You can search someone's name for hours and find nothing—but there's a single report that pulls together what courts, creditors, and public records already know, and most people have no idea it even exists.
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Buried in courthouse archives, county clerk offices, and state databases—everything you wish you knew is already public. You just have to know where to look.
Most people assume 'old' cases vanish. They don't. Civil judgments, evictions, and most criminal cases stay searchable for decades—you just need the right database.
People change last names, use middle names, and reinvent themselves. One report cross-references every legal name a person has ever used—and what's attached to each one.
A polished profile says one thing. The bankruptcy filing from 2019 says another. The internet shows what people want you to see—public records show what actually happened.
Every apartment, every house, every state—mapped on one page. Sudden moves, evictions, and the timeline of someone's life become impossible to hide.
"Divorced" on a dating app. "Married" in county records. The discrepancy takes 30 seconds to find—if you know it's there to look for.
Past business partners, former employers, ex-spouses—every civil suit ever filed is searchable. You just need the database that aggregates them all.
These are the kinds of records sitting in public databases right now—waiting for someone to look.
Average loss from tenant fraud
$8,000+
Average embezzlement by small business
$50,000+
Average loss to romance scams
$15,000+
Cost to evict a bad tenant
$3,500 - $10,000
Average identity theft cleanup
$1,500+ & 200+ hours
Cost of hiring the wrong person
$15,000 - $50,000
The information is free. Finding it all in one place is what costs $17.
This isn't a Google search. It's a structured pull from thousands of official sources—courts, credit bureaus, government registries, and verified data brokers.
Run a search on someone you already know—a friend, a coworker, even yourself—and see how much of their life is actually a matter of public record. Most people are stunned.
Here are the most common concerns people have before running their first background check.