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Notary Public?

gtsukada

Golden Member
I just got my affidavit of unauthorized use for one of my credit cards. I filled out everything, but on the bottom it says notary public and my commission ends. Anybody have any idea what or who supposed to sign this.
 
Anybody have any idea what or who supposed to sign this.
A notary public. Check at a bank or something. If they don't have a notary there, they'll probably be able to tell you where to find one.
 
FYI:

Main Entry: no·ta·ry public
Pronunciation: 'nO-t&-rE-
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural notaries public or notary publics
Etymology: Middle English notary clerk, notary public, from Latin notarius clerk, secretary, from notarius of shorthand, from nota note, shorthand character
Date: 15th century
: a public officer who attests or certifies writings (as a deed) to make them authentic and takes affidavits, depositions, and protests of negotiable paper -- called also notary
 
it cost 10 f||ckin dollars for a notary public to sign a piece of paper because some punk ass bitch was able to come up with my cc number. I hope you die a slow horrible death whoever you are.
 
Originally posted by: gtsukada
it cost 10 f||ckin dollars for a notary public to sign a piece of paper because some punk ass bitch was able to come up with my cc number. I hope you die a slow horrible death whoever you are.

check where you work. its free where i work.
 
Originally posted by: Hammer
Originally posted by: gtsukada
it cost 10 f||ckin dollars for a notary public to sign a piece of paper because some punk ass bitch was able to come up with my cc number. I hope you die a slow horrible death whoever you are.

check where you work. its free where i work.

me too, there are 2 of them here.
you just gotta know the right people i guess.
 
Almost all banks have notary publics on staff (usually just a regular employee who happens to also have a notary -- banks regularly need documents notarized). Both my bank and my credit union will notarize a single document for their customers for free. For example, when I sold a car a few months back, my bank handled the transfer of funds and notarized the bill of sale for free.
I have a notary public myself. I had to get one years ago for my employer at the time, and I have kept it updated (every 4 years) just because it comes in handy sometimes.
The purpose of a notary public is to vouch for the actual identity of a document signer. They will generally require photo ID (drivers license) and have you sign in the notary journal. The document(s) in question should always be signed in the actual physical presence of the notary. The notary will then sign an affidavit on the document in which they swear that the person who signed the document is the actual person named within the document. edit: notaries also have a state-issued seal which they will affix to the document near their signature (usually a rubber stamp)
 
Government centers should have one. If you have a DMV office near you, they'll do it cheaply. I had something notarized at the local licensing station and it was $2.
 
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