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You don't.
Gerard Arenas
The state actually owns the license plate itself. As for the owner of the vehicle the plate is attached to, that's not for you to know.
Only if you are the legal owner of the vehicle you wish to register.
One can go about finding a license plate check by locating the local police department, and asking for a temporary access to the license plate database. Also one may do the same at the local vehicle registry building.
License Plate data is considered private and cannot be released to the public. If the vehicle has committed an offense, the plate should be reported to police.
When you get a 'ticket' for violating a State Statute, City Ordinance, or Driving Code the violation is not tied to the license plate on the vehicle. The license plate is associated with the "registered owner" of the vehicle.When you get a 'ticket', it is associated with your driver's license, and the 'violation' is put in the driving record that is tied to your driver's license.You (if you are the registered owner of the vehicle) can get new license plates for your vehicle for many different reasons, unfortunately the tickets (violations) you get while driving (in any vehicle) are all associated with your driver license, not the vehicle's license plate.If you are referring to having been given a 'parking ticket', then the officer has 'called in' the license plate number and issued that parking ticket to the registered owner of the vehicle, which is also put on the person's driving record.Changing the license plate will not get you out of paying a parking ticket.
Only police and the courts can legally obtain and release that information.
They can find that info out by running the plate number and then, when the owner i sdisplayed, running the name of the owner. The owner of a vehicle does not have to have a license.
form_title= License Plate Search form_header= Find the license plate you are looking for. What state are you searching for?*= _ What is the license plate number?*= _ Is this for a non-commercial vehicle?*= () Yes () No
Not ordinarily. Each vehicle must be properly registered with the local motor vehicle department and properly licensed. If the plates and registration do not match, one could be subject to receiving a moving violation and be fined. In some states, the license plate is issued to the owner of record and not the car. When the car is sold, the owner removes the plate, which then forces the new owner to re-register the vehicle in their name.
You can transfer your license plates from one car to another, in the state of Illinois. You must be the owner of the vehicle the license plate is being transferred to.