Your first report is due to your local police precinct, together with any copies of documentation you have on the diamond.
Also report it to your insurance carrier.
Report it to the police. They will place the serial number into a data base, once there if anyone tries to pawn it the pawn shop will consult the data base and find that you reported it missing. Once that happens they will have to report it to the police or they will be liable for receiving property knowing it may have been stolen.
If the diamond has a serial number -- not all diamonds do -- you are most likely to find it engraved on the girdle of the stone.
Should is an interesting word, and in this context doesn't mean much, until you expand the context of the query. If the jeweler is proving that the diamond is not on the list of stolen diamonds -- those listed with serial numbers, then, yes: the jeweler should show you the serial number on a diamond. If the jeweler wants to prove that a serial number exists on a diamond -- it cannot be seen with the naked eye -- then, yes: the jeweler should show you the serial number on a diamond. Otherwise, the situation requires a context.
Diamond Arms single gauge serial number 49885 what gauge is it and when was it made plus value if in fair condition?" Diamond Arms single gauge serial number 49885 what gauge is it and when was it made plus value if in fair condition?" "Diamond Arms single gauge serial number 49885 what gauge is it and when was it made plus value if in fair condition?"
Nothing.
The Federal Bureau of Investigations keeps a record of all missing/stolen firearms.....
Under the lever.
remove barrel and serial # will be stamped on top of receiver on left
don't know if the '?' mark on the serial number is supposed to be a missing number or not. Suspect your Colt was made between 1912-1913
Nothing you idiot! If it doesn't have a serial stamp on it, it's gay and worth crap!
Look up the manufacturer website and type in your Serial Number.
1912