Long Beach is a coastal city and port in Southern California. Moored in its Queensway Bay, RMS Queen Mary is a retired ocean liner and museum ship. The waterfront Aquarium of the Pacific features touch tanks and a shark lagoon. Modern and contemporary works are on display at the Museum of Latin American Art. Rancho Los Cerritos is a 19th-century adobe home and museum set in expansive gardens.
While I reside in Long Beach, I also spend a lot of time in the Monterey Park area. We have a small postal shop, MY PO BOX LA, located 443 West Garvey Ave, Ste C, Monterey Park, CA 91755. There we provide shipping, translation and notary services. We also have over 600 private mailboxes we rent. If you are looking for a private mailbox we can help!
Very much consider myself a "Dude". At 6'4 and 330 pounds I'm not hard to miss. My wife and I have been married for 25 years, have 3 kids, 2 in college and one teenager. We have lived in Salt Lake City, Las Vegas, Monterey Park and Long Beach. Before the China takeover of Hong Kong we loved spending our summers in the "Fragrant Harbor". I speak semi-fluent Cantonese and a very broken version of Mandarin. We are huge "foodies" and enjoy to travel.
Our Notary Services can cover most of the San Gabriel Valley and Los Angeles area. Long Beach, Monterey Park, Alhambra, Los Alamitos, San Gabriel, Wilmington and everything in between.
For Notary Services you can visit our store from 9am-3pm, M-SA or give me a call at (626) 620-3667 and we can meet up or I can come directly to you. Shoot me a text or call anytime.
In order to get a document notarized you will need appear before a licensed Notary Public in person. Provide them with the document you need notarized along with a valid government issued picture ID.
Do you need a notary?
What can a Notary Public in Long Beach do for you? If you’re looking for an official witness for a variety of documents that require such a service, you may need a notary. Here’s more about what a notary is and what a notary does. The National Notary Association notes: A Notary Public is an official of integrity appointed by state government —typically by the secretary of state — to serve the public as an impartial witness in performing a variety of official fraud-deterrent acts related to the signing of important documents. These official acts are called notarizations, or notarial acts. Notaries are publicly commissioned as “ministerial” officials, meaning that they are expected to follow written rules without the exercise of significant personal discretion, as would otherwise be the case with a “judicial” official.
What duties does a Notary perform?
A Notary’s duty is to screen the signers of important documents — such as property deeds, wills and powers of attorney — for their true identity, their willingness to sign without duress or intimidation, and their awareness of the contents of the document or transaction. Some notarizations also require the Notary to put the signer under an oath, declaring under penalty of perjury that the information contained in a document is true and correct. Impartiality is the foundation of the Notary’s public trust. They are duty-bound not to act in situations where they have a personal interest. The public trusts that the Notary’s screening tasks have not been corrupted by self-interest. And impartiality dictates that a Notary never refuse to serve a person due to race, nationality, religion, politics, sexual orientation or status as a non-customer. As official representatives of the state, Notaries Public in Long Beach certify the proper execution of many of the life-changing documents of private citizens — whether those diverse transactions convey real estate, grant powers of attorney, establish a prenuptial agreement, or perform the multitude of other activities that enable our civil society to function.
When do you need a notary?
There are a number of official documents that require a notarized signature. Only a Notary can perform this service. The Notary witnesses your signature and verifies that s/he confirmed your identity and that you were the person who signed the document. One of the most common times individuals encounter notaries is during a closing on a house. Home mortgage closings feature a number of legal documents which must be signed, and those signatures must be witnessed. A Notary Public or Mobile Notary Public in Long Beach can witness and certify the signatures on these important documents. You can always search for notaries at https://notary.net/find/ or http://www.notaryrotary.com/agent/find_a_notary.asp
Notarization: The Role of the Notary
Notarization is the official fraud-deterrent process that assures the parties of a transaction that a document is authentic, and can be trusted. It is a three-part process, performed by a Notary Public, that includes of vetting, certifying and record-keeping. Notarizations are sometimes referred to as “notarial acts.” Above all, notarization is the assurance by a duly appointed and impartial Notary Public that a document is authentic, that its signature is genuine, and that its signer acted without duress or intimidation, and intended the terms of the document to be in full force and effect. The central value of notarization lies in the Notary’s impartial screening of a signer for identity, willingness and awareness. This screening detects and deters document fraud, and helps protect the personal rights and property of private citizens from forgers, identity thieves and exploiters of the vulnerable. Every day the process of notarization prevents countless forged, coerced and incompetent signings that would otherwise overwhelm our court system and dissolve the network of trust allowing our civil society to function.
What Does the Act of Notarization Accomplish?
According to the North Dakota Secretary of State website, the act of notarization is more than simply a clerical procedure. Notarization protects against fraud. A notarized signature proves the signer appeared before the notary public because the signer must be in the physical presence of the notary before the notary may lawfully notarize the document. The notary also certifies that a signature is made willingly and freely. However, a notarization does not prove a document or statement is true or accurate, nor does a notarization validate or legalize a document.
What is involved in Notarization?
The Notary’s screening of the signer for identity, volition and awareness is the first part of a notarization. The second part is entering key details of the notarization in the Notary’s “journal of notarial acts.” Keeping such a chronological journal is a widely endorsed best practice, if not a requirement of law. Some states even require document signers to leave a signature and a thumbprint in the Notary’s journal. The third part is completing a “notarial certificate” that states exactly what facts are being certified by the Notary in the notarization. Affixation of the Notary’s signature and seal of office on the certificate climaxes the notarization. The seal is the universally recognized symbol of the Public Notary office. Its presence gives a notarized document considerable weight in legal matters and renders it genuine on its face (i.e., prima facie evidence) in a court of law.
Downtown, Belmont Shore, Naples, Bixby Knolls, Alamitos Beach, Cambodia Town, Waterfront, Ramona Park, Eastside, Marina Pacifica, Los Altos, Belmont Heights, Los Cerritos, Westside, 4th Street Corridor, Carmelitos, California Heights, Bluff Heights, Queensway Bay, Bixby Village, Alamitos Heights, Traffic Circle Area, Rancho Estates, Zaferia, Bixby Hill, El Dorado South, Artcraft Manor, North Alamitos Beach, University Park Estates, South Wrigley, Rose Park, South of Conant, Old Lakewood City, Willmore, Bluff Park, Wrigley Heights, Aubry at Alamitos, Plaza, Hellman Street, Coolidge Triangle, Freeway Circle, Addams, Cherry Manor, Penisula, Jackson, Lindbergh, Belmont Park, Carroll Park, Upper Westside, Sutter
RMS Queen Mary is a retired British ocean liner that sailed primarily on the North Atlantic Ocean from 1936 to 1967 for the Cunard-White Star Line and was built by John Brown & Company in Clydebank, Scotland. Queen Mary, along with RMS Queen Elizabeth, were built as part of Cunard's planned two-ship weekly express service between Southampton, Cherbourg and New York.
Knott's Berry Farm is a 57-acre theme park located in Buena Park, California, owned and operated by Cedar Fair. In 2015, it was the twelfth-most-visited theme park in North America and averages approximately 4 million visitors per year. The park features 40 rides including roller coasters, family rides, dark rides, and water rides.
The Aquarium of the Pacific is a public aquarium on a 5-acre site on Rainbow Harbor in Long Beach, California, United States. It is situated across the water from the Long Beach Convention Center, Shoreline Village, and the Queen Mary Hotel and Attraction. The aquarium sees 1.5 million visitors a year and has a total staff of about 1,875 people, including more than 1,500 volunteers and about 375 employees.
The Museum of Latin American Art was founded by Dr. Robert Gumbiner in 1996 in Long Beach, California, United States and serves the greater Los Angeles area. MOLAA is the only museum in the United States dedicated to modern and contemporary Latin American and Latino art.
The Long Beach Museum of Art is a museum located on Ocean Boulevard in the Bluff Park neighborhood of Long Beach, California, United States. The museum's permanent collection includes over 4,000 paintings, drawings, sculptures, works on paper, and decorative arts objects.
Knott's Soak City is a seasonal water park owned and operated by Cedar Fair located in Buena Park, California. The Knott's Soak City name was previously used for two other water parks in Southern California, since sold to SeaWorld Parks & Entertainment and CNL Lifestyle Properties
California State University, Long Beach is a public research university in Long Beach, California. The 322-acre campus is the second largest of the 23-school California State University system .
Long Beach City College is a public community college in Long Beach, California. It was established in 1927 and is divided into two campuses, the Liberal Arts Campus in Lakewood Village and the Pacific Coast Campus in central Long Beach on Pacific Coast Highway.
Graduation rate is for non-first-time, full-time undergraduate students who graduated within 6 years. They were the largest group of students (95%) according to the 2018–19 College Scorecard data
Average annual cost is for first-time, full-time undergraduate students receiving federal aid
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21 Alboni Place, Long Beach, California 90802, United States
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