Ul>You can go to the Department of Motor Vehicles and fill out a form to find the last person who titled the car. Although it's true in a general sense that you can walk into a motor vehicle agency and get information regarding the owner of a vehicle if you have the VIN, there are some specifics. I'm quoting Oklahoma law here, but it's similar in most states and even more restricted in California.
You have to have some reason for having the information. If you are a wrecker service and need it to notify the owner that their vehicle has been impounded, you must include your business license and DOT number. If you are the registered owner, you can get it.
If you are acting on behalf of the RO and have their signed and notarized statement giving you permission, you can get it. If you are a court, or law enforcement you can get it. If you are a creditor you *might* get some limited information, ditto if you are an insurance company, unless you have a signed and notarized statement from the RO giving you permission to get it.So, yes you can, but only under certain circumstances and you show a need for the information.
You can also find out the cars complete history and previous owners if you do a carfax on the car, it will cost you $25 and all you need is the vin#. Carfax will NOT give out previous owners name or address! In Greenville County Greenville, SC where I live you can take a license plate number, and go to the SC DMV website, go to public services and obtain duplicate registration.
If you enter the plate number it will give you a VIN. Then you can take that VIN to greenvillecounty.org and do a property tax search and it will show you the owner and their address. There are probably similar searches for most major counties in the US.
A Title search in NY costs $20. You will find who the last titled owner was. You will also find out if the car has a clear title(no loans or liens against it.
If you cannot find the most recent owner, you will have to apply for a title for an abandoned vehicle. It is very COSTLY. First , you have to place a lien against it.
Then you must advertise that the car is for sale by auction. This must be done at l;east 30 days before the sale. If no one shows up, you have to prove that you had an auction(newspaper ad, etc. ) You will then be issued a title by the Department Of Motor Vehicles.
It take several months to go through the entire process.
You can go to the Department of Motor Vehicles and fill out a form to find the last person who titled the car. Although it's true in a general sense that you can walk into a motor vehicle agency and get information regarding the owner of a vehicle if you have the VIN, there are some specifics. I'm quoting Oklahoma law here, but it's similar in most states and even more restricted in California.
You have to have some reason for having the information. If you are a wrecker service and need it to notify the owner that their vehicle has been impounded, you must include your business license and DOT number. If you are the registered owner, you can get it.
If you are acting on behalf of the RO and have their signed and notarized statement giving you permission, you can get it. If you are a court, or law enforcement you can get it. If you are a creditor you *might* get some limited information, ditto if you are an insurance company, unless you have a signed and notarized statement from the RO giving you permission to get it.So, yes you can, but only under certain circumstances and you show a need for the information.
You can also find out the cars complete history and previous owners if you do a carfax on the car, it will cost you $25 and all you need is the vin#. Carfax will NOT give out previous owners name or address! In Greenville County Greenville, SC where I live you can take a license plate number, and go to the SC DMV website, go to public services and obtain duplicate registration.
If you enter the plate number it will give you a VIN. Then you can take that VIN to greenvillecounty.org and do a property tax search and it will show you the owner and their address. There are probably similar searches for most major counties in the US.
A Title search in NY costs $20. You will find who the last titled owner was. You will also find out if the car has a clear title(no loans or liens against it.
If you cannot find the most recent owner, you will have to apply for a title for an abandoned vehicle. It is very COSTLY. First , you have to place a lien against it.
Then you must advertise that the car is for sale by auction. This must be done at l;east 30 days before the sale. If no one shows up, you have to prove that you had an auction(newspaper ad, etc. ) You will then be issued a title by the Department Of Motor Vehicles.
It take several months to go through the entire process.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.