English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

to help someone get a child

2006-09-04 08:16:17 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Internet

2 answers

In my county (Coos) you can go to the court house and pull up the criminal records on a public terminal for free. Then you can ask the clerk of the court for the records, and copy them. If you are not a party to the action, there is a small copying fee, but if you are a party you can get the copy for no charge when you are there in person (but this may have changed - I did my research about 6 years ago).

2006-09-08 05:59:28 · answer #1 · answered by An Oregon Nut 6 · 0 0

Hello, I am a retired Police Officer here in the US and I can confirm to you that these types of records, for the most part, are not available to the general public. You won't be able to obtain them for free. That's the reality of it. Even if you came into the station for a particular police report to which you have a right to possess, you are often required to pay a small fee at the clerk's counter for the paperwork. There are however, to my knowledge, just a couple LEGITIMATE services that have full access to these types of records, and OFFICIAL approval/certification to provide them. The one which comes to mind is http://www.echeck.pcti-system.com - and if I recall correctly, They do provide these records at a relatively small cost.. especially considering the highly personal, confidential, or otherwise sensitive nature of the information within. Here you will find things such as:

Reverse Phone Search
Criminal Records
Inmate Records
Sex Offenders
DUI/DWI Records
Court Records
Arrest Records
Warrant Records
Police Records
Address History
Death Index
Marital Status
Relatives and Associates
Property Records
Felonies and Convictions
Alias and Date of Birth
Business Search

http://www.echeck.pcti-system.com

The only other way to obtain this type of information is to be working in certain areas of the public sector, such as Police work. Please do not use this any information you may discover for malicious purpose, as many States do provide criminal penalties under statutory law for certain acts regarding invasion of privacy. Hope this helps.

2014-10-10 07:32:07 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You will usually have to pay an administrative fee to get a full hard-copy of somebody's jacket... it's public domain information, in most places, but they do expect you to pay for pulling it and copying it. Aslo, if you're going to use it as evidence in a legal case, you'll probably need a notarised or certified copy, just printing stuff off a web site won't do
The fee also tends to discourage "frivolous" enquiries....

Call the front desk at the appropriate police department or sherrif's office and ask to speak to the records department, they will be able to advise.

2006-09-04 08:23:18 · answer #3 · answered by IanP 6 · 0 0

try the local police dep web site

2006-09-04 08:17:51 · answer #4 · answered by tednugentshotmydog 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers