Locate Missing Persons

A missing person can be anyone: your mother,
your father, your sister or brother, your daughter or son. One of your grandparents. A
friend.
A
missing person might be someone you gave up for adoption, or someone who gave you up for
adoption. A missing person is someone you, and perhaps only you, wish to find.
Americans move from place to place
more than any other nation of people. Twenty-five percent of us (not the
same 25%, of course) move every year! We move to take advantage of new
employment or a business opportunity, to change our lifestyle, to continue
our education, or to be closer to our families and friends.
Those of
us who relocate for these reasons generally have nothing to hide and should be fairly easy
to find. Conversely, people who move to avoid debt, legal action, criminal charges, and
child support responsibilities, are more difficult to locate. Runaway spouses and
children comprise a portion of the latter group.
How
to Locate a Missing Person
Start by
reading all the "Missing Persons" section, and if you need to find someone
separated by adoption, please consult "Adoption." To locate a military
person, see "Military Sources." Print out our exclusive "Locate"
forms to aid you in locating a missing person or to help move your adoption search along.
These comprehensive forms have been proven to be the best way to begin. Check out "Locating
Assets" if you need to find out who owns what. Peruse the "Background"
section if you need to conduct a background investigation or to gather the data you'll
need for a locate search. Familiarize yourself with the
"Information" section to learn about various local, state and national records
sources. Check out "State Records" and "National Records."
Locating
people or assets without the benefit of training in the techniques of skip tracing, might
seem on first examination, a difficult, if not impossible, chore. Where does one
begin to look for someone? What methods and techniques should one employ?
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