in most states you go to the DMV and get a vehicle abstract report, a few bucks. That report might contain the vin #
call the courthouse or have an officer run the plates.
No. Unless it is a vanity plate and you have filed paperwork assigning it to a different car, you cannot move a license plate from one car to another. License plates in the United States stay with the vehicle. You can get in an awful lot of trouble for using a plate on a different car than the one the plate was issued for.
Only Switzerland publishes that type of data, as there your plate number is your driving license number. In all other countries you have to go to court to get it, as it is regarded as private. Police officers have access to the data through Motor Vehicle registrations, but they are restricted in how they use it. Sometimes private investigators obtain this information in a technically illegal manner.
Assuming there was no police report filed, you will have to do the work yourself. Get a lawyer and an investigator and file a lawsuit. Provide the information to your insurance carrier. They can normally get the insurance information from the State DMV using the license plate number of the vehicle that hit you. Keep the license plate number and call the police. The police have all the information. They can find out the information of that car instantly, given the plate number.
find color by reading vin number or id plate on vehicle not by reg
An AVG license plate number can be found on the AVG website using the search function, Brand Star, Panther Computers, Malware Tips and Site Velocity Test.
a way of finding out information about a car solely on it's license plate. in that link you need is the car brand and it's plate number if you get one of those I am sure what you are looking out is easy to find.
how to find the owner of a vehicle using the vin number
Using a sharpie marker, hold the license plate up the the front bumper and mark the bolt holes on the bumper and then using a drill gently apply pressure and drill through the bumper, be sure there are no wires behind where you are drilling and not to drill in too far, then attach the license plate with two bolts and nuts.
The Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) on all modern vehicles can be used to locate the registered owner. Since the registered owner information also contains mailing address and other personal information, it is not readily available to the public. But, that number does tie the vehicle to an owner. The license plate 'could' be used to track the registered owner through the Motor Registration system (varies from U.S. State-to-State, and other countries), but the license plate is just a bolt on 'tag', which can be easily stolen and switched between vehicles. Therefore, it is not as reliable as using the VIN number, which is stamped or etched into the metal (and various hidden places) to ensure tracability.
Try using the key... (the lock should be behind the license plate)
Remove the cover using a tork bit.