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Archive for August, 2008
The County Clerk’s Office Can Help You Search For People
Search For People
A while back, we wrote a post on how to search for people with free help from the city clerk’s office. You can read that post here: City Clerk’s Office Can Help You Find People.
When you search for people and you know the county where they reside, the county clerk’s office is another great free resource. Here is a nice website to help you find any county in the USA: NACO – Find A County.
An easy way to find the address and phone number of a particular county clerk is to Read More
Staying Organized and Keeping Good Notes Will Help You Search For Someone Lost
Search For Someone Lost
When OmniTrace begins a new search for someone lost, we ask our client, who is requesting the search, for as much information as possible about the lost subject of the search. We take extensive notes and use the following worksheet (feel free to make a copy for your own use):
During the course of a search for someone lost, we attempt to fill in all the blanks in our worksheet. We also take notes on any research that we conduct such as: Read More
OmniTrace Testimonials and Reports
OmniTrace Testimonials and Reports
Here are some thank you letters from our clients to OmniTrace Private Investigators — Sari, Julie, Tatiana and Chris.
To all of you angels at Omnitrace, I want to express my deepest gratitude to you for locating my biological son. My son was born in 1968. I was 17 (just out of high school) when he was conceived and 18 when he was born. I was unmarried and never told his birth father or my parents that I was pregnant and moved to Los Angeles from Montana where he was born and adopted in a private adoption. Giving him up was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in my 58 years of life so far. Before the nurses took him away from the delivery room, they offered for me Read More
Searching For Birth Mother; Searching For Adoptee – Call The Library!
Searching For Birth Mother | Searching For Adoptee
The Public Library is a great resource if you are searching for your birth mother or searching for an adoptee.
Not convinced? Here’s just one example of how a library can help you when searching for your birth mother:
If you were adopted in New York City and have your amended (adopted) birth certificate, you can obtain your original birth name by visiting the New York Public Library Genealogy Department. This department has original birth listings (in birth books and on microfiche) dating back Read More









