The serial number on your Club Car can help you determine the model year. The serial number of each vehicle is printed on a bar code decal mounted either below the passenger side cup holder or above the accelerator or brake pedal (Example: PH0901-123456, as shown, or F9901123456). The letters or letter at the beginning of the serial number (1) indicate the vehicle model, could be one or two letters. The following four digits (2) indicate the model year and production week during which the vehicle was built. The six digits following the hyphen (3) represent the unique sequential number assigned to each vehicle built within a given model year.
Car Alarm Serial Number Lookup
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The serial number on your Club Car can help you determine the model type. See instructions above for locating and reading your serial number. A directory of serial number codes and associated model types can be found here.
The serial number of each vehicle is printed on a bar code decal mounted either below the passenger side cup holder or above the accelerator or brake pedal (Example: PH0901-123456, as shown, or F9901123456). The letters or letter at the beginning of the serial number (1) indicate the vehicle model, could be one or two letters. The following four digits (2) indicate the model year and production week during which the vehicle was built. The six digits following the hyphen (3) represent the unique sequential number assigned to each vehicle built within a given model year.
NCIC is a computerized index of criminal justice information (i.e.- criminal record history information, fugitives, stolen properties, missing persons). It is available to Federal, state, and local law enforcement and other criminal justice agencies and is operational 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. PURPOSE: The purpose for maintaining the NCIC system is to provide a computerizeddatabase for ready access by a criminal justice agency making an inquiry and for promptdisclosure of information in the system from other criminal justice agencies about crimes andcriminals. This information assists authorized agencies in criminal justice and related lawenforcement objectives, such as apprehending fugitives, locating missing persons, locating andreturning stolen property, as well as in the protection of the law enforcement officersencountering the individuals described in the system.ACCESS CONSTRAINTS: All records in NCIC are protected from unauthorized access throughappropriate administrative, physical, and technical safeguards. These safeguards includerestricting access to those with a need to know to perform their official duties, and using locks,alarm devices, passwords, and/or encrypting data communications.USE CONSTRAINTS: Users of the NCIC system will be restricted to only those privilegesnecessary to perform an authorized task(s).AGENCY PROGRAM: The FBI is authorized to acquire, collect, classify and preserveidentification, criminal identification, crime, and other records and to exchange such informationwith authorized entities. SOURCES OF DATA: Data contained in NCIC is provided by the FBI, federal, state, local andforeign criminal justice agencies, and authorized courts.The most recent iteration of NCIC became operational on July 11, 1999 at the FBI's Criminal Justice Information Services Division in Clarksburg, West Virginia. A recent hardware upgrade to the NCIC system is responsible for this significant improvement in performance.Categories of individuals covered by the system: A. Wanted Persons: 1. Individuals for whom Federal warrants are outstanding. 2. Individuals who have committed or have been identified with an offense which is classified as a felony or serious misdemeanor under the existing penal statutes of the jurisdiction originating the entry and for whom a felony or misdemeanor warrant has been issued with respect to the offense which was the basis of the entry. Probation and parole violators meeting the foregoing criteria. 3. A "Temporary Felony Want" may be entered when a law enforcement agency has need to take prompt action to establish a "want" entry for the apprehension of a person who has committed or the officer has reasonable grounds to believe has committed, a felony and who may seek refuge by fleeing across jurisdictional boundaries and circumstances preclude the immediate procurement of a felony warrant. A "Temporary Felony Want" shall be specifically identified as such and subject to verification and support by a proper warrant within 48 hours following the entry of a temporary want. The agency originating the "Temporary Felony Want" shall be responsible for subsequent verification or re- entry of a permanent want. 4. Juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent and who have escaped or absconded from custody, even though no arrest warrants were issued. Juveniles who have been charged with the commission of a delinquent act that would be a crime if committed by an adult, and who have fled from the state where the act was committed. 5. Individuals who have committed or have been identified with an offense committed in a foreign country, which would be a felony if committed in the United States, and for whom a warrant of arrest is outstanding and for which act an extradition treaty exists between the United States and that country. 6. Individuals who have committed or have been identified with an offense committed in Canada and for whom a Canada-Wide Warrant has been issued which meets the requirements of the Canada-U.S. Extradition Treaty, 18 U.S.C. 3184. B. Individuals who have been charged with serious and/or significant offenses: 1. Individuals who have been fingerprinted and whose criminal history record information has been obtained. 2. Violent Felons: Persons with three or more convictions for a violent felony or serious drug offense as defined by 18 U.S.C. Sec. 924(e). C. Missing Persons: 1. A person of any age who is missing and who is under proven physical/mental disability or is senile, thereby subjecting that person or others to personal and immediate danger. 2. A person of any age who is missing under circumstances indicating that the disappearance was not voluntary. 3. A person of any age who is missing under circumstances indicating that that person's physical safety may be in danger. 4. A person of any age who is missing after a catastrophe. 5. A person who is missing and declared unemancipated as defined by the laws of the person's state of residence and does not meet any of the entry criteria set forth in 1-4 above. D. Individuals designated by the U.S. Secret Service as posing a potential danger to the President and/or other authorized protectees. E. Members of Violent Criminal Gangs: Individuals about whom investigation has developed sufficient information to establish membership in a particular violent criminal gang by either: 1. Self admission at the time of arrest or incarceration, or 2. Any two of the following criteria: a. Identified as a gang member by a reliable informant; b. Identified as a gang member by an informant whose information has been corroborated; c. Frequents a gang's area, associates with known members, and/or affects gang dress, tattoos, or hand signals; d. Has been arrested multiple times with known gang members for offenses consistent with gang activity; or e. Self admission (other than at the time of arrest or incarceration). F. Members of Terrorist Organizations: Individuals about whom investigations has developed sufficient information to establish membership in a particular terrorist organization using the same criteria listed above in paragraph E, items 1 and 2 a-e, as they apply to members of terrorist organizations rather than members of violent criminal gangs. G. Unidentified Persons: 1. Any unidentified deceased person. 2. Any person who is living and unable to ascertain the person's identity (e.g., infant, amnesia victim). 3. Any unidentified catastrophe victim. 4. Body parts when a body has been dismembered.Categories of records in the system: A. Stolen Vehicle File: 1. Stolen vehicles. 2. Vehicles wanted in conjunction with felonies or serious misdemeanors. 3. Stolen vehicle parts including certificates of origin or title. B. Stolen License Plate File. C. Stolen Boat File. D. Stolen Gun File: 1. Stolen guns. 2. Recovered guns, when ownership of which has not been established. E. Stolen Article File. F. Securities File: 1. Serially numbered stolen, embezzled or counterfeited, securities. 2. "Securities" for present purposes of this file are currently (e.g., bills, bank notes) and those documents or certificates which generally are considered to be evidence of debt (e.g., bonds, debentures, notes) or ownership of property (e.g., common stock, preferred stock), and documents which represent subscription rights, warrants and which are of the types traded in the securities exchanges in the United States, except for commodities futures. Also, included are warehouse receipts, travelers checks and money orders. G. Wanted Person File: Described in "CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM. A. Wanted Persons, 1-4." H. Foreign Fugitive File: Identification data regarding persons who are fugitives from foreign countries, who are described in "Categories of individuals covered by the system: A. Wanted Persons, 5 and 6." I. Interstate Identification Index File: A cooperative Federal-state program for the interstate exchange of criminal history record information for the purpose of facilitating the interstate exchange of such information among criminal justice agencies. Described in "Categories of individuals covered by the system: B. 1." J. Identification records regarding persons enrolled in the United States Marshals Service Witness Security Program who have been charged with serious and/or significant offenses: Described in "CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS covered by the system: B." K. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms (BATF) Violent Felon File: Described in "Categories of individuals covered by the system: B. 2." L. Missing Person File: Described in "CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS covered by the system: C. Missing Persons." M. U.S. Secret Service Protective File: Described in "CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS covered by the system: D." N. Violent Criminal Gang File: A cooperative Federal-state program for the interstate exchange of criminal gang information. For the purpose of this file, a "gang" is defined as a group of three or more persons with a common interest, bond, or activity characterized by criminal or delinquent conduct. Described in "CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS covered by the system: E. Members of Violent Criminal Gangs." O. Terrorist File: A cooperative Federal-state program for the exchange of information about terrorist organizations and individuals. For the purposes of this file, "terrorism" is defined as activities that involve violent acts or acts dangerous to human life that are a violation of the criminal laws of the United States or any state or would be a criminal violation if committed within the jurisdiction of the United States or any state, which appear to be intended to: 1. Intimidate or coerce a civilian population, 2. Influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion, or 3. Affect the conduct of a government by crimes or kidnapping. Described in "Categories of individuals covered by the system: F. Members of Terrorist Organizations." P. Unidentified Person File: Described in "CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS covered by the system: G. Unidentified Persons."Authority for maintenance of the system: The system is established and maintained in accordance with 28 U.S.C. 534; Department of Justice Appropriation Act, 1973, Pub. L. 92-544, 86 Stat. 1115, Securities Acts Amendment of 1975, Pub. L. 94-29, 89 Stat. 97; and 18 U.S.C. Sec. 924 (e). Exec. Order No. 10450, 3 CFR (1974).
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