Rob, this was the International Motorcycle Show in Ft. Worth. Demo rides in the infield. Austin is about three hours south. Weather was sunny, and mid-80s.what was going on there fella, i spent the weekend watching motogp just down the road in Austin, would love to fly over and watch that gp
the UK tv guys said AUSTIN was great place to be for the weekend
Rob
you would have to call a profiling expert ... and they'll tell you who it is…..
surely measures more than 1.80 meters
usually travel long distances
has a partner who usually travels with him
that day his partner was not with him
Outstanding.Next time, take a picture of the license plate ... it would simplify things. But hey, at least we already know that you are right-handed.
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Why would anyone avoid that? Here in the Netherlands we can’t get much out of it. The plates here belong to a vehicle not a person. When sold, the plates go with it.Some people would rather not show their plate number. I avoided it on purpose. And, it's not the first time that my mitts have ended up in the frame. I usually crop them out.
Possible but not legal.... Texas, the only info that a person will get off of the plate, is my name an address. And, yes, if a person has the proper skill level, there's ways to find out even more.
Don't even need to visit office. 90% of Texas is online. Can search by address and find name or vice versa. Public information. Can even find out how much their property taxes are and whether paid or past due.But, anybody can go to the tax office, and find out who lives at a specific address. There's always a way, so I don't worry about it too much.
Quasi. Public Data.com, completely legal for a fee, can provide a ton of stuff. There's another site, can't recall the name, also for a monthly fee provides every telephone number, email address, physical address, that you ever had . . . . even who your related to, or have been related to. All legal. Even the state of Texas will provide you a copy of a person's criminal history . . . . if pay a fee. ($25 the last I heard) It seems that as long as everybody gets a piece of the pie, it's legal. BUT . . . . if a Texas cop gives you information off of a license plate . . . . the cop can get a $10,000 fine, and 10 years in jail. Of course those penalties were made w-a-a-a-y before the internet.Possible but not legal. . . .
Quasi is right. PublicData is a legal service but if you access it for the wrong reasons (probably most) you can actually be breaking the law. They have a quite long Access Agreement Terms and Conditions.Quasi. Public Data.com, completely legal for a fee, can provide a ton of stuff...