Get a lawyer, it's a ton of paperwork and the details of what is required to file claims like this vary from county to county let alone state to state.
If you already have the judgment, then you can get a court order demanding the information required to collect it. Once you have a court order, the debtor has to turn over all the information you need or be in violation of the order. This can result in additional sanctions against the debtor, including fines and/or jail time.
Without the judgment and court order, you have no legal right to this kind of information.
You may NOT receive any infiormation on anyone else from the IRS. Regardless of what you know or what your needs are. Not even a court order, if you could get one, directing the IRS to disclose info would be legal or enforceable. End of story.
Open a credit account, steal their identity, keep your social security number as safe as you can.
call em, tell em you have to do a wire transfer and you need the address of the bank. Than google it and bingo it
You cannot access your social security entitlement until you are eligible to collect social security. Then the people who are working will fund your entitlement.
Yes, taxes can be garnished even if you do not live or work in the county where the judgment was issued. The garnishment process is typically based on your social security number or other identifying information, and it allows creditors to collect payments directly from your wages or bank accounts regardless of your physical location.
That answer will vary from state to state. In California, you can collect 10% per year on the oustanding balance. You take 10% of the outstanding judgment and divided that number by 365 to obtain the daily rate of interest. Multiply the number of days since the entry of judgment. Payments are applied to interest first and then to the principle. The interest is not capitalized.
age, weight, home address, home phone, marital status, social security number, religion
hello
The Phone book
Make a request to the Clerk of the Court
He can't. That is one of the pitfalls of hijacking someone else's SSN. He'll never be able to collect Social Security payments earned under the false number either.
Social Security Benefits are paid based on their Social Security number. The younger parent will have to wait until she becomes of age to collect her own benefits.