General Resources


The Effectiveness and Cost of Secured and Unsecured Pretrial Release in California’s Large Urban Counties: 1999-2000
By Michael K. Block, Ph.D., Professor of Economics and Law, University of Arizona (March 2005).

The Fugitive: Evidence on Public Versus Private Law Enforcement from Bail Jumping
By Eric Helland, Claremont-McKenna College and Alexander Tabarrok, George Mason University, Published in University of Chicago Journal of Law and Economics (April 2004).

Warnken Report on Pretrial Release
by the Maryland Bail Bond Association, Prepared by Professor Byron L. Warnken, University of Baltimore School of Law (February 2002).

*Thank you to Lexington National Insurance Corporation for providing this information.

 

Inmate Searches

Bibb County, Georgia
Hall County, Georgia
DeKalb County, Georgia
Fulton County, Georgia
Gwinnett County, Georgia
State of Georgia Corrections

 

Investigative Links

USA.com
North American Numbering Plan Administration
Fedstats
Federal Bureau of Prisons

 

Bail Bond Associations

Florida Bail Agents Association
California Bail Agents Association
Mississippi Bail Agents Association
North Carolina Bail Agents Association
Ohio Bail Agents Association
South Carolina Bail Agents Association
Tennessee Association of Professional Bail Agents
Professional Bondsmen of Texas

 

Social Security Numbers

State Issued Identification Chart

Use this chart to determine state of issuance

The First Three (3) Digits of a Social Security Number determine the State or Territory of Residency of the Applicant at the time of issuance of the Social Security Number. For Example: The number 254-00-0000 indicates a Georgia resident at the time of issuance.

001-003 New Hampshire

004-007 Maine

008-009 Vermont

010-034 Massachusetts

035-039 Rhode Island

040-049 Connecticut

050-134 New York

135-158 New Jersey

159-211 Pennsylvania

212-220 Maryland

221-222 Delaware

223-231 Virginia

237-246 North Carolina

232-236 West Virginia

247-251 South Carolina

252-260 Georgia

261-267 & 589-595 Florida

268-302 Ohio

303-317 Indiana

318-361 Illinois

362-386 Michigan

387-399 Wisconsin

400-407 Kentucky

408-415 Tennessee

416-424 Alabama

425-428 & 587-588 Mississippi

429-432 Arkansas

433-439 Louisiana

440-448 Oklahoma

449-467 & 627-645 Texas

468-477 Minnesota

478-485 Iowa

486-500 Missouri

501-502 North Dakota

503-504 South Dakota

505-508 Nebraska

509-515 Kansas

516-517 Montana

518-519 Idaho

520 Wyoming

521-524 Colorado

525, 585 & 648-649 New Mexico

526-527 & 600-601 Arizona

528-529 & 646-647 Utah

530 Nevada

531-539 Washington

540-544 Oregon

545-573 & 602-626 California

574 Alaska

575-576 Hawaii

577-579 District of Columbia

581-584 & 596-599 Puerto Rico

586 Guam

586 American Samoa

586 Philippine Islands

700-728 Railroad Employees

*650-699 unassigned, for future use

*700-728 Railroad workers through 1963, then discontinued
*729-799 unassigned, for future use
*800-999 not valid SSNs.
Some sources have claimed that numbers above 900 were used when some state programs were converted to federal control, but current SSA documents claim no numbers above 799 have ever been used.