What’s your California
Public Records IQ?
Take a few minutes to see how well
you know California
public records. Either print out this quiz or write down the answers. There’s a link at the bottom that will lead you to the
answers, but please don’t go there until you’ve completed the entire test.
True or False? All of these statements refer to California Public Records:
- For
licensed private investigators, voter registration records are completely
open.
- Federal
search warrants are less likely to be sealed than
local search warrants.
- To
find a local search warrant, you don’t need the
name of the suspect.
- The
documentary transfer tax on a deed can include municipal city taxes also.
- The
coroner gets involved if the decedent hadn’t seen
a doctor in the past 20 days.
- Frequently,
the “informant” listed on the death certificate found the body.
- Traffic
cases are not heard in municipal court.
- Foreign-born
citizens must prove their U.S.
citizenship in order to register to vote.
- The
Health Department is the best place to find recent death certificates.
- Find the “assessee” at the
assessor’s office and you have surely found the owner.
- The
county recorder keeps military discharge records on file.
- The
police chief files a statement of economic interest but the sheriff doesn’t.
- Females
must be at least 18 years of age before they can register to vote.
- Fictitious
name statements are not required in unincorporated areas.
- Trust
deeds remain on file at the recorder even after the loan is completely repaid.
- Fines
charged for overdue library books are not a matter of public record.
- The
California Public Records Act says arrest information is public record.
- Financial
records of United
Way are not publicly available
at the IRS.
- The
grantor on a recorded document can be either the seller or the buyer.
- The
homeowner’s exemption suggests that the owners live in the house they own.
- Fido’s rabies vaccination records are not a matter of
public record.
- Fresno’s assembly candidates don’t need to file campaign papers in L.A. County.
- For
security purposes (post-911) birth records are no
longer public record.
- The
confidential marriage certificate does not require witness signatures.
- The
grantor on a quitclaim deed may have never had interest in the property.
Multiple Choice.
Write down or circle the best answer:
- A
borrower on a deed of trust will be identified as
a) the trustor, b) the trustee, c) the
beneficiary, d) the grantee, e) none of these.
- Building
permits are on file at the a) state level, b) the city or county level, c)
the county level only, d) the city level only, e) the federal level.
- Don’t bother looking at the Secretary of State for a)
notary public records, b) limited liability company files, c) statements
of officers, d) names of limited partners, e) out-of-state corporations.
- Bankruptcy
records are available for viewing at a) superior court, b) U.S. District
Court, c) Board of Equalization, d) state court, e) County Bankruptcy
Court.
- Every notary knows that he or she will lose their commission
if they a) notarize a document signed by someone they’ve never met, b) buy
their rubber stamp from a local printer, c) show register to a private
investigator, d) show their register to a journalist, e) refuse to show or
make a copy of any particular line item a private investigator or
journalist requests.
- Business
license information is certainly available at of a) the County
Recorder’s
office, b) City Hall, c) Superior Court, d) the Country Tax Collector, e)
none of these.
- Any
couple may obtain a confidential marriage certificate a) if they can prove
they’ve been shacking up, b) if either is HIV positive, c) if either one
is a sworn officer, d) if they were married out of state, e) if either is
a protected witness.
- Animal
licensing records usually are not available for viewing at a) the County
Health Department, b) City Hall, c) the Humane Society, d) the ASPCA, The Department of Animal Regulation.
- Bank
account information can show up as public record a) in an individual’s IRS
tax returns, b) in a divorce or probate file, c) at the County
Assessor’s
Office, d) at business license desk at Superior Court, e) at the business
license desk at City Hall.
- Corporate
filings such as 10K’s, annual reports, 10Qs and proxy statements are best
available at the office of a) Secretary of State, b) California Department
of Corporations, c) Securities and Exchange Commission, d) Board of
Equalization, e) County Recorder.
- County Tax Collector
records are likely to include a) marriage records, b) assessor’s map
books, c) unsecured property, d) income tax records, e)
automobile ownership records.
- Coroner’s
case files are a) never available for public viewing, b) available to
family members only, c) are available to anyone, d) are available only
with a court order, e) are available to private investigators who are on
the Registered Searcher list at that county.
- Assessor
records in California
are usually sorted by a) book, page and parcel, b) tract, section and lot,
c) tract, page and lot, d) book, section, lot, e)
township, block, parcel.
- Army
personnel records for retired and discharged soldiers are available at the
National
Personnel
Records
Center
in a) St. Louis,
MO, b) Alexandria, VA, c) Washington, DC, d) College Park, MD, e) Ft.
Benning, GA.
- Copies
of other people’s marriage and death certificates are a) more difficult to
obtain since 911, b) not available to anyone except government employees,
c) easier to obtain since 911, d) are available only to family members, e)
available only if you have a power of attorney.
- Electric
bills are a matter of public record a) if the subscriber is 30 days behind
on payments, b) if the subscriber is 60 days behind on the payment, c) if
the subscriber is a business, d) if the subscriber is a 501(c)(3) corporation, e) none of the above.
- Campaign
financing statements are available at the a) city and county levels only,
b) county and state levels only, c) city, county, state and federal
levels, d) city and federal levels only, e) county and federal levels
only.
- DMV
registration records may be outdated, but average citizens might be able
to zero in on the owner’s new neighborhood by running the license number
online at the website of the a) California Highway Patrol, b) Department
of Insurance, c) Smog Certification Site, d) Bureau of Automotive Repair’s
Smog Check website, e) California Department of Auto Financing.
- Buyer’s
signatures are most likely to appear on a) the grant deed, b) the deed of
trust, c) the quit claim deed, d) the reconveyance, e) none of these.
- CC&Rs are a matter of public record at a) the
county assessor’s office, b) the county tax collector’s office, c) the
county recorder’s office, d) the city clerk’s office, e) the city zoning
commission’s office.
- California’s
Public Records Act specifics are spelled out in
the a) Code of Civil Procedures, b) Evidence Code, c) Government Code, d)
Penal Code, e) Administrative Code.
- Exemptions
to the Freedom of Information Act do not include a) personal information,
b) banking records, c) national security, d) ongoing investigative files, e) correspondence with corporations.
- Current
and former inmate information is available online at the website of a)
every county sheriff, b) the California Department of Corrections, c) The U.S.
Bureau of Prisons, d) the California Attorney General,
e) the FBI.
- Airplane
ownership indicators can be found at the F.A.A.
and very often at the a) county tax collector’s office, b) registrar of
voters, c) DMV, d) Department of Corporations, e) none of these.
- A
person cannot obtain complete voter registration record access unless he
or she a) is attempting to serve legal papers b) is investigating voter
fraud, c) is doing academic research, d) is a journalist on assignment, e)
is running for office.
For the answers to these questions,
please click on the very last line on the main page of http://www.industrialstrengthseminars.com.
If you have any problems getting there, please e-mail me at donray@donray.com.
© 2007 Don Ray’s Industrial
Strength Seminars. You may copy, duplicate or post this without permission as
long as you do not delete or change any word or line.