SSN Policy Manual

Policy Manual

bank teller in the 1960s, it will get a ticket to jail today when it fails an online instant verification check. Certainly high-quality fake IDScan help you open a postal drop account which may serve useful for preserving anonymity while providing a mailing address for your soon to arrive official documents. Fake IDShave very little value beyond limited application such as this. You would do better to avoid obtaining fake ID simply because of their high-cost and limited use. Getting a New Birth Certificate An official, State issued birth certificate is probably the easiest document to obtain. For a fee and with the correct information any county recorder's office or State agency will issue you a certified birth certificate. Since birth certificate documents are the easiest to get, you might also guess that they are the most abused of identification documents, as such they have only limited use. Most public officials know well that a certified birth certificate is indeed a real official document . . . and they also understand that it may be documenting the birth of someone other than the person holding it. The process is rather simple, but does take some research effort. Ideally, you need a candidate that has a clean past. This is best done by obtaining the birth certificate for a child who died very young. However, because this method is so overused, some care must be asserted so that you don't assume the identity of someone who has already been borrowed. Begin your search at a public library that maintains a good archive of old newspapers. Most large libraries have these on microfilm. Search the obituaries for babies and young children who are the same sex as you, who died two to three years before and after your own birth. Make as through a list as possible because you are going to weed out most of them during your screening process. Next take your list to the country recorders' office for the county in which the death occurred. You can also do death searches at you local county recorder's office if you wish to reduce the effort of the first step. All county recorders' offices allow public access to their microfilm records. At the county recorder's office you will view a copy of the death certificates for each name on your list so that you can screen out inappropriate people. Specifically, you are looking for people who match your race and who died in a State other than their State of birth. This is important because, for example, if you are black, then you probably don't want a certificate for a white baby. The State issue is important because States do not trade this kind of information. So far as the State of birth is concerned, this person is still living, Either make a copy of the death certificate or write down all of the information from the certificate. Death certificates will always list the date of birth, the state and often the county of birth. It also gives the names of both parents and sometimes their addresses as well.

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