more detail : <a href=http://RecordOnlineGuide.blogspot.com>http://RecordOnlineGuide.blogspot.com</a

 
 
 
 
 
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Go to recordonlineguide.blogspo t.com

and find Top Ten list of where to find the best public record search databases online,Search thousands of official public record sites to find court records, criminal records, property records, and more. Find people, property, criminal and civil cases, and other background check information quickly, easily.

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10/21/2008

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Are you looking for an obituary, marriage certificate, or deed of trust? How about declassified CIA documents, or a political candidate's money trail? Whatever public record you might be looking for, I've made your job easier with my Top Ten List of Public Record Search Solutions. It's a great way to streamline your public record search efforts. All Public Records In One Site. Find What You Need in 1 Minute. more detail : http://recordonlineguide.blogspot.com

10 / 28 / 2008

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public records search engine that allows you to search across different categories, such as criminal, court, financial, professional, miscellaneous (birth and death records, for example). You enter the name of a person and a state, and it shows you the relevant link in each category. more detail : http://RecordOnlineGuide.blogspot.com

10 / 28 / 2008

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How to Use a Phone Number to Find People Do you know that you can use a phone number to find people? It is a common thing to stare at a phone number of someone you know but you simply do not remember or know where he or she stays. Perhaps this person is your ex-business associate or an ex-college buddy or relative that you are trying to send a post card to, or in a bad case of receiving repeated prank calls. Whatever reason it may be, you can use a phone number to find people using a reverse phone number search service. Why Most Free Reverse Phone Number Directories Fail Doing a quick search online for “free reverse phone number search”, “reverse cell phone lookup” or even “find people using reverse phone number lookup directories” and so on would return you a list of free phone directories. While it appears easy to quickly find someone’s address by simply running the area code and the 7 digit number you have into the search toolbar, you would realize soon that if you are relying on a free reverse phone number directory, most of the numbers are returning void results to you. What happened? The free directory does not contain databases of numbers that are unlisted or unpublished, cellular phone numbers, VoIP numbers and others. These free directories only can provide details of the person’s name and address if the phone number you are searching is a landline number listed in the public domain. Why You Need to Use Paid Reverse Phone Number Lookup Directories Since the free phone directories only contain public domain numbers, almost all of them share a common database. This means that if you cannot find a number at Directory A, there is a likelihood that you cannot find it at Directory B as well. But fortunately, there are paid services that allow you to conduct reverse phone number searches to use a phone number to find people. Complete Database of Numbers – New and Old, Listed and Unlisted The good thing about these databases is that they are complete with the latest telephone number updates. Whatever number it is be it a pager, hand phone, VoIP or unlisted number, you can find it there. The reverse cell phone number lookup services also have advanced search features that allow you to search old numbers which you have not called for years. The expanded people search tools provided by the services can help you to trace the person’s number right to the point of revealing his or her most recent address. Use Phone Number to Find People and Their Background Say you want to know more about the person and are not satisfied with only his or her name and address, you can always utilize the value-added people search features to get other information like the person’s neighbors, family members and more. There is a 100% guarantee offered at several top notch services that ensure you find the people you want with a phone number. With such an assurance to back their service, you need not worry that you cannot locate the person you are looking for. Social networking Tags: cell reverse phone lookup, free criminal background check, people finders, cell phone, cell reverse -------------------------------------------

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No Free Reverse Lookup Phone Services, But So What? Off the “top of your head,” do you think it’s possible to effectively run a reverse lookup phone search these days? I ask because I received a call the other day from an elderly gentleman wondering if I could help him conduct such a search. Like many others, he had become frustrated with certain services which had promised to help, but eventually left him “high and dry.” Now, I realize such problems happen, perhaps frequently, with cell phone directories . . . but have we as a society become so concerned with personal privacy that we’ve prevented business associates from conducting real, live reverse lookup phone search? I won’t reveal the gentleman’s name, but suffice it to say, he had a legitimate need for information. He was preparing to go to court and needed information regarding a previous business associate who had dropped one phone number and picked up another. His case was complicated by the fact that he’d been tracing cell phone numbers. The gentleman who called me wanted his associate’s more recent cellular number, a task which proved difficult. Usually in this case, a lot of people just decide to end their searches because they’re faced with too many dead ends; going the traditional route can be even more discouraging. To access some business phone numbers, you have to call different offices, and either wait in very long lines or have your call placed on hold until you can get qued into a company’s computerized answering service. In large companies, or if your colleague works for a government agency, or if you need information about several different colleagues, you could be waiting for extended periods of time (days or weeks) to get everything you need. When your colleague has changed, and you’re in the position of trying to conduct a reverse lookup phone search, the problem is multiplied because there’s generally no way to determine what their new cell phone number might be. That in mind, I told the gentleman I didn’t think I could help him, until I thought about it… Look at it this way, I explained, if he’d be satisfied with doing a reverse lookup phone search, I had an idea for him! Enter: The All-American Reverse Lookup Phone Search It’s not that the concept of a “reverse lookup phone search” is so awkward or ill-fitting that no one uses it for very much. They do. Indeed, several companies facilitate these searches. Connecting with a colleague’s business phone rather than her/ his cell phone might make a difference, depending on the intended confidentiality of the conversation, but it would certainly appear that there’s a time and place for both. And especially, if you need to conduct business, being able to do a reverse lookup phone search makes a lot of sense. I can’t say that these services are free, because they are not free. But, a quality reverse lookup phone serch can provide you with a telephone number, even if that phone number is currently unlisted and not in the local phone book. These services naturally have to pay for access to some of their information, and go through considerable trouble of pulling disparate database resources together. So, as a result, you will be charged a small fee before you can access their business databases. However, the fee is a one-off payment and you can run as many searches as you like once you have access. The records they offer include address history, carrier details, and the phone connection status. The databases include numbers to cell phones plus residential, business, toll-free, even pagers… Then, if you decide against contacting your colleague after you have conducted your own reverse lookup phone search, no one would be the wiser. Unlike some sites, your business friend/ colleague will have no knowledge that you or anyone else was looking closely at their records. These services are discrete and private, so you can be assured that no one but you will ever know you conducted a serch. Trying to connect with someone from your past does not need to be an arduous task. Use them to get all the answers you need instantly, without having to leave the comfort and privacy of your own home or office. In conclusion, the answer is no, free reverse lookup phone search services do not currently exist. But, if you really need to access such records, then I believe paying a small fee to trace a business colleague is a price worth paying. Tags: instant criminal background check, background check, people finders, free criminal background check, reverse phone number, how to trace phone, cell phone number reverse look up, cell reverse, cell reverse phone lookup, trace cell number Tags: instant criminal background check, background check, people finders, free criminal background check, reverse phone number, how to trace phone, cell phone number reverse look up, cell reverse, cell reverse phone lookup, trace cell number

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Access the Legal System Instantly Courtrecordsregistry.org, a recognized and trusted online records information provider, lets you utilize a network of multiple data sources to find the exact records you are looking for. They provide fast and discreet access to nationwide court records utilizing direct data retrieval. Court Files Search Results may include the following: Full Criminal Check: Felonies, Misdemeanors or Sex Offenses 20 Year Address History with Phone Numbers and Details National Arrest & Court Warrants National Federal & State Tax Liens National Federal & Civil Judgments National Federal & State Bankruptcies Distinguishing Bodily Marks List of Relatives with Addresses Roommates and Associates Age/Date of Birth Alias/Maiden Name Possible Neighbors Property Ownership Marriages/Divorces Death Index Check Work Licenses Criminal, civil, and reverse court records are available with precise and fast results. You will be able to instantly access driving offenses, arrest records, bankruptcy reports, and public records. You can perform instant background checks or use information that you already have, such as cell phone numbers, telephone numbers, email, or physical addresses, to complete reverse lookups. When you visit Courtrecordsregistry.org and choose to become a member you will have instant access to all searches and records that they currently offer. These include the following: Background Reports Business Records Birth Records Criminal Records Court Records Civil Records Legal Judgments Bankruptcy Records Reverse Phone Reverse Cell Phone Reverse Address Reverse Email Marriage Records Divorce Records Vital Records SSN Records Death Records DUI Records Police Records Arrest Records Jail Records Employee Checks Address Verification Property Records People Search Address Search Public Records Sex Offender Check Inmate Locator and much more… Options are available for unlimited, three year or one year access to all services. Signing up for an unlimited Courtrecordsregistry.org membership will provide you will unlimited, unrestricted access to their services for only $39.95. It is also possible to restrict your search to a single event, in which case you will be charged as little as $1.95, which is comparatively cheap versus fiding the needed information through other means. Business users of the site may choose to utilize the criminal records batch services. These searches offer the following benefits: Instant results returned to you in just seconds! Search over 300 million records collected from over 500 city, county and state databases Conveniently print or send the reports to your email address Instantly search records in these categories: Arrest, Conviction, incarceration, Warrant, Sex Offender, DUI records and more We provide our customers with industry leading data at the most competitive prices. State searches allow businesses to search criminal records for a specific state utilizing a First and Last Name. You may use the person’s Date of Birth to narrow down your search results. Nationwide searches allow the business owner to cover all available states and searches over 300 million records with just one click. This is a very cost-effective way to conduct criminal records investigations. more detail :http://recordonlineguide.blogspot.com

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The Life and Death of Public Records Sometimes it's the small abuses scurrying below radar that reveal how profoundly the Bush administration has changed America in the name of national security. Buried within the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 is a regulation that bars most public access to birth and death certificates for 70 to 100 years. In much of the country, these records have long been invaluable tools for activists, lawyers and reporters to uncover patterns of illness and pollution that officials miss or ignore. In These Times has obtained a draft of the proposed regulations now causing widespread concern among state officials. It reveals plans to create a vast database of vital records to be centralized in Washington and details measures that states must implement -- and pay millions for -- before next year's scheduled implementation. The draft lays out how some 60,000 already strapped town and county offices must keep the birth and death records under lock and key and report all document requests to Washington. Individuals who show up in person will still be able to obtain their own birth certificates and, in some cases, the birth and death records of an immediate relative, and "legitimate" research institutions may be able to access files. But reporters and activists won't be allowed to fish through records, many family members looking for genetic clues will be out of luck, and people wanting to trace adoptions will dead-end. If you are homeless and need your own birth certificate, forget it: no address, no service. Consider the public health implications. A few years back, a doctor in a tiny Vermont town noticed that two patients who lived on the same hill had ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease. Hearing rumors of more cases of the relatively rare and always fatal disease, the doctor notified the health department. Citing lack of resources, it declined to investigate. The doc then told a reporter, who searched the death certificates filed in the town office only to find that ALS had already killed five of the town's 1,300 residents. It was statistically possible, but unlikely, that this 10-times-higher-than-normal incidence was simply chance. Since no one knows what causes ALS, clusters like this one, once revealed, help epidemiologists assess risk factors, warn doctors to watch for symptoms,and alert neighbors and activists. Activists in Colorado already know what it is like when states bar access to vital records. For years, they fought the Cotter Corp., claiming that its uranium mining operations were killing residents and workers. Unwilling to rely on the health department, which they claimed had a "cozy" relationship with the polluters, the activists tried to access death records, only to be told that it was illegal in this closed-records state. An editorial in Colorado's Longmont Daily Times-Call lamented, "If there's a situation that makes the case for why death certificates should be available to the public, it is th[is] Superfund area." Some of state officials around the country are questioning whether the new regulations themselves illegally tread on states' rights. But the feds have been coy. Richard McCoy, public health statistic chief in Vermont, one of the nation's 14 open-records states, says, "No state is mandated to meet the regs. However, if they don't, then residents of that state will not be able to access any federal services, including social security and passports. States have no choice." But while the public loses access to records, the federal government gains a gargantuan national database easily cross-referenced in the name of national security. The feds' claim that increased security will deter identity theft and terrorism is facile. Wholesale corporate data gathering is the major nexis of identity theft. As for terrorism, all the 9/11 perpetrators had valid identification. Meanwhile, the quiet clampdown on vital records is part of a growing consolidation of information at the federal level. "That information will dovetail with the Real ID Act of 2005," says Marc Rotenberg of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. "Real ID cards are the other shoe that is scheduled to drop in three years." That act, signed into law last May, establishes national standards for state-issued driver's licenses and ID cards, and centralizes the information into a database. Aside from public health and privacy concerns, closing vital records incurs a steep intangible cost: It undermines community in places where that healthy ethos still survives. In small town America, the local clerk's office is a sociable place where government wears the face of your neighbor. Each year, Vermont's 246 towns distribute their vital statistics to all residents. "It's the first place everybody goes in the Town Report," says state archivist Gregory Sanford. "Who was born, who died, who got married, who had a baby and wasn't married." This may not be the most dr

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