Yes. And, depending on the car, it can be in more locations than just the dash.
It will be on the car's firewall, the rear of the body, the drivers door, the left front fender, the trunk lid, and more.
To find the owner of a property in the US you can check in two places. First, check at the assessor's office in the town where the property is located. If you look up the address in the assessor's listings it should show the owner and possibly a deed reference. The second source is your local land records office. At many land records offices an address can be checked to find the owner of property. If there is no listing by address, then use the name you found at the assessor's office to find the owner's deed reference. Many towns have made their information available online. Search for assessor's and land records in your locality.
loyal companions, show affection, protect owner, obey owner, fetch things, greet owner
You would go to the land records office where the property is located and ask the staff to show you how to research a property by using the property address. A little research should reveal the present owner.
The Name Box will show the address of the current cell that is active.
Not guilty findings no longer show up on standard DBS checks but may show up on an enhanced check if the police believe the information is relevant to the role.
Very few stores will accept starter checks. This is because they do not have your name on them. You can call the particular store you want to write the check at and ask them. If they do, you will likely to show at least two forms of ID.
To check a property for recorded liens you can check the owner's name in the local land records. If any liens have been recorded they will show up in the "grantor index" under the owner's name. The staff at the land records office can show you how to use the records.
Convictions that resulted in custodial sentences will always show up on a DBS check (DBS checks replaced CRB checks in 2012).
he goes on the computer and checks it
Yes.
They very likely would. These are the same records referred to by law enforcemnt when running a "name check" on you.
The credit report has sections. One gives you name and address and then there is a section titled JUDGEMENTS. This is where one will show up.