citizenship, or other problems that would arise if it were to occur in real life. [[AlienAmongUs Space aliens in disguise]] and even [[HumanAliens aliens that don't need a disguise]] never seem to get the same problems with immigration that [[TheIllegal regular aliens]] have.
7
8The character gets an Undead Tax Exemption. It's often implied they use mind control or magic to either brainwash or [[AWizardDidIt literally "magic up" an identity for themselves]]. It's usually used by evil characters/monsters/vampires because VillainsBlendInBetter while heroic ones will be a FishOutOfWater due to RuleOfDrama.
9
10It is easiest for TheNeedless, since by definition they don't ''need'' the benefits of society. If one doesn't have to have money for food, clothing, or shelter, detection is not likely.
11
12It can occur when the character is ''not'' extranormal but a sleeper government agent. Other mundane means to set up a fake ID usually involve getting a friendly (or bribable) [[PlayfulHacker hacker]] to set up a false identity, or [[DeadPersonImpersonation impersonating someone else]]. A MonstersAnonymous group may have the resources to make one from scratch as well.
13
14Where this is a situation of an immortal or special who has to fashion the normal identity afterward, the reverse, where the normal person came first then had [[SuperHeroOrigin something happen]], results in a SecretIdentity and likely several ShouldntWeBeInSchoolRightNow moments.
15
16Most of the time, this trope is dismissed with a {{handwave}} and covered by the WillingSuspensionOfDisbelief. If not, you may have a case of SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome. [[WatsonianVersusDoylist The Doylist explanation for this trope]] is that watching someone fill out paperwork is boring in real life, so it would be just as boring in fiction; it's just assumed to have happened or isn't explained [[BellisariosMaxim with the expectation that a viewer isn't supposed to ask that kind of question]].
17
18Historically this can be a justified trope. Prior to the twentieth-century, records tended to be sparse, difficult to retrieve, and even more difficult to verify. Without some overriding need justifying such efforts or a dissenting witness, identities and origins had to be taken at face value. If a character has been around for this time passing themself off as a descendant and then 'dying' and inheriting it several times see MyGrandsonMyself. (Note this has its own logistical issues.)
19
20See also CasualCarGiveaway, which is another situation where ordinarily expected paperwork is unnecessary. See FantasticLegalWeirdness for other instances of speculative fiction elements having legal ramifications.
21
22----
23!!Examples:
24
25[[foldercontrol]]
26
27[[folder:Advertising]]
28* In a 2013 Sprint commercial, a zombie attempts to take advantage of a "lifetime guarantee" on a mobile phone. [[http://www.ispot.tv/ad/7qGD/sprint-unlimited-my-way-zombie Commercial here.]]
29[[/folder]]
30
31[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
32* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'':
33** Occurs when Rukia starts going to Ichigo's school. The forces of Soul Society are comparable to TheMenInBlack, right down to the LaserGuidedAmnesia, so they are capable of this.
34** Later in the series [[spoiler:[[TheRival Renji]]]] does the same. This also works in reverse, since characters who leave again are [[{{Retgone}} forgotten by anyone]] without sufficient power to resist the effect.
35* ''Manga/AhMyGoddess!'' spends a small StoryArc on this, but eventually goes the "magic up the papers" route.
36** In the manga, she feels sorry for the teacher who is trying so hard to find her student registration. [[spoiler:Being Belldandy, she completely misses the fact that he's trying to out her, suspecting that she's a plant by a rival professor to lure students away from his lectures.]] When he collapses from exhaustion in the middle of flipping through the ''paper'' school records a ''second'' time, Belldandy tucks him in and uses her magic to create the paperwork he's trying so hard to find, thinking that it will make him happy. Fortunately for Belldandy, the professor's reaction is never shown.
37* Nicola in ''Manga/MermaidMelodyPichiPichiPitch'' whipped up an identity for Lucia, and [[spoiler:Kaito was a DoorstopBaby and passed off as the Doumoto family's natural child from the start]], but there's no excuse for Hanon and Rina, each of whom has her own apartment and enters school on her own. Both end up moving in with Lucia eventually, but before then, they didn't even have any human-world connections.
38* ''Anime/MagicalPrincessMinkyMomo'', a MagicalGirl from another dimension, avoided this problem by picking a childless couple and hypnotizing them into thinking she's their daughter.
39* ''Franchise/SailorMoon'':
40** In ''Anime/SailorMoon R'', [[KidFromTheFuture Chibi-Usa]] pulls off joining Usagi's family through brainwashing. In the next season, the paper trail is somehow faked well enough that she can enroll in school.
41** Likewise, the Ayakashi Sisters are somehow able to function as normal citizens of present-day Tokyo after their HeelFaceTurn -- despite coming from the future, and from another planet at that.
42** The Sailor Star Lights become a famous boy band. Even though they came to Earth from a far-off planet and now are under the media spotlight, no one notices a lack of childhood on Earth. Most of the various villains arrive in the form of being shopkeepers, a traveling circus, a famous medium, or exchange students. Even though almost all of these characters are/become highly successful and get a lot of attention under their disguise, no one notices that they came right the flip out of nowhere. Presumably like Chibi-Usa, they brainwash everyone into not noticing or caring.
43** Averted with Jadeite, as he'd usually take over existing businesses and either brainwash or [[MuggedForDisguise kidnap and replace the owner]]. With the two times he didn't do that, in one the scheme was short-term enough to escape detection, and in the other Sailor Moon tracked him down ''because of this trope''.
44* ''Anime/JubeiChan'':
45** Any spirit who is hit by Jiyu's Healing Sword Technique not only [[HealingShiv comes back to life and loses their hatred]], but immediately develops modern-day skills, tastes in clothing, and presumably a Social Security number. That is one hell of a sword technique.
46** Freesia, despite being from a Russian tribe from 300 years ago brought to the present via HumanPopsicle, bulldozes her way into the modern world effortlessly. Presumably with the help of {{talking animal}}s.
47* ''Anime/TenchiMuyo'' in its various forms has this in... er, various forms. The original series seems to have the least amount, although the girls do seem to wander into town every so often with little comment. The manga has Mihoshi getting a driver's license (partly after using her high-tech blaster right in front of a cop), and Ryoko tries her hand at it too. The TV series has Kiyone and Mihoshi renting an apartment and working part-time jobs often. And no-one really seems to mind all the aliens hanging around. And think about Katsuhito in the TV series (in the OAV he landed long enough ago to have avoided modern recordkeeping).
48** The third OAV reveals that "Yosho" has ties to the government, possibly going all the way up to the Emperor. In fact, given the relationship between Earth (Japan) and Jurai, it's pretty easy for aliens to establish any long-term identities they like.
49* ''Anime/PrettyCure'':
50** ''Anime/FutariWaPrettyCure'': Kiriya Irisawa, [[spoiler:who has both sudden existence and sudden ''nonexistence'' to deal with... and then suddenly exists ''again'' in a ''different'' identity at the end of the series.]]
51** ''Anime/FutariWaPrettyCureSplashStar'': Michiru and Kaoru Kiryuu. [[spoiler:They, like Kiriya, disappear, and no {{muggles}} ever remember they existed... until they come back.]]
52* In ''Manga/ChocottoSister'', nobody raises any eyebrows when 9-year-old Choco appears out of nowhere.
53* Hikari and Akari in ''Anime/ThisUglyYetBeautifulWorld''.
54* ''Anime/SonicX'' averts this by the government eventually taking care of creating real paperwork for Sonic & co. Then again, Sonic never was good at keeping a low profile.
55* Conan Edogawa and Ai Haibara from ''Manga/CaseClosed'' are actually {{teen genius}}es Shinichi Kudo and Shiho Miyano shrunk by the local FountainOfYouth to the appearance of 6-year-olds. Yet, not only do they have assumed names, they use those identities to attend public schools, and given the show's nature, haven't even had their legal identities suspected by the police officers they meet frequently. This lack of proper papers becomes a plot point when Conan receives an invitation to go to London. He has to travel as Shinichi because Conan doesn't have a passport.
56* ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist''
57** An aversion to this trope is speculated by fans to be the reason that Ed and Al's mother and father never officially married in the manga and second anime version, making both Ed and Al {{Heroic Bastard}}s. [[spoiler:Hohenheim is a living, immortal philosopher's stone who is centuries old and probably has no official records, and so Ed and Al had their mother's surname to avoid being associated with him and tracked down by Father, who would use them in his plans]].
58** The trope is averted in the [[Anime/FullmetalAlchemist2003 2003 anime]], meanwhile, [[spoiler:as Hohenheim there was a {{Body Surf}}er and probably 'inherited' all the relevant paperwork from the person whose body he took]]. He still never married Trisha, but the implication is that in this version it has more to do with [[spoiler:his psycho-ex wife Dante, who like Father would try to track them down]].
59* Rizel Iwaki of ''Manga/{{Rizelmine}}'' pulls off the RobotGirl variant of this, although it's justified as the government is fully aware of her and uses secret funding and other shady measures to support her.
60* In ''Anime/{{Yumeria}}'', Mone appears in Tomokazu's bed one morning and is in school a few days later. Fortunately, his teacher is very accepting of the situation, and [[LampshadeHanging lampshades]] Tomokazu's incredulity:
61--> ''You look like an anime fan who's unable to accept this ridiculous premise.''
62* ''Manga/GirlsBravo'': Miharu and other HumanAlien girls enter the school system without any difficulty.
63* In the TV series of ''Anime/BlackRockShooter'', [[spoiler: Yuu is introduced]] as a NewTransferStudent despite being [[spoiler: the same age as she was when she entered the Otherworld and replaced Strength, 10 years ago.]] There isn't even a handwave.
64* Handled in an unusual manner in ''Manga/YuYuHakusho'': when Yusuke [[BackFromTheDead returned to life]] after being dead for at least a couple weeks (including a public funeral), his mother convinced the school's principal he had actually been mistaken for dead and had remained comatose until then by ''threatening him with the {{Yakuza}}''. The other students genuinely believed the tale (after being terrified when he reappeared in spite of being dead), and the authorities never called him up on his death.
65* ''Anime/MagicalGirlLyricalNanohaAs'' has the Wolkenritter, who are {{Pure Magic Being}}s that appeared before Hayate one day and who she tries to pass off as distant, foreign relatives. There's also Lindy Harlaown, a HumanAlien who decided to have her family take up residence on Earth near Nanoha's home and even enrolls Fate to Nanoha's school.
66* [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] in one of the ''{{Manga/Karin}}'' novels. The Markers realize that they could easily stop the building project threatening to demolish their house by just going down to city hall and showing them where they live.[[note]]meaning that the area would be a residential district and thus not available for development.[[/note]] However, Ren notes that that would require them to start paying taxes, which in turn would highlight all of their forged birth records among other things (since they're all [[FriendlyNeighborhoodVampires vampires]]).
67* Tohru in ''Manga/MissKobayashisDragonMaid'' is shown using magic to make the necessary paperwork when Kanna wants to go to school. For some reason, [[AdaptationExplanationExtrication the anime cut out this scene]].
68-->'''Kobayashi:''' It even has the watermark...
69* Two of the main characters of ''Anime/OjamajoDoremi'' use magic to pose as Hana's parents and enroll her into school. The questions that arise from suspiciously having the same name as [[PlotRelevantAgeUp the baby the girls have been taking care of the past two years]] is excused by baby and tween using different characters to spell their names.
70* Averted in ''Manga/CityHunter''. Ryo is legally dead since he was three and the aircraft he was on with his parents crashed and has returned to Japan as a stowaway on a ship, and since he was three when his parents died he doesn't know who he was (Saeba Ryo being the name given him by the guerilla soldier that took him in). Because of this he doesn't legally exist, and can't hold a real job, administer his own money (Kaori does it for him), or marrying.
71* Averted in ''Anime/ReCreators''. The very first thing the government does upon discovering fictional people appearing in their world is to round a few of them up and, after informing them about the need for assistance, give them identification papers.
72* Merged beings from ''Anime/UsagichanDeCue'' such as Mimika and Koshka can emit psionic suggestion that allows them to go anywhere unquestioned. Mimika the bunny girl joins Haru's household, and his family treats her as though she's always been there. Almost no one finds anything odd about bunny ears or a cat tail on these characters. It's one more reason the GovernmentAgencyOfFiction wants to quietly eradicate these merged beings.
73* ''Manga/AyakashiTriangle'':
74** The series begins with Matsuri [[GenderBender being turned female]] the day before he was set to start high school. His family's work protecting people from ayakashi give his grandpa Seigen [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections the connections]] to alter Matsuri's enrollment to list him as a girl (and also put him in the same classroom as [[SecretKeeper Suzu]]). Since Matsuri had [[FriendlessBackground almost no social life]] previously, he can use his RealNameAsAnAlias, even to classmates he went to the same middle school as. Seigen seems prepared for [[FirstLawOfGenderBending his grandson to be female permanently]], suggesting they could similarly alter all of Matsuri's legal records. The setting's pervasive WeirdnessCensor may also help to preserve his cover.
75** Jinyo don't just [[GodInHumanForm look like humans]], they're able to [[PerceptionFilter manipulate regular humans' perceptions]] to blend in. When Shadow Mei starts attending Suzu's high school as her cousin, most people don't just believe her, they think she was ''already there''.
76* ''Manga/ToLoveRu'' suggests there's a formal process for giving human identities to aliens on Earth, but most of the cast's HumanAliens don't bother with such for long. Instead, the females are allowed to become students and teachers at Sainan High School because the principal is a DirtyOldMan who immediately lets all pretty girls attend, no questions asked.
77[[/folder]]
78
79[[folder:Comic Books]]
80%%* Ethan Kostabi and Solomon Ravne from ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'''s ''Caballistics Inc.''
81* Explained and {{justified|Trope}} with [[SupermanSubstitute Samaritan]] in ''ComicBook/AstroCity'', who came from the future with extensive training to insert himself into late-20th-century society so he could change the past to save his own time. After realizing that his success must have changed the future so much he wouldn't belong, he used his training and a 35th century organic computer to create a new identity - which he admits he only needed so he could get a news media job so he could have an easier time keeping tabs on breaking events for his superheroics.
82* ''ComicBook/Blackbird2018'': [[spoiler:Paragon abilities are a DeathActivatedSuperpower. As a result, there are multiple paragons who have this problem. Clint, for instance, officially died in a car accident in 1999, and he pays for his ''very'' expensive Monarch sneakers in cash. The LAPD detective investigating the paragons and cabals refers to them as her "zombie files".]]
83* In ''ComicBook/GoldDigger'' we've seen the government's Agency Zero take care of an alien recruit. Though frankly there's enough weirdness it wouldn't be surprising if their government's non-shadowy branches had official forms for aliens, people from lost or hidden civilizations, and dimensional travelers, at least in one of the 'weirdness magnet' areas, of which there are several.
84* {{Averted|Trope}} in ''ComicBook/{{Icon}}'', as he basically passes his wealth on to his "son", who is himself, over the years. By the time he meets Raquel Ervin, he's Augustus Freeman IV.
85* ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'':
86** Immortal Hob Gadling avoids suspicion by faking his death once in a while and leaving the money to a "relative" with the same name. It still doesn't solve the problem of government records, though, in the modern era.
87** {{Averted|Trope}} with the long-lived caveman who dies in a modern city -- when his modern-day son (not aware of his father's secret) starts sorting through his father's possessions, he finds paperwork for multiple alternate identities and funds to take advantage of them, with no explanation available for what kind of double life his father may have been leading.
88** In ''World's End'' we see that the immortals take care of one another when they encounter others in trouble (Hob helps out an Indian gentleman who was stowing away on the ship Hob secretly owns), so if there's an immortal of some sort working in an influential position, they probably give the others a helping hand in getting proper documents.
89* ''ComicBook/{{Superman}}'':
90** ''ComicBook/TheSupergirlFromKrypton1959'': Justified. After ComicBook/{{Supergirl}} has created her "Linda Lee" identity, Superman sends her to the Midvale Orphanage, claiming all her records were destroyed by the same disaster which killed her family and wiped out her whole community.
91** ''ComicBook/Supergirl2005'': In issue #10, it is completely glossed over how Kara created her Claire Connors identity. Justified in issue #34 when [[ComicBook/{{Batgirl}} Barbara Gordon]] uses her hacker skills to set up Kara's Linda Lang identity.
92** ''ComicBook/SupergirlCosmicAdventuresInThe8thGrade'': It is not explained how Kara got fake birth records in order to attend Stanhope Elementary.
93** Superman himself. He's an orphan adopted by the Kents, that much is always clear. What's less clear is how the Kents pulled it off. Even if they told truth that they found him abandoned in a cornfield/on the side of the road, how did they ensure that ''they'' adopted him without him going into the system and being potentially adopted by some other family? Presumably they wanted to avoid that and let anyone else discover he was an alien.
94* Creator/AlfredBester:
95** Actually dealt with early on with ''ComicBook/TheShadow''. In a tale written by Alfred Bester, the Shadow encountered a caveman who gained immunity to aging from a meteor. This caveman decided to aid the Axis in winning World War II by sabotaging the US war effort. He sought the position of War Labor Chief of the country, but since he did not have a birth certificate, he stole Moe Shrevnitz's birth certificate, bringing him in conflict with the Shadow (the caveman had earlier attempted to buy some business interests from Lamont Cranston, and displayed unusual personal knowledge about Cranston).
96** Bester [[RecycledScript had used this exact same plot a year earlier]], magic immortality meteor, stolen birth certificate, Axis sympathies, and all. when he introduced Comicbook/VandalSavage in the 1940s iteration of ''Green Lantern''.
97* In ''ComicBook/{{Sturmtruppen}}'', Musolesi, in one of his early appearances, tripped while bringing boiling coffee to a general and immediately started claiming that he had "[[ExactWords heroically fallen in the course of his duty]]"... Only for the bureaucracy to take him at his word and declare him dead, [[SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome resulting in his personal effects being taken away and added to the inheritance his heirs divided among themselves]] and almost ''actually dying of starvation'' because the military cook, not getting rations for him, refused to feed him. He was eventually restored in the ranks as a "Soul of a Fallen Hero", and immediately proceeded to eat everything the cook had refused to feed him.
98* {{Subverted|Trope}} in ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'' when [[spoiler:Gwen Stacy comes back to life]] and a letter from ComicBook/IronMan to the Vice Principal doesn't immediately clear things up.
99* In ''ComicBook/TheUnbelievableGwenpool'', Gwenpool is a girl from the real world (or someplace similar) transported to the Marvel Universe. As she has no legal identity, she is unable to open a bank account or get a driver's license or passport. Eventually, she gets an appointment with ComicBook/DoctorStrange, who uses his magic to alter some records and memories to solve her problem.
100* In UsefulNotes/TheGoldenAgeOfComicBooks, ComicBook/WonderWoman needed a SecretIdentity, but by ContrivedCoincidence a woman who was named Diana Prince and who exactly resembled her needed to go overseas to be with her fiance. Wonder Woman gave her the funds to go overseas and took on her identity.
101* Shows up from time to time in ''ComicBook/{{Diabolik}}'':
102** Early on the title character used the identity of Walter Dorian until discovered by the police, with the issue "Diabolik, Who Are You?" eventually clarifying he survived a shipwreck as a child and taken in by criminals in the Far East, who never bothered to register him and didn't know where he came from. A later story then showed that Diabolik later found out of an IdenticalStranger named Walter Dorian and stole his identity, and thus his properties in Clerville, after assaulting him and throwing him into a river.
103** Diabolik from time to time invents new identities for himself and Eva for use in his heists. It's explained as him being a skilled hacker, able to hack government databases and alter the data well enough to then have the government provide him with actual paperwork. They usually hold well enough under casual scrutiny, but crumble whenever [[SympatheticInspectorAntagonist Ginko]] gets involved... Something Diabolik has long learned to plan for.
104** Occasionally, Diabolik creates identities for someone else that he owes a favor to. His standard modus operandi is to create [[LatexPerfection one of his perfect masks]], recover the necessary paperwork and give them money and a warning to hightail from the country, as they have Ginko's attention and there's a good chance he may expose them.
105*** In one peculiar occasion, Diabolik adopted a different modus operandi: he sent the woman who needed a new identity to ''Ginko'', as she was a witness in a Mafia trial and knew Ginko, as a high-ranking police officer, could simply have the government provide her a new identity as part of a witness protection program.
106** In "The Years Lost in the Blood" Walter Dorian turns out having survived Diabolik's attempted assassination only to be captured by rogue soldiers preparing for a coop and, being a foreigner, detained as a spy for years until he managed to escape and reach Clerville's consulate... At which point he found out he was legally dead due Diabolik confessing his murder, and with him having no family or heirs his properties had been seized by the government. Given Diabolik's involvement, Dorian's identity was quickly verified, at which point he was granted a temporary pension until the matter of his properties could be settled and a new identity due the very real risk of Diabolik finding out and finishing the job to take over his identity again. [[spoiler:His properties remained in the government's hands due him tracking down Diabolik and trying to force him to pay him money for what he did to him and also to [[IGaveMyWord promise to leave him alone]] only to accidentally reveal Diabolik had ''another'' good reason to kill him, resulting in Diabolik doing just that]].
107* The comic book version of ''Literature/TheExtinctionParade'' plays with this by having a mortal working for the vampires whose job is to arrange their false identities, maintain their property records, and make sure their taxes are paid... and gives a brief glimpse of how utterly ''fucked'' they are when he decides he's had enough. Of course, the zombie apocalypse kinda puts that in perspective...
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:Comic Strips]]
111* ComicStrip/{{Garfield}} hangs a [[LampshadeHanging Lampshade]] on this trope with an InUniverse film: The Curse of The {{Mummy}}: Mummy rises only to be hit with 5000 years of back taxes.
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Fan Works]]
115* Averted with ''Fanfic/LongRoadToFriendship'' and its sequel, ''FanFic/SpectacularSeven''. Sunset Shimmer having no ID, no birth certificate, and no proper records means she ends up living in an abandoned factory and stealing small amounts of food and money to survive. According to a FourthWallMailSlot, the only reason Sunset was able to attend Canterlot High School was that she faked her records using the computers at the local library. When Sunset graduates high school as salutatorian (meaning she had the second-best grades out of every student in her graduating class), she doesn't apply to colleges, because she knows her lack of school records would be a huge red flag and is trying to maintain TheMasquerade about Equestrian magic.
116* Michikyuu Kanae, resident slider in ''Fanfic/KyonBigDamnHero'', never had any trouble with having an identity in each world she arrived. [[{{Deconstruction}} Deconstructed]] later it's when it's revealed that [[spoiler:she [[BodySurf slides only mentally]], replacing or [[FridgeHorror overwriting the local Kanae with herself]] and thus never needing to have an identity -- she always already has one]]. She doesn't realize it.
117* ''FanFic/MisfiledDreams'' explains how it's done in ''Webcomic/{{Misfile}}'' (see below). [[OurAngelsAreDifferent Angels]] have a kind of obfuscation power that makes [[InvisibleToNormals normal people]] not notice the Angel's [[UnusuallyUninterestingSight ears]]. This is extended to make it so that unless an Angel does something totally unexpected for a person, any story given is accepted. If Rumisiel enters a random house, anyone seeing him doesn't think anything is wrong. But if he does something that's unusual, say [[http://www.misfile.com/?date=2004-06-21 entering the girls' locker room]], people notice. Since much of ''Misfiled Dreams'' is built around exploring ''Misfile's'' FridgeLogic, this is nothing new.
118* The trope is played back and forth in ''FanFic/WithThisRing''
119** OL doesn't have any documentation due to the fact he comes from another dimension. The League tries to provide him with some when they attempt to enroll him in high school, but he refuses and makes a point of erasing all traces of it. He is noted to not even have a passport.
120** OL finally averts with when he's given Theymyscrian citizenship and a diplomatic passport.
121** Red Tornado and Firebrand don't have any citizenship due to being robots and not considered people to the U.S. government despite both of them living in the U.S. for years.
122** J'arrkn's co-worker points out that M'gann is technically an undocumented immigrant that's only there due to her connections to Manhunter.
123** J'onn J'arrkn's arc is an aversion of this: the Department of Homeland Security is trying to deport him back to Mars and needs the help of the Team to make it stick.
124* Justified as with [[spoiler: Obito]] in ''FanFic/LittleUzumaki'' as it is common with many presumed dead ninja to later be discovered alive. Especially in times of war or conflict. Although it's extremely difficult for missing ninja to get their ninja status back.
125* Justified in the ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'' story ''FanFic/TheHydeFactor'', as Wade creates a separate documented identity for Faye (Kim's [[JekyllAndHyde evil alter ego]]) in order to keep the situation under wraps and to provide a bargaining chip to convince Faye to accept some ground rules.
126* Averted in the ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'' fic ''FanFic/TheWorldIsYourOysterTheUniverseIsYourNamesake'', wherein the Crystal Gems have only the barest civil status and must spend a significant amount of effort becoming real citizens.
127* In ''Fanfic/GodSlayingBladeWorks'', Shirou and Illya get sent to the world of Campione. Shirou notes that they don't have any documentation until they get the expert accountant Yusuke to forge them some and get them enrolled in school. Only a few people get suspicious, as they used their real names, and there are no Emiya and von Einzbern families in this world.
128* Averted in ''FanFic/{{crawlersout}}'', despite being a time traveler in the 1930s Harry still has to make sure she pays her taxes to not draw government attention to herself.
129* In ''Fanfic/FateHaremAntics'', Taiga Fujimura is eventually informed of the existence of magic and the Holy Grail War, especially once she ends up getting her own Servant. She uses her {{Yakuza}} connects to help set Saber up as a gym teacher.
130* In ''Fanfic/FateGenesis'', as part of the BrokenMasquerade going on in Fuyuki thanks to Dr. Eggman's destruction and Sonic and company's efforts to stop him, a policeman named Stuart begins to do background checks with the support of Twice H. Pieceman on the Servants that have appeared publicly (Saber and Caster among them), and can't find any official records of their existence. The most he finds are the credentials Kiritsugu falsified for Saber when she entered Fuyuki back in ''Literature/FateZero'', a ''decade'' ago, and he notes she doesn't look any older now. This is just one of the many things that's leading to a bunch of raised eyebrows and making people think something else is going on besides a MadScientist and a bunch of seemingly magical animals fighting in the streets.
131* Alluded to briefly at the end of ''Fanfic/TheSecondTry'' while Shinji is monologuing to his father [[ConverseWithTheUnconscious as he lies comatose in a hospital bed]]: He's ''not'' looking forward to dealing with the paperwork and awkward questions that will come with establishing a legal identity for [[spoiler:his and Asuka's KidFromTheFuture, four year-old Aki.]] Although in earlier chapters it's hinted that Japan has a ''lot'' of orphans and lost children thanks to Second Impact, so a few vague or missing details in the paper trail wouldn't cause much comment. And the first chapter of [[Webcomic/AkiChansLife the sequel]] involves Ritsuko insisting on a DNA test to verify Shinji and Asuka's story. By the fifth chapter, Misato has arranged a valid passport [[NoodleIncident by some unspecified means that she intends to lord over them forever.]]
132* ''Fanfic/TheRedDragonsSaber'': Rias Gremory uses her influence in the school board to get Asia Argento and Saber enrolled in Kuoh Academy. Saber resembles Asia enough to pass for her sister.
133* ''Fanfic/FateBlackDawn'': In the sequel, the Pendragon family is in the modern era, and Morgan mentions putting together the paperwork for them. While the details are different, the broad strokes are the same as their real lives, making them easier to remember. Shirou is a historical anthropologist, Morgan is old money who was sequestered until she married Shirou, "Momo" (Mordred) is her bastard daughter who Shirou adopted, and "Altria" (Arturia) is Morgan's estranged sister who recently returned to make amends. Of course, since [[spoiler:they reached the modern era by TheSlowPath]], this isn't the first time they've had to do this. Morgan had a Western-style home built in Fuyuki [[spoiler:twenty-five years before the Holy Grail War]].
134* ''Fanfic/ADiplomaticVisit'': Discussed in the first chapter of the fourth story, ''The Diplomat's Life'', when Principal Celestia reveals she and her sister have known about Equestria for a long time because of the Alpha and have been covering for Sunset, explaining why she had no trouble registering for school.
135* ''Fanfic/ThyGoodNeighbor'' has a variant - [[VideoGame/{{Bloodborne}} Lord Fairchild]] makes no secret he hails from distant lands and makes a point to shower the [[Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire Westerosi]] characters with evidence, to the point that they feel even if it's somehow a trick, they are completely willing to buy it by dint of the sheer absurd amount of effort needed to uphold it. He isn't trying to deceive anyone, it's just that he allows them to make certain assumptions about where he came from and what he is.
136[[/folder]]
137
138[[folder:Films — Animation]]
139* This happens quite a bit in the ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirls'' series. Despite having several characters show up from another dimension where everyone's a magical talking pony, the pony-turned-human characters rarely seem to hit any snags with paperwork.
140** In ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirls1'', Sunset Shimmer and Twilight Sparkle were both able to join a high school without any documentation. Sunset did it before the movie starts, and Twilight just walks onto campus and is assumed to be a new student, even when she talks to the principal, all without proving her identity.
141** In ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirlsRainbowRocks'', the Sirens were also able to join the school. They presumably used their MindControlMusic to make authority figures look the other way.
142** As seen in ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyEquestriaGirlsForgottenFriendship'' and the shorts "Monday Blues" and "Good Vibes", Sunset Shimmer has both her own apartment and a job as a waitress, despite presumably not having the documentation one would need for either of these. She also is able to legally live on her own, despite apparently being a high school age teenager.
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Films — Live-Action]]
146* {{Subverted|Trope}} in ''Film/TheAssociate'': Laurel Ayres' creation that allows her to pass off her ideas becomes so prominent and is [[InventedIndividual so realistic]] that she is accused of murdering him when she fakes his death.
147* {{Averted}} in ''Film/{{Highlander}}'' (the first movie): Connor has to keep changing his name every few years and handing his antiques shop down to his new identity. The police find it suspicious that every owner of that property inherited it from the previous owner for at least a century.:
148-->'''Nerdy computer guy:''' So what you've got, Brenda, is a guy who's been creeping around since at least 1700, pretending to croak every once in a while, leaving all his goods to kids who've been corpses for years -- and assuming their identities.
149* In ''Film/BackToTheFuture1'', Marty [=McFly=] apparently attends his HighSchool for a week in 1955 with no problems. At the very least, he hangs out at the school for a few scenes, tells George "you weren't at school today" and goes to the HighSchoolDance. The movie is rather vague on the point of whether or not he was officially enrolled, probably to avoid drawing attention to this very problem. Doc Brown nods to the trope a little by having a collection of money from various eras. Imagine spending 2009 money in 1999, or worse, 19''8''9.
150* Averted in ''Film/TheManFromEarth'': The protagonist mentions how it was easy to move around as a hunter-gatherer, harder when villages arose, even more so among city-states with central authority. He even spent a year in jail for forging government papers.
151* ''Film/{{Sneakers}}'': After he becomes a fugitive from the Federal government for computer hacking, Martin Bryce changes his name to Martin Bishop. He's only outed when the [[spoiler:Mafia (posing as the NSA)]] discovers who he is and coerces him into helping them.
152* ''Film/TheSkeletonKey''. [[spoiler:The old siblings are actually Hoodoo practitioners who switch into new bodies when the old ones fail, taking over the new identities and inheriting everything.]]
153* Averted in ''Film/{{Coneheads}}'' when the INS discovers that Beldar's fake identity ("[=Donald R. DeCicco=]") has been used by at least five other undocumented immigrants. Beldar [[spoiler:is eventually able to coerce a senior INS agent into providing him with legitimate papers.]] Funnily enough, the INS agent is less concerned with the Coneheads being aliens (i.e. extraterrestrials) than them being ''illegal'' aliens.
154* Averted in ''Film/{{Dogma}}''. Even though Bartleby and Loki have been roaming Wisconsin since ancient times, they don't need food, clothing, shelter, sex, or society, and can comfortably exist outside of the system.
155* {{Enforced}} in ''Film/{{Thor}}''. Jane just gives Thor the identity of her ex, who isn't even stated as being dead. S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Phil Coulson, being an ''[[TheMenInBlack Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D.]]'', has a background check done, sees through the alias in seconds, but goes with it anyway in order to see what Thor does.
156* ''Film/EncinoMan'' tried this, with the defrosted caveman dubbed "Link" and evidently enrolled in the local high school, with paperwork and everything. Until the JerkJock uncovers the truth. Seems very unlikely none of the school officials bothered to look at the paperwork (it was medical records for a dog).
157* Averted in ''Film/MenInBlack''. When they're not saving the world, much of the MIB's job is acting as [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Immigration_and_Customs_Enforcement ICE]] for aliens. {{Lampshaded}} in the first scene of the movie, with Kay using ICE's predecessor INS (Immigration and Naturalization Service) as their cover (although that was also because the alien he was looking for was hiding among some Mexican undocumented immigrants).
158* ''Film/Supergirl1984'': Shortly after ComicBook/{{Supergirl}} arrives on Earth, she takes on a human identity of Linda Lee and enrolls in a school (after typing a fake letter of recommendation).
159* ''Film/{{Vamps}}'': The vampires all stay underground, with no [=IDs=], using only cash, dummy credit cards and making sure to not do things which draw attention. However, in modern times this has become difficult, as most are on social media or use various electronic devices that the government has taken note of. They're starting to be drawn out with things such as being called for jury duty, which they can't do with it being during the day. In the end, they all band together and hypnotize government officials during an eclipse into erasing them from all records.
160* ''Film/{{Spring}}'': {{Discussed}} as Louise says she has to change her ID frequently and will herself things, which is a logistical nightmare so no one knows she's an immortal mutant.
161* ''Film/TheAgeOfAdaline'': After being stopped for having ID which (accurately) stated her age but not [[OlderThanTheyLook matching this due to being immortal]], Adaline narrowly escaped having the FBI sent her somewhere, presumably for "[[TheyWouldCutYouUp study]]". Since then she's regularly had many fake documents made for her, as we see when she deals with the latest forger she hired. Her name's been changed numerous times as a result.
162[[/folder]]
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164[[folder:Gamebooks]]
165* The first-person protagonist in the ''Literature/{{Time Machine|Series}}'' choose-your-own-adventure book ''The Rings of Saturn'' is somehow able, after time-traveling into the future, to enroll himself into an elite academy, despite the fact that his address is specifically stated to be years out of date (and it's not like he could have some documents forged before setting out to the future, since there was no way he'd have known what they should look like). Having a powerful senator on his side probably helps, though.
166[[/folder]]
167
168[[folder:Literature]]
169* ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'':
170** A crash-landed Andalite poses as a college math teacher. His lack of contact with others (like getting out of sight to morph/demorph every two hours) is handwaved as being a loner.
171** Also the Chee, nigh-immortal androids who use holograms to imitate humans and have each lived numerous lives going back to ancient Egypt. Of course, they're advanced enough to easily take control of every computer on Earth if they wanted to, so forging a new birth certificate every couple of decades is probably no big deal.
172* Many of the immortals of ''Literature/{{Baccano}}'' avoid this issue by living in the [[TheMafia criminal underworld]], which for the 1711 generation is probably also helpful in avoiding Szilard's [[TheAssimilator attention]].
173* In the first two books of Creator/TanyaHuff's ''Literature/BloodBooks'' series, policeman Michael Celluci investigates his romantic rival, vampire (and romance writer) Henry Fitzroy -- and, naturally, finds the sort of gaping holes in Henry's ID that you'd expect with someone who was born (and died) well before Social Security numbers and driver's licenses were created. Of course, skeptical as Celluci is, "vampire" is not what he first thinks when he finds those holes and informs Vicki of them; he's rather nonplussed when she laughs at him when he suggests that Henry might be affiliated with the Mafia because of it, though.
174* The immortals in Creator/PoulAnderson's ''Boat of a Million Years' do this. Some more regularly than others. It's occasionally averted when some don a GodGuise. The main character plays it the straightest. Changing identities over the years and keeping control over his, eventually rather large, business and financial interests. [[spoiler: It's not really primarily a CompoundInterestTimeTravelGambit as he's building up his corporate empire to search for other immortals, not purely financial gain. Though the money helps. ]] Another minor character has spent over a millennium in the Byzantine/Ottoman/Turkish civil service, giving him the ability to create a false paper trail for his next identity.
175* ''Literature/ACertainMagicalIndex'': Index Librorum Prohibitorum sneaks into Academy City. Touma Kamijou hides her in his apartment and asks her to keep a low profile because she is an undocumented immigrant. Later, much to Touma's surprise, the city's ruler Aleister Crowley secretly provides Index all the documentation she requires to be a citizen.
176* {{Deconstructed|Trope}} in TheUnmasquedWorld of Creator/KevinJAnderson's ''Literature/DanShambleZombiePI'' novels. Dan's partner Robin is a civil rights lawyer who's made a career out of helping the newly-undead re-enter society and reclaim their legal status as citizens, spouses, and property-holders. As the Big Uneasy happened only a decade ago, courts are still hashing out how to apply the law to people who come back from the grave... but Dan ''does'' have to pay taxes, so doesn't get a literal Undead Tax Exemption.
177* In ''Literature/TheDevilIsAPartTimer'', Maou has just enough magic to use hypnosis to get an identity in Japan.
178* Subverted in ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'', when the first thing Arthur Winkling gets after being turned into a vampire is a derelict crumbling castle needing thousands and thousands spent on it in repair work; the second thing is a final demand for two hundred years worth of back taxes on the castle. He discovers there's no money worth a damn associated with the title of Count Notfaratoe, and because, legally, vampires never die, it ''is'' possible to be legally liable for several hundred years worth of debts.
179* Mentioned in ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles''. [[spoiler:The main character]] "died" but got better. At least a year passed with the world considering him dead. This has, however, happened enough to wizards that the White Council of Wizards has forms to fill out to get "reinstated". (Which makes sense given WizardsLiveLonger.)
180* Sousuke in ''Literature/FullMetalPanic'' infiltrates a Japanese high school with a forged identity provided by Mithril, under orders not to reveal his identity as a special ops sergeant or his objectives. Bureaucratically speaking, he pulls the infiltration off without a hitch as no-one seems to raise questions about his papers, prior education, tax status, social security number, etc ([[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney though the huge "donations" from Mithril to the school may have helped with that]]). [[FishOutOfWater Practically]]... [[HilarityEnsues less so]].
181* ''Literature/GhostRoads'': When [[spoiler:Rose]] is [[UnwantedRevival forcibly incarnated]] and goes to [[spoiler:Laura]] for help, [[spoiler:Laura]] gets her a fake ID so they can take a plane to [[spoiler:Portland, Maine]].
182* ''Literature/HarryPotter'': Wizards and muggles generally live in two separate societies, but in the times when the two worlds must interact this trope can come into play. Wizard children born to magical parents are presumably never registered to receive birth certificates given wizards' general ignorance of muggle customs, yet Ron receives a driver's license in Deathly Hallows. Muggle-borns could cause problems as well, given that at the age of eleven they suddenly disappear from the muggle society for ten months out of the year. We see an explanation for this in a flashback when Dumbledore comes to recruit Tom Riddle. He initially tries to claim that he's from a private school (which isn't too far off the truth really), but the orphanage director (described by Harry as "inconveniently sharp" ) keeps poking holes in his explanations, so he ultimately just uses a spell that makes her think he has the appropriate paperwork. The Ministry of Magic maintains a staff of "Obliviators", wizards and witches who specialize in memory charms. Usually, their job is to cover up public displays of magic or appearances by magical beings. However, it is quite reasonable to imagine that they also perform the necessary manipulations of muggle authorities to manage children who seemingly drop out of sight. At one point the Ministry even arranges to have the ''president'' of a foreign country "forget" to call the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and reschedules for them to do so the following day, thus showing the extent of their reach. It's also possible that getting these kinds of things taken care of is part of the reason the two governments work together at all.
183* Explored in ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'' through Yuki and Ryoko. The two girls can manipulate information and did so to construct identities for themselves in order to blend into human society. However, when Haruhi is investigating [[spoiler:Ryoko's disappearance, she is justifiably suspicious of the sparse paper trail Ryoko left behind, such as not giving a new address, parents paying cash up front for an apartment, parents untraceable, and so on.]] Why ''[[AliensInCardiff Canada]]''?
184* Justified in ''Literature/HighSchoolDXD'', when Rias reveals that not only is Kuoh Academy's office staffed almost entirely Devils themselves, they're horrifically outranked by herself and the StudentCouncilPresident - they can enroll, or employ, any immortals they like when they have an entire administration willing to fudge the appropriate paperwork (it helps that Kuoh Academy was formerly, and continues to be, a legitimate place of education for humans). It's also shown that powerful devils can hypnotize humans into forgetting what they saw, or at least thinking it's so normal they never comment on it again. Except Issei's parents, who - apart from when his mother caught him [[NotWhatItLooksLike naked in bed with Rias]] - appear to be [[ParentalObliviousness weird-proof]].
185* In ''Creator/JeanJohnson'''s ''Literature/FirstSalikWar'' the Immortal [[Main/ResurrectiveImmortality can be killed but then immediately comes back to life]], and she wants to [[Main/SecretIdentity keep a low profile]], so she constantly needs new identities. It is complicated by the fact that she was born 500 years after the events in the book and got thrown back in time, so she knows what is going to happen on a broad scale and is very aware of the things that history says she did. Therefore she needs specific identities at specific times in order to be at the right place and time to do those things.
186* ''Literature/JourneyToChaos'': Two aversions:
187** A grown person dropping in from another world happens often enough in Tariatla that no one bats an eye at it. It's easy for Eric to gain citizenship papers, a job, an apartment, etc.
188** Vaya is an ArtificialHuman created by a fugitive in hiding. Thus, when Professor Haburt wants to adopt her, he has to make up a cover story about finding her on the street because she was abandoned by her parents due to the country's regular food shortages. There's no Ceihan paperwork to support this but the scenario is plausible enough for Ataidaran paperwork to be created. [[spoiler: Since she's a clone of his real daughter, he also has to change her name as well as her hair and eye color so no one suspects a link between them.]]
189* In the ''Literature/LeeNez'' series the eponymous vampiric state trooper lampshades it to himself at one point, noting that he's just lucky nobody's noticed that he's been in the New Mexico state police off and on since UsefulNotes/WorldWarII. He also doesn't know how much longer he can keep it up, considering the increasing use of electronic records and the like.
190* Averted and touched upon in Creator/DouglasAdams' novel ''Literature/TheLongDarkTeaTimeOfTheSoul'', in which Dirk Gently realizes that the god Thor would have a huge amount of difficulty if he wanted to use an airplane because he has no passport, no birth certificate...
191* In the novel ''Literature/MethuselahsChildren'' by Creator/RobertAHeinlein, the problems with getting an Undead Tax Exemption are mentioned as one reason why the long-lived Howard Family members are attempting to see if they can end their {{masquerade}}. In ''Literature/TimeEnoughForLove'', it's shown that their descendants throughout the centuries continue to come up with ways to hide the fact that they're much longer-lived than their fellow humans. The records of their genealogy, however, are fastidiously maintained in the secret Family files.
192* In ''Literature/NyarukoCrawlingWithLove'', nobody seems to bat an eyelash when Mahiro Yasaka has three "cousins from overseas" enroll in the same class over a very short span of time, let alone that the first of the "cousins", Nyarko, claims to be his wife while the second, Cuuko, claims to be ''Nyarko's'' [[HoYay wife]].
193* DoubleSubverted in ''Literature/OctoberDaye''. Toby was [[ForcedTransformation turned into a fish for fourteen years]], during which time nearly everyone, human and fae, assumed she was dead. When she turns back into herself, she's taken to the police station after someone finds an unconscious naked woman in the park. She tells them who she is, only to be told that October Daye went missing and was declared dead 14 years ago. Then her old benefactor Evening Winterrose arrives, and is somehow able to convince them that she really is who she says she is. Leaving aside the 14 year disappearance, as a [[HalfHumanHybrid changeling]] Toby ages more slowly than humans, so it would be hard to convince any {{Muggles}} of her actual birth date.
194* Explored in the sequel to ''Literature/{{Paranormalcy}}'', ''Supernaturally''. Lend's father David helps immortal paranormals by giving them fake paperwork so they can function in society.
195* In L. Jagi Lamplighter's ''Literature/ProsperosDaughter'', averted. Miranda contemplates the difficulty in getting her ID updated nowadays after she slips by one guard only because she has white hair; a century ago, a letter of introduction was enough to establish someone. Later in the series, [[spoiler:we learn that they are trying to establish identities for lots and lots of people. They finally came to the conclusion that they would have to forge them in sequence. Even with the ability to compel people to issue birth certificates, etc, and the help of an extensive extended family, it's rough.]]
196* Repeatedly averted in the ''Literature/RepairmanJack'' novels, in which Jack expends considerable thought and effort on establishing false identities, through which to obtain credit cards and other conveniences while remaining off the grid of officialdom. When he ''does'' consider becoming a fully-documented citizen, because Gia wants him to legally marry her [[spoiler: before their baby comes]], the logistics of setting up a sufficiently solid identity for himself are so complex, Jack suspects it'll use up nearly all the gold he's been hoarding from his hired-vigilante work - and as the series begins, he's received UndisclosedFunds for fighting ''terrorists'' for the British government, and gets paid that ''again'' for the job that jump-starts the plot.
197* One of the Literature/SerratedEdge novels by Creator/MercedesLackey mentions that an elven protagonist carries a magically-created driver's license (copied with alterations from a human friend's license). The novel in question predates the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REAL_ID_Act [=REAL ID=] Act]], so the forged license not being in any official databases is a moot point. Besides, all three protagonists are deliberately living "off the record" to hide from enemies.
198* Justified and averted at the start of ''Literature/ShakuganNoShana'': Shana fits in by borrowing the identity of Hirai Yukari -- a Torch who had gradually [[RetGone ceased to have existed]] -- the moment she finally vanishes, all memories and records instantly change to accommodate Shana's appearance (Hirai's family had been Torches themselves and already disappeared), though everyone is still surprised by "Hirai's" [[{{Tsundere}} radical shift in personality]].
199* Averted in ''Literature/TheSistersGrimm''. The ever-alfers (all characters from fairy tales) are immortal (age only if they want to, can be killed but need a bit more than a normal human). Even though non-humans (e.g. the Three Little Pigs) can appear human, most are unemployed and hide in Ferryport or [[spoiler:an underground village in UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity Central Park]] because they do not have official papers. [[LaserGuidedAmnesia For those slip-ups, there is always memory dust.]]
200* ''Literature/SoICantPlayH'': All three of the shinigami enroll at Ryosuke's school by claiming to be [[NewTransferStudent transfer students.]] Though, in Lisara's case, she also tells the class she's Ryosuke's relative and has him vouch for her.
201* In ''Literature/SpiritsThatWalkInShadow'', one of the main characters, a witch, has no official ID, but her father just magically creates a driver's license for her (which exists only until she puts it back in her pocket). This is so that she can attend university, something most of her people don't choose to do.
202* ''[[Literature/TimeMachineSeries The Rings of Saturn]]'': Very noticeable in its future setting -- at one point, the time traveller protagonist gets in trouble because the address he gives is years out of date. Nevertheless, he's able to enroll into an elite academy later on and become a full-fledged astronaut (though it's implied he had the backing of a politician).
203* ''Literature/TheTwilightSaga''
204** The Cullen family move every few years and are able to assume identities, get jobs and enroll in school. ''Breaking Dawn'' reveals that they work with a professional fraudster who can provide them with fake passports, drivers licenses, etc. They've also been doing this for a long time and have also amassed a lot of money and contacts to grease the wheels.
205** This is pointed out in Maryann Johanson's [[http://www.flickfilosopher.com/blog/2010/06/062910the_twilight_saga_eclipse_revi.html review of the film]]:
206--->'''Maryann:''' He’s a century-old immortal, he’s richer than God, and he’s not even bound by the clichés of vampirism to avoid sunlight: he could be doing anything and everything fabulous with his endless, privileged life. Traveling the world. Living like a rock star. Anything. What does he choose to do? Attend high school in the rural Pacific Northwest.
207* In Creator/AnneRice's ''Literature/TheVampireChronicles'', newly-turned vampires usually just carry on pretending to be regular citizens for as long as reasonably possible. Older ones are shown to use a complex web of lawyers, front companies and multinational bank accounts to allow them to openly own property and engage in similar affairs. Of course, most supplement their income with assets taken from victims. Armand amasses a huge fortune very quickly by slaughtering drug smugglers in large numbers and then having the cash he takes laundered. The fact that they possess telepathic powers also goes a long way in enabling them to maintain the upper hand in dealings with mortals and modifying any memories as needed. Lestat selects his first attorney based at least partly on the fact that the man's mind is very easy to read.
208** Quinn Blackwood comes by it honestly, as in life he had inherited control of a generations-old family trust that has contracted accountants to take care of the taxes and capital gains that come from the trust's earnings, and anything he cares to buy comes from the interest. The trust also takes care of the upkeep of his plantation house and the pay for the employees that work at his estate. Tax men don't usually care much who the beneficiary of a trust is, so long as the trust is taking care of its business.
209* The title character from ''The Vampire Tapestry'', who got the urge to hibernate for decades every generation or so, was fearful of doing so in modern times, in part because of this trope. (Also because he was worried humanity [[WorldWarIII might not even be around anymore]] the next time he woke up.)
210* The eponymous character of Creator/GuyGavrielKay's ''Literature/{{Ysabel}}'' is briefly annoyed when, having been reincarnated in France for the umpteenth time since the Roman Empire, her old stash of francs that she hid the last go-round is now useless. She steals another woman's purse instead.
211* In ''Beneath a Gated Sky'' by Creator/RobertReed, The Few that travel between dimensions send someone ahead to spend decades building up influence so that they can ''avoid'' this in the first place, allowing them to set up false identities relatively painlessly. When a group of Few enters a new realm intent on settling, they are given a crash course in history and customs by one of those scouts, and relevant paperwork is filed and manipulated.
212[[/folder]]
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214[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
215* Averted by ''Series/ThirdRockFromTheSun'', in which it was made clear that Tommy phonied up their Earth identities and all the required paperwork. When they admit they lost their originals without ever submitting them to the proper authorities, he hurriedly throws new ones together... with some spite thrown in at having to do it again, such as deciding that Sally was a UsefulNotes/{{transgender}} woman, much to her chagrin. Subverted in an episode where they get audited and make up several far-out stories to explain why they haven't paid their taxes before. Eventually, they admit to being aliens and the IRS guy looks at them for a {{beat}} before saying "Sorry, I've heard that one too."
216* In ''Series/{{Being Human|UK}}'', all the vampires seem to have jobs. For example, BigBad Herrick is a local policeman, and the vampires' lair is an undertaker. This is justified as vampire society has centuries of experience in hiding in plain sight, and it is implied there are vampires in high places. Also, Annie (a ghost) got a job as a barmaid. This isn't completely impossible, as Annie can (usually) pass for a normal human, and if she gets paid cash in hand, there wouldn't be the fact she's legally as well as biologically dead to worry about.
217** In Season 2, the system starts coming apart after [[spoiler:Herrick's death]], and Mitchell has to work to cover up for the rest of the vampires. Especially whenever one of them slips and kills someone.
218** In one of the ExpandedUniverse Books it's revealed that vampires get normal humans to act as body doubles so they can have passport photos.
219*** They also use photoshop. Mitchell's Hospital ID badge is taken from a black and white photo he had back when he was alive.
220* ''Franchise/{{Buffyverse}}'':
221** Averted in one instance by ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'', when [[spoiler:Buffy]] is raised from the dead and is able to re-integrate immediately into society, just as if she'd never died at all. In real life, people who have mistakenly been declared dead in some government database can spend years trying to get the bureaucracy to acknowledge and correct the error. But [[spoiler:Buffy]] was never declared dead. The Scoobies actively hid her death through the use of [[spoiler:the [=BuffyBot=]]].
222*** Although she did get a gravestone. A gravestone in a remote part of the woods, so no one other than the Scoobies knew it existed.
223*** In "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS6E11Gone Gone]]", the social worker handling the paperwork for the Buffy household went a little cuckoo bananas nutcakes after being tormented by an invisible woman. Perils of a Sunnydale life.
224*** Anya Christina Emmanuella Jenkins (Lame-Ass Made-Up Maiden Name)? She even goes to high school after losing her powers! Although she ''did'' alter reality so that she'd appear to be a normal high school student and not a freaky-ass vengeance demon. She didn't account for the possibility that she'd lose her powers and be stuck that way.
225*** In the Season 10 comics, Spike states that it would be a challenge for him to get a job, pointing out that he has no social security number, can't work daytime shifts, and has a hundred-year gap in his resume; he explains that most vampires support themselves by [[RobbingTheDead robbing their kills]]. Xander suggests he get a job as a consultant for the S.F.P.D.'s supernatural crimes unit, which Spike confesses isn't a bad idea.
226** ''Series/{{Angel}}''
227*** From the pilot episode, wealthy vampire Russel Winters has an identity, owns property, pays his taxes, and seems to run a business with meetings in the day (the windows are a special kind of glass that block the harmful part of the sun's rays; he presumably is driven around in cars with the same glass). He's a client of Wolfram & Hart, so they probably helped him get a lot of the documentation. He and his lawyer learn that absolutely none of this prevents Angel from simply walking into his office and throwing him out the window.
228*** Spike and Angel himself both having learned to drive (and Angel holding a driving license). Angel successfully rents property in LA -- how many estate agents do you know will send someone out after dark to arrange a lease? This is lampshaded in one episode where someone asks Angel how he can order stuff over the Internet. Fred explains how to hack a company's computer system and steal whatever you want. Angel says he just memorized Cordy's credit card number.
229*** Fred spent a few years in a Hell dimension. Afterward, she lives in the Hyperion and gets all her resources from Angel and co, so legal documents are not necessary.
230*** Kate comments in one episode about how real detectives have licenses and surnames.
231*** They don't into the details of how Angel acquired his first place in L.A, but the team consulted a millionaire who owed them a big favor for financial advice when they decided to take over the Hyperion Hotel.
232*** The deliberately ObstructiveBureaucrat Gavin Park quickly recognizes that they can shut Angel Investigations down simply by pointing out Angel's ID issues to the government. Just to spite Gavin, [[AHouseDivided Lilah gets Angel all the documents he needs]].
233*** Humorously [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] in "[[Recap/AngelS05E20TheGirlInQuestion The Girl in Question]]", when Spike's rant reveals that the Immortal had him thrown in prison for tax evasion.
234* ''Series/CSICyber'' dealt with a hacker who had created several carefully-constructed identities that he had spent years putting together to provide both cover for his operations and as a fallback plan in case he was uncovered. As with the ''Series/WhiteCollar'' example, detailed scrutiny quickly reveals them as false.
235* Both versions of ''Series/DarkShadows'' have this problem for the vampire Barnabas Collins. Pretending to be a cousin from England helps him be accepted by the family, and he can sell his old jewels to get money, but that isn't going to get him a Social Security number or credit card or let him open up a bank account. Especially since he'll have needed those to buy a wardrobe and renovate the old house.
236** Presumably he had Willie Loomis do most of the shopping for him, as well as bring him up to speed on how to blend into the 20th century.
237* Throw in some LampshadeHanging in ''Series/DeadLikeMe'': Something is mentioned in early episodes about switching persona on a semi-regular basis, although this never occurs in the series. The series timeframe never got past the point of plausibility for a normal person. Reapers also get new "real" identities with the help of reapers who work in the government.
238* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
239** The original series didn't go into as much detail as to how the Third Doctor managed to keep covert in 1970s Britain, but it can be safely assumed that UNIT was more than able to provide him with enough documentation to keep Inland Revenue happy. The revived series tends to rely on the AppliedPhlebotinum of the Doctor's "psychic paper", a blank booklet that [[PerceptionFilter appears to a reader]] to be whatever official document [[WeirdnessCensor they were expecting to see]].
240** The "John Smith" alias was adopted for this very reason. Mind you, there's a later scene where some big shot visiting UNIT complained that the file on Doctor John Smith is completely empty.
241** The new series has had various moments where the various undercover aliens' disguises were imperfect enough for regular human journalists to pick up upon them, such as the Master — for example, because no one at the university he supposedly went to could recall him. Unfortunately, the villainous alien in question will typically make quick work of anyone who finds them out before the protagonists arrive...
242** {{Justified|Trope}} with the Master in [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E12TheSoundOfDrums "The Sound of Drums"]]. He's using mind control to make most people think he's been around for decades. To the 1% of people who are immune to the mind control, his forgery is actually very obvious.
243** In the spinoff ''Series/TheSarahJaneAdventures'', aliens grow a human boy in a lab; Sarah Jane's MagicalComputer is able to fabricate an identity for him so that Sarah Jane can adopt him.
244*** Though not without problems — when his "Real" parents (actually evil aliens) turned up to claim him, she had real problems trying to explain why she hadn't gone to the authorities when she found him. At least she realized that "But they can't be his real parents — he was constructed by the Bane!" probably wouldn't help her case.
245*** Although her UNIT contacts did at least keep her out of prison on a kidnapping charge while things played out.
246** Averted in ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'', where a young accidental time-traveller is provided with paperwork, gets herself a job and heads off happily to London for her new life.
247* Averted example in ''{{Series/Eureka}}'' after a women thought to be dead shows up in town due it having been a clone that died, Carter begins going on and on about how hard it'll be to convince all the bureaucracies that declared her dead that she's now alive. Only to find out the town of Eureka [[CrazyPrepared has a standard Resurrection Form that takes care of everything.]]
248* In ''Series/ForeverKnight'' the vampire-cop considers moving on at one point and visits a vampire whose specialty is providing false identities for this very purpose.
249** At one point he also has to dummy up birth records when someone starts looking into his past.
250* Discussed on the later seasons of ''Series/{{Haven}}''. Various characters show up that have been helping Haven, Maine hide the suspiciously high numbers of deaths due to the various [[PowerIncontinence Troubles]] throughout the years, including falsifying news stories and death certificates. Duke Crocker goes missing for six months and is presumed dead, and when he returns, he gets arrested and accused of being an imposter for a while. Audrey Parker was missing for even longer than that, but since she is a police officer, her colleagues help her with the documentation.
251* The ''Series/{{Highlander}}'' TV series deals with this a few times, although the exact treatment seems to vary DependingOnTheWriter, or maybe depending on the plot of an episode. Presumably most or all immortals have to do this in modern society, and do so successfully (perhaps relying on black market sources and fraud/forgery of official documents). Some even manage it despite very public deaths (most notable are a guy who made a circus act out of the fact that he couldn't be killed, and Richie, Duncan's {{sidekick}}, who had become a professional motorcycle racer and died on the track). Mostly, this is treated as little more than a bother and having to leave town for a while, but a few times there have been attempts at justifications, such as Duncan complaining about how hard it is to forge/alter records and documentation for his friend Hugh Fitzcairn, who has not adapted well to new technology like computers.
252** Another episode played with the trope: when a friend of Duncan's shows up on his doorstep with police right behind her she claims it was because she was in the same hotel as a VIP that was killed and afterward the police had realized that her paperwork didn't check out and have been following her since. The truth is that, haunted by her failure to assassinate Hitler and potentially save many lives, she has taken it upon herself to go around assassinating would-be dictators and [[PoliticallyIncorrectVillain those who spark off hate crimes]] so that the world will never go through that again.
253* PlayedWith in ''Series/IDreamOfJeannie''. In one episode, Jeannie wanted to travel overseas with Major Nelson disguised as a normal woman, not hidden in her bottle. He told her that she'd need a passport and that she could go with him if she could get one without using magic. Of course, he knew there was no way a centuries-old genie could produce the proper documentation.
254* Tsukasa, the eponymous ''Series/KamenRiderDecade'', nicely skirts around this by instantly adjusting to his new dimension through some cosmic force. He always finds himself with the skills, documentation, equipment, and attire for whatever his job may be. This is later explained in the GrandFinale movie: [[spoiler:Decade's job is to be whatever a given dimension needs him to be - hero or villain, savior or destroyer. Thus, the job adjustment is simply him being handed his role by ThePowersThatBe.]]
255* ''Series/KnightRider'': After being presumed dead, Michael Knight got a shiny new identity from his rich employers, but its limitations come up more than once -- every time someone starts looking into him, they discover that he apparently didn't exist until just recently. Naturally, this tends to make them suspicious. Of course, this rather blatant ongoing problem is never dealt with by his employers because Administrivia/TropesAreTools.
256* ''Series/{{Leverage}}'': One of the cover identities [[PlayfulHacker Hardison]] set up for Parker is so thoroughly documented that she got called for jury duty.
257** Then again, in some districts the jury duty officials are so lax, [[http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2014/04/14/nj-familys-dog-summoned-for-jury-duty they send summonses to household pets.]]
258** Subverted in a later episode when Hardison is rushed prepairing a cover ID for Sophie (the grifter) and accidentally gives her one designed for Eliot (the hitter). Fortunately, Sophie has learned how to throw a punch...
259* On ''Series/TheMagicians'', Alice's parents have been using magic to keep control of their huge and lavishly expensive mansion. When magic is taken away, the IRS hits them with a bill for 30 years of unpaid taxes.
260* Korean drama ''Series/MyGirlfriendIsANineTailedFox'' has [[PunnyName Gu Mi-Ho]] able to, with the help from a halfling, falsify records and establish an identity. Before this, however, it was an aversion of the trope.
261* ''Series/OnceUponATime'' zigzags this trope to hell and back, sometimes justifying it, sometimes glossing over it:
262** Emma Swan has an easy explanation: she is officially found as a baby by the side of the road, so she enters the system as any abandoned baby would. The same can be inferred of Lily.
263** The Dark Curse seems to provide all the needed papers to the Storybrooke residents. It makes sense within the magically isolated bubble that is the town, but apparently, the new identities have a certain reach even on the outside. Regina has all the right credentials to adopt infant Henry from an agency in Boston; Mr. Gold has enough contacts and power to grease the wheels and make the adoption happen, even having a couple dropping off the list at the last moment; Sidney Glass has a wide enough ear network to crack open a classified file from a closed adoption. Did the Dark Curse give them all leverage on the outside world?
264** Ursula and Cruella fall into a portal to the Land Without Magic and manage to get by for three decades afterwards. Ursula seems to work a low-pay job and live in a modest-income flat, so she might have pretended to just be an undocumented immigrant from somewhere. Cruella was married to a rich and corrupt husband, who might have had a hand at integrating her. Neither gets an explanation in-universe.
265** Ingrid the Snow Queen is even more puzzling: a single lady from another dimension gets integrated well enough to own a house, work as a foster parent for orphaned children and file for adoption for one of them. She even does this in-universe when she turns up in Storybrooke, blends into the background and even opens an ice cream parlour without Regina, who has eyes everywhere in town and is aware of the Curse, being the wiser.
266** Baelfire/Neal Cassidy seems to avert this at first, living at the edge of society as a petty thief. Flash-forward ten years, and he seems to own a flat and have a corporate job. Flashbacks eventually reveal he spent time on the streets as an orphan, which he could at least use to probably explain a few things.
267* ''Series/TheOuterLimits1995'': Averted in "[[Recap/TheOuterLimits1995S3E4LastSupper Last Supper]]". Laura/Jade was caught by the FBI when they found multiple false identities she used to conceal herself.
268* ''Series/ThePlayer'' had a former Witness Protection officer go into private business creating false identities with the assistance of an insider in a government records facility who entered fake births into the system which would form a basis for the new [=IDs=]. The inside man was given away when it was noted how people connected with the forger seemed to have been born in a small rural county which just happened to have the records facility.
269* Played oddly in ''Series/PowerRangersTimeForce'', with travelers from the year 3000. Its explicitly stated that their drivers' licenses are invalid in the present... but getting a new one is a simple matter of taking the test, with no problems of legal existence.
270* Jarod of ''Series/ThePretender'' presumably has to forge any and all documentation he uses to establish himself in each new identity. Only rarely does this come up in the series -- for example, when he's working as a paramedic and a hospital bureaucrat complains that he can't get ahold of Jarod's tax forms. It is alluded to in the series that his personas are temporary at best and would not stand closer scrutiny. He only has to pass the initial check, find what he is looking for and then leave. He does his research in a very low key position and only then assumes the high profile persona needed to accomplish his mission. Once he 'saves the day' he has to leave really quick before he is stopped or the bad guys find him.
271* Averted in ''Series/PushingDaisies'', where the protagonists have to go to great lengths to hide the fact that Chuck is alive from just about everybody. She uses an alias in public and doesn't have any valid ID.
272* ''Series/RemingtonSteele'': The eponymous character is actually a made-up persona taken over by a con man. He had no problems the first season, but the second season starts out with a visit from the IRS, curious about the lack of about twenty-odd years of income tax filings.
273* ''Series/{{Smallville}}'' actually gives an explanation for how the Kents got the paperwork to adopt Clark. After the initial meteor shower, they picked up Lionel and Lex Luthor and got them back to town. They used that to get a grateful Lionel to use his wealth and connections to provide what they needed...but he of course made some additional stipulations.
274* ''Franchise/StargateVerse'':
275** At least half a dozen aliens here and there have been found off-world, presumably brought to earth and integrated into human society, and never seen again. The Witness Protection Program must have a permanent office set up in Colorado Springs, CO, and/or Stargate Command has a permanent liaison with the WPP.
276** ''Series/StargateSG1'':
277*** Jack O'Neill gets a clone who, due to a screw-up on [[MadScientist Loki]]'s part, is a teenager. In the end, the clone decides to go back to high school and make his own way. How they get him the necessary documents to do so is not explained. Of course, this is the same organization that can hide Stargate Command, which is an element at least the size of a few battalions. One kid oughta be easy.
278*** Ba'al. He ends up on Earth, as a freaking CEO of a huge high-tech company, and no-one seems to know where he came from, or how he got to be in charge. Of course, one must remember that Ba'al has control of the Trust, a shadow organization that has roots in most major government agencies. No doubt they could manage to forge the relevant documents.
279* ''Series/StrangerThings'': [[spoiler: Eleven was abducted immediately after birth due to her telekinetic powers and spent the first twelve years of her life in the Hawkins Lab with no contact with the outside world. Legal records stated that her mother miscarried, so the abduction was covered up. At the end of season one, she vanishes after defeating the Demogorgan, and in the next season (which takes place a year later) it's revealed that she was shortly after taken in by Hopper. In the season finale, Owens manages to forge a birth certificate for "Jane Hopper" so she can live a normal life.]]
280-->[[spoiler:'''Hopper:''' ''[about the birth certificate]'' How did you-?\
281'''Owens:''' Sometimes I surprise even myself.]]
282* ''Series/TimeTrax'': A basic premise of the series is that travelers from the future can easily manipulate 20th-century American electronic databases with their advanced 22nd-century computer technology. The protagonist once had to sit tight in a small county jail cell because they didn't check records with computers.
283* Lampshaded on ''Series/TrueBlood'' with Sophie-Anne, the Vampire Queen of Louisiana. She amassed immense wealth over the years, using Undead Tax Exemption to her advantage. But now that Vampires have come into the open, the IRS is after her.
284** Indeed one of the central themes of the series is coming out, being taxed, and having rights.
285* At the start of ''Series/TheVampireDiaries'', Stefan tries to become a new student and is quizzed on his lack of vaccinations and paperwork. He has to hypnotize the secretary to believe that everything is in order.
286* This is addressed on ''Series/WhiteCollar''. Neal Caffrey is a conman who regularly uses fake identities. However, he is fully aware that even his best identities cannot survive a thorough investigation. When he considers breaking his parole and fleeing the country, he is referred to a master forger who spent decades creating a set of 'perfect identities'. The man registered a number of fake births with the government and over the years he created fake school, medical and employment records for his 'kids'. He planted those records all over the country in government archives. He made sure that the identities had credit histories and that they all paid their taxes on time. Anyone doing a background check would have to do a very thorough in-person investigation to discover that these people never existed. For obvious reasons, the forger is asking a lot of money for one of these identities.
287** In general, the series presents fake identities only working until someone starts taking a closer look at you. Once the FBI starts investigating, it does not take them long to spot the tell-tale signs of a fake identity.
288* In an episode of ''Series/WizardsOfWaverlyPlace'', the AlphaBitch spends a whole day trapped inside a book. Upon being released, she is convinced that it's still the same day and immediately goes on with her life. Even if we assume she's a total idiot and won't eventually notice that it's a day later, there's still the little issue that there would be an AMBER Alert on her by that point.
289* The 2016 miniseries revival of ''Series/TheXFiles'' plays this for laughs. When a lizard-man turned human suddenly has the urge to get himself a job, Mulder questions how he managed that without any documentation. The lizard-man claims he just BS'd his way through the whole thing.
290[[/folder]]
291
292[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
293* While not undead, this issue sometimes comes up in ''TabletopGame/WerewolfTheApocalypse'' with [[HumanityEnsues wolf-born]] Garou. The game itself doesn't explain what they do if they want to integrate with human society, it's just taken for granted that the other werewolves and their kinfolk (humans born with the gene recessive) forge identities for them, and possibly teach them reading and other basic skills.
294** Considering the Glass Walkers, it's not hard to figure out how they pull it off...
295** ''TabletopGame/WerewolfTheForsaken'' has a slight variant. It makes clearer than ''Apocalypse'' that werewolves' healing factor means they don't age at the same rate as humanity; a Uratha might look like they're still in their 30s when they're pushing 80. As such, they need to take special steps to keep their paperwork up to date, lest awkwardness ensue when they're called in for a police interview or whatever.
296** ''TabletopGame/VampireTheMasquerade'' also touches on it. Between being able to create Ghouls and (depending on the clan) other mind-control powers, most vampires find little intrinsic problem in arranging things. Source material/fluff occasionally mentions both the necessity of ensuring your own Undead Tax Exemption and the effectiveness as a tactic of screwing with your enemies'.
297*** However, the fluff (Book of Nod specifically) also says "There will always be Caesar, pay him his due". The notes on that specific line imply that tax evasion is one of the biggest threats to the Masquerade. This is part of why the [[ProudMerchantRace Ventrue]] are in charge of the [[AncientConspiracy Camarilla]]; they have all the business and government influence necessary to handle this kind of problem.
298** ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheLost'' also takes into account that characters will likely look [[YearInsideHourOutside a little different]] due to their time in Faerie if they're not presumed dead. There's a Merit called New Identity that runs from 1 dot (a forged driver's license that ''might'' pass inspection when you're pulled over) to 4 dots (a well-constructed identity that would take some deep probing by a federal agency to dismantle).
299*** The stand-alone sourcebook ''Immortals'' has a similar Merit, Alternate Identity, for {{Blood Bath}}ers and [[ImmortalityBeginsAtTwenty the Purified]]. [[GrandTheftMe Body Thieves]] have no need of the Merit, for obvious reasons.
300** [[TabletopGame/PrometheanTheCreated Promethean]] subverted this in 1e, but 2e Played It Straight; in the event a Promethean completed its quest to BecomeARealBoy, in 1e they were then left with no identification to prove their existence (birth certificate, job history, etc.), not helped by the fact they typically lose their memories of having been a Promethean. In 2e, this was changed so that completing the pilgrimage re-writes history to ''give'' them a human life, complete with family, friends, paper trail, and a complete memory of said life (whether they remember their alternate, Promethean life depends on a few factors).
301** From ''TabletopGame/DemonTheDescent'', when the God-Machine creates angels under mortal guises, it also provides resources, contacts, background, anything the newly-minted angel needs. Frankly, manufacturing new identity whole cloth is child's play for [[DeusEstMachina an entity of such power.]] Demons will occasionally even try to get a new free Cover by "angel-jacking" - stepping in when the God-Machine weaves a new Cover for an angel sent down to do a mission and punting it out of the way.
302** ''TabletopGame/DeviantTheRenegades'' has a different take. While most Deviants still have their own identities, they're pursued by Conspiracies that want to get their hands on them, which means maintaining an official identity is an easy way to be traced. This is reflected by how Merits such as Resources have the "Overt" tag, indicating that calling on them makes it easier for a Conspiracy to find them. Most Deviants are said to turn towards dumpster diving, low-paying under-the-table work, or organized crime to get by while trying to avoid the notices of Conspiracies.
303* Justified in ''TabletopGame/InNomine''. Angels and demons have to have "Roles" crafted for them to fit into society, get a driver's license, etc. Role creation is an equal mix of metaphysical miracle (a powerful superior convincing the universe that you "belong there") and of having celestials in their own Roles (in the DMV, Social Security Office, etc.) manipulating records to make this possible.
304** ''TabletopGame/InNomineSatanisMagnaVeritas'' completely averts the problem by having angels and demons incarnate into an existing person. Demons incarnate when a person dies with few enough witnesses, while angels incarnate in very pious people who donate their body. Archangels' (and demon princes') Avatars just pop into existence, but they vanish within a few minutes so it's not a problem either.
305* King Kaius III of Karrnath in the ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' setting ''TabletopGame/{{Eberron}}'' was known as King Kaius I when he was turned into a vampire. He faked his death, returning years later posing as his own grandson. Since he's the King he doesn't have to worry about paying taxes, but he is concerned with keeping the truth about his identity secret from his people.
306** He should take a page from [[TabletopGame/{{Ravenloft}} Strahd]], of Ravenloft fame. Strahd has for almost a dozen generations taken a wife, had a son named Strahd who looks just like him and passed from the world just in time for his adult son to take over his realm. You may wonder why no one catches on, but the peasants do know of the 'Devil Strahd' and perhaps [[WorldHalfEmpty the setting]] [[CrapsackWorld helps him out]] [[FisherKing for its own]] [[GeniusLoci reasons]].
307* ''TabletopGame/CallOfCthulhu'' campaign ''The Fungi from Yuggoth'', adventure "Castle Dark". Baron Hauptmann transfers his mind into a new body every few decades and assumes the victim's identity, then kills his old body (with the victim's mind in it) and produces a will that transfers his property to his "heir". He gets away with it for two reasons: as a Baron, he's the highest authority in the local area, and the local peasants are too scared of him to protest.
308* In the ''TabletopGame/LegendOfTheFiveRings'' module Ryoko Owari there is [[spoiler:a foreign mage hidden in the city who 'rebirths' himself every so often. After the first few generations, he realized he was becoming inbred and modified the spell with the 'donated' sexual organs of a female. He also raised a fanatic slave to run his business and take care of his young body when he's reborn.]]
309* Averted in the ''[[TabletopGame/D20Modern Urban Arcana]]'' setting for the Shadowkind, as noted in [[http://web.archive.org/web/20050404142224/http://www.wizards.com/default.asp?x=d20modern/fb/20040528a this article]] from Wizards.com - if you're an elf or ogre that just arrived from that other world, not having ID in 21st-century America is gonna be a problem. This is why so many Shadowkind wind up with the criminal crowd, or simply taken in (whether they like it or not) by a community of their own kind. For those fortunate enough to find one of the MonstersAnonymous organizations, they can get ID through a more benevolent source.
310* Averted with in ''TabletopGame/{{Continuum}}'', a game about time travelers. Simply put, the Continuum (an organization of time travelers) ensures that time travelers moving far from home undergo extensive preparation. It's not just identification and documentation; they have to even practice the correct forms of speaking a language when they move up and down in time. Imagine you could travel time, and you had to ensure your speech pattern was period accurate to 1850 before you took a trip there. Fortunately, the Continuum actually trains its members and does the due diligence for such projects.
311* ''TabletopGame/ArsMagica'': Zig-zagged by MagicalSociety as a [[RuleOfDrama potential story hook]]. Many [[HomeBase Covenants]] are isolated enough from mundane society that the magi don't need to worry about their legal identities; others need to move more carefully around mundane authorities. The categories can overlap; one side plot involves a prince finally noticing that a Covenant's landowner is [[WizardsLiveLonger impossibly old]] and opening an investigation.
312* Justified in ''TabletopGame/{{Shadowrun}}''. After the collapse of the internet and the re-organization of the old order in the Sixth World, the {{MegaCorp}}s and remaining nation-states realised they needed a system to deal with the concept of [[OneNationUnderCopyright corporate extraterritoriality]] and mass loss of national [=IDs=] following the collapse of the Fifth World, and created the international System Identification Number system instead. Every citizen of every nation has a SIN in their respective home database, tied to their biometrics and purchase history, and every national or corporate database has full access to verify a given SIN (and ancillary information) as valid or not. A black market around counterfeit [=SIN=]s quickly came into being, and a PlayerCharacter can, with the right contacts, pay for someone to insert a fake entry (with an accompanying purchase history, DNA and so on) into the appropriate database and thus create a fake ID that goes with you wherever. A fake SIN is expensive as all heck, but potentially ''anyone'' can pretend to be a valid citizen of anywhere else by greasing the right palm in advance.
313[[/folder]]
314
315[[folder:Theatre]]
316* ''Theatre/YouCantTakeItWithYou'' presents Martin Vanderhoff (or Grampa, as he's usually referred to in the play). Throughout the play, he is hounded by an IRS agent for not having paid his income taxes (Martin doesn't believe in it). This plot is resolved when the agent discovers that Martin Vanderhoff has been legally dead for years and therefore cannot owe taxes. [[spoiler: Martin Vanderhoff and his family had a man living with them for years whom they never learned the name of (it was impolite to ask after a while), and when he died, they decided to give him Martin's name for the death certificate (since it was such a nice name and all). Thus, according to the government's records, Martin Vanderhoff was dead and therefore exempt from owing taxes.]]
317[[/folder]]
318
319[[folder:Video Games]]
320* ''Franchise/{{Persona}}'':
321** ''VideoGame/Persona3'':
322*** Aigis seems to blend in with society quite well with just a simple wardrobe change, despite being a robot. Being backed by a considerably powerful organization helps justify this.
323*** There's Ryoji, who appears out of nowhere as an exchange student. As [[spoiler:the AnthropomorphicPersonification and Avatar of Death]], questions like where he spends his off-school hours and where his transfer records came from are left unanswered.
324** ''VideoGame/Persona4'':
325*** Teddie, who is a being from beyond the TV, also manages to slip into society quite easily (well, at least [[spoiler:he ''looks'' very human underneath that bear layer]]), despite lacking any ID, and any attempts at scanning his body with X-rays or similar medical equipment automatically fails. The only time this is an issue is in ''[[UpdatedRerelease Golden]]'' where he uses [[RollerbladeGood roller blades]] instead of a motorbike most of the other Investigation Team acquires after getting licenses. He also gets a job at the local superstore Junes thanks to Yosuke being the manager's son, so he can pull strings and arrange a salary, as well as conveniently being the store's new mascot with his bear costume.
326*** Marie in ''[[UpdatedRerelease Golden]]'' somehow is even worse than Teddie in logistic department; with her previously living in a place between conscious and unconscious, even less social skill than the previous attendants of the Velvet Room, without identity and memory, [[spoiler:said memory turns out to be a part of AnthropomorphicPersonification of mankind's desire shaped like a Japanese Goddess tasked to be the garbage bin for the fog her fellow aspects expelled after they were defeated, and disappeared after you kick said Japanese Goddess' ass in final boss fight]]. Cue a year later, and she becomes a weather forecaster on TV, a quite famous one at that. [[spoiler: Probably justified after the final battle, said Goddess and her aspects fused with Marie, and she gained their powers. When you can do things such as ''change the weather on a cheerful whim'', you likely don't need to worry about little things such as establishing a paper identity.]]
327* Arcueid the True Ancestor vampire from ''VisualNovel/{{Tsukihime}}'' is magically-self sufficient enough to not require food (her drinking blood would be bad), shelter, or sleep and just wanders Tokyo all day and all night; [[TheNeedless since she doesn't rely on society's infrastructure]], she doesn't need an official identity. When necessary, she presumably hypnotizes her way into getting a hotel room should she need to recover from damage. She actually has a special ability to psychically absorb cultural knowledge so that she instantly knows the language and general customs of any place or time she wakes up in. (Although there is a funny gap between theory and practice.) She's fairly rich, though, as she has a friend in the Clock Tower who sells her fairy gold for her.
328** Also averted with Ciel, who blatantly states that she just brainwashes everyone, with a standard 'trust what Ciel says' command, and lets their brains fill things in (in fact, she doesn't have to attend classes! She just hangs around the tea ceremony room; well, except when she attends classes for the fun of it).
329** The Back-Alley Alliance, Satsuki, Sion, and [[spoiler:Riesbyfe]], is another aversion. They're not old enough or powerful enough for the shenanigans Ciel and Arcueid do; and while Sion ''could'' hack people's minds for an identity, she doesn't. Sion spends most of the first VideoGame/MeltyBlood game sleeping in an alley, and them being homeless is a bit of a MemeticMutation.
330** Averted for most of the surviving Servants [[VisualNovel/FateHollowAtaraxia post-Fifth Holy Grail War]]. Lancer and Rider make a living through part-time jobs, Archer Projects whatever he needs and spends a fair bit of time in spirit form, Berserker and Assassin are unable to interact in any meaningful way with people, and Saber's decided to [[PrettyFreeloaders freely indulge in Shirou's hospitality]]. Gilgamesh and Caster are the only ones who actually bothered to set up a legal identity; the first is so filthy rich he can afford to throw money at any problem (hell, somehow he's a ''business owner''), and Caster's main reason to have records at all was to be able to legally marry Kuzuki.
331* In ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder: Observer on Timeless Temple'', [[spoiler: Doctor Roman]]'s lack of paper trail prior to 2004 makes Sherlock Holmes suspicious that they are untrustworthy.
332** In ''Cosmos in the Lostbelt'', Holmes finds out that one of the now-rogue Masters from Team A, [[spoiler: Akuta Hinako]], has an outright false identity. They turn out to be an immortal elemental, and one of their reasons for working at Chaldea was [[DiscussedTrope to avoid being found out by their lack of legal documentation]].
333* In ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 3}}'', [[spoiler:Harkness]] is an android from the Commonwealth named A3-21 who had his face altered and his memories as A3-21 repressed by Dr. Pinkerton. [[spoiler:He's now in charge of Rivet City's security and is on their leadership council.]] Arguably a {{justified|Trope}} case, what with the whole [[AfterTheEnd post-nuclear apocalypse thing]] -- people are no longer likely to be very concerned with paperwork. Hell, as long as you can shoot something reliably, most places will take you no questions asked.
334* ''VideoGame/{{Fallout 4}}'' takes android identity forging even further, with three factions at war with each other over android rights: The Institute see the androids they created as soulless robots whose only purpose is to look and act even more human than actual humans because they're emotionless and capable of computing emotions instead of feeling them, and test this out by [[KillAndReplace ordering their androids to murder survivors and take their place as robot moles]]. The Railroad see androids as a new race of humans who have even fewer rights than slaves and seek to give them new human identities (and memories), no matter the cost to everyone else. And of course, the Brotherhood of Steel see identity-stealing androids as the ultimate incarnation of the technological abuse of human rights that their charter was created to fight against - and discover that [[spoiler:their paragon champion was killed and replaced with a robot years ago]].
335* Averted in ''VideoGame/MassEffect2''. When Shepard returns to the Citadel after being reported KIA two years prior, C-Sec records still list them as dead. A brief chat with [[CowboyCop Captain Bailey]] has the latter explain that rectifying this sort of thing would usually require about nine days of running around various Citadel bureaucratic offices but he handily fixes everything with a push of a button (it helps that Shepard is a legendary hero and that the C-Sec DNA scanners have verified that it's truly them). Bailey also offhandedly claims [[Literature/TheRestaurantAtTheEndOfTheUniverse "spending a year dead is a popular tax dodge."]]
336* Count Janus Hassildor of Skingrad in ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion'' maintains the illusion that he's a very crowd shy noble who never makes public appearances and rarely meets with visitors in person. It turns out that he's a vampire trying very hard to conceal his identity. If his secret were to get out, he'd likely be hunted down and killed. His longevity is attributed by the populace to the fact that he is (or has at least cultivated a reputation as) a powerful wizard.
337** Averted in that [[spoiler: high-level wizards in the Mages Guild are aware of his status. Instead of owing money, he trades favors to the Mages Guild in exchange for them concealing his secret. Eventually, the Player Character is let in on the secret by Hassildor himself.]]
338* Averted in the good ending of ''VisualNovel/HeartOfTheWoods''. Abigail, a 200-year-old ghost who was recently returned to life, has no documentation, so Tara has to forge government documents for her, adding forgery to her fairly long criminal record acquired as part of doing investigation for her paranormal VlogSeries, ''Taranormal''.
339* Amusingly {{Averted}} by [[ApesInSpace Winston]] in ''VideoGame/{{Overwatch}}''. Despite being a gorilla from the moon, since escaping the Lunar Colony and making it to Earth, he properly immigrated to the point of having to pay taxes (to Switzerland, home of the Overwatch Headquarters).
340[[/folder]]
341
342[[folder:Web Comics]]
343* {{Justified|Trope}} in ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'', where someone in the government is responsible for creating the legal identities.
344** That, and everyone is either a shapeshifter or has access to a transformation device of some sort.
345* Something like this happens in ''Webcomic/TheWotch'' with Mingmei, who is a middle-aged [[http://www.thewotch.com/?epDate=2003-02-12 Latino man transformed into a teenage Asian girl.]] A [[LaserGuidedAmnesia quick memory-altering spell]] allows her to pass herself off as an exchange student, but the larger problems of lack of paperwork, a real family back in Japan, or any means of support are not addressed... [[http://www.thewotch.com/?epDate=2005-10-05 till]] [[http://www.thewotch.com/?epDate=2005-11-25 later.]]
346* ''[[http://sharingauniverse.comicgenesis.com/ Sharing a Universe.]]'' Lynette is still able to get a job, rent an apartment, and otherwise live a perfectly normal life despite being an Elf from a parallel fantasy-themed universe. Lampshaded from time to time with her lack of ID for buying alcohol, and Allison suspecting that she's an undocumented immigrant.
347* Mentioned in ''Webcomic/TRULifeAdventures'' as part of the reason [[spoiler:Mike Michaels]] doesn't go back to being [[spoiler:Trent Tyrell]] once he gets his memory back.
348* In ''Webcomic/{{Misfile}}'' Ash and Em's new identities are justified by the RetGone, but how Rumi and Cassiel get enrolled in the local high school is a bit of a mystery, and how Rumi's brother Vash gets employment in the local med center as secretary is similarly unexplained. Possibly justified in Cassiel and Vash's case as they are both still in heaven's good graces but Rumi is on [[FallenAngel semi-permanent suspension]].
349* In ''Webcomic/KevinAndKell'', Catherine and Nigel Aura manage to establish human lives in the human world, but to do so, need to forge some documents.
350* ''Webcomic/{{Narbonic}}'': Apparently the Knipl Award committee does no background checks at all on their grant recipients, because in the ''same year'' their three winners were a mutant shapeshifter, a battle android, and a were-gerbil.
351** Correction, a were''human''.
352* In ''Webcomic/WapsiSquare'', Bud and Brandi are able to acquire modern birth certificates and social security numbers despite being immortal clay golems who predate most known civilizations. However, it is made believable in that it was done by Jin, who has been playing political manipulator in multiple countries for over a thousand years and probably has more than enough contacts to make someone exist (or cease to exist).
353* Parodied in ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' with Aylee, who mentions she has problems surviving in society because she doesn't have photo ID. So apparently if she had that, it'd be no problem [[DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment she's an alien who looks like the alien from]] ''Franchise/{{Alien}}''.
354* Inverted in ''Webcomic/LeifAndThorn'', where there's no {{Masquerade}}, the vampires have legal identities under their original names and real ages...and are [[http://leifandthorn.com/comic/vampire-masquerade-466/ subject to an undead-specific ''tax'']] to keep them from amassing enough wealth to unbalance Sønheim's economy.
355[[/folder]]
356
357[[folder:Web Animation]]
358* ''WebAnimation/HunterTheParenting'' lampshades the need to keep up with tax codes even when you're an immortal parasite; one high-ranking member of the Tremere simply brainwashes her victims into forking over their cash. This may have worked in the Dark Ages, but her accountant was ostracized for pointing out that the IRS is eventually going to catch on to her lack of legitimate income and expensive purchases, which is potentially an even greater Masquerade breach than murdering and looting a few schmucks dry.
359[[/folder]]
360
361[[folder:Western Animation]]
362* It's suggested in ''WesternAnimation/Ben10UltimateAlien'' with Sir George, with him living as an old man in a nursing home since the '70s.
363* ''WesternAnimation/CodeLyoko'' is an aversion. The heroes go to great lengths to give Aelita a plausible identity ("Aelita Stones, transfer student from Canada"), Jérémie even creating false ID papers for her. And the cover almost gets blown several times, mostly because of Sissi's snooping.
364* In the epilogue of ''WesternAnimation/TheOwlHouse'', [[spoiler:Vee is shown in a photo to have graduated from high school alongside Luz, implying that Camila was somehow able to get her a legal identity in the four years since she came to Earth.]]
365* In ''WesternAnimation/StarVsTheForcesOfEvil'', Star Butterfly is a princess from another dimension. Star's parents enroll her into Echo Creek Academy and arrange for her to live with the Diaz family by giving her principal (and presumably anyone else with authority to ask) gold and jewels to look the other way.
366* Averted in ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'': Because of the Crystal Gems' status as aliens, Pearl mentions in [[Recap/StevenUniverseS4E6LastOneOutOfBeachCity "Last One Out of Beach City"]] that she can't legally acquire a driver's license and [[Recap/StevenUniverseS4E8GemHarvest "Gem Harvest"]] reveals that Greg and Rose Quartz couldn't get legally married.
367* ''WesternAnimation/SymBionicTitan'' is about two aliens and a robot who come to Earth to hide out. They quickly manage to buy a house and a car (using counterfeit cash their robot printed), enroll themselves in a high school, and one of them even obtains a driver's license.
368* In the last episode of ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003'', Beast Boy spots Terra (or a girl who looks exactly like her) going to high school, despite the fact that [[spoiler:Terra is a criminal, supposed to be petrified, and (as of her origin story in the tie-in comic) an undocumented immigrant. The episode never firmly establishes whether this girl really is Terra, though]].
369* Defied in ''WesternAnimation/DrafteeDaffy'': Daffy's misfortunes as he tries to [[DraftDodging dodge being drafted into the armed forces]] (it's a WartimeCartoon) ends with him dead and in Hell. [[FromBadToWorse And then he discovers]] that the little man sent by the Draft Board to give him his summons ''[[ImplacableMan is still after him]]''.
370* Averted in ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated''. Sari Sumdac tries to take over her father's company after something happens to him... only to be informed that she has no birth certificate, Social Security number, or any other documentation, meaning she legally ''can't.'' [[spoiler:It turns out she's actually a human-Autobot hybrid, and her father kept her sheltered because, well, try getting paperwork for ''that''.]]
371-->'''Sari:''' Hey, why is my office locked?\
372'''Porter C. Powell:''' Miss Sumdac, I regret to inform you that your services will no longer be required. The board has unanimously elected me to take over as CEO of Sumdac Systems.\
373'''Sari:''' You can't do that! It's still my family's company!\
374'''Powell:''' Is it? I took the liberty of doing some research into your claim. It might interest you to know that there is no will, no birth certificate, no adoption papers, social security number, or any kind of record whatsoever for a "Sari Sumdac".\
375'''Sari:''' Are you saying I can't prove I'm Isaac Sumdac's daughter?\
376'''Powell:''' I'm saying you can't even prove you ''exist.''
377[[/folder]]

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