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Please note that
listings for any type of phone records have been removed from Abika.com
websites and those searches are not available through Abika.com
and will not be available through Abika.com Please
click here for details on how
to protect your phone records.
The following phone searches, lookup publicly
available resources and return whatever is found. |
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Cell Phone Mobile Phone Cellular Phone
Caller ID Directory Assistance |
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Search Name or Address from cell or
mobile phone numbers. Instant Directory Assistance. 411
Directory, Caller ID Phone Book. Reverse Cell phone directory. |
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Reverse Phone Number
Search, Name / Address from a phone number |
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Search, lookup name or address
associated with a phone number. Search the phone book. |
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Lookup Phone
Number from Address |
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Search phone number associated with Address.
Search Landline, Cell, Mobile, VOIP, Web & Internet phone
numbers. |
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Search Name
and Address from Cell Phone or fax number |
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Search name and address associated
with cell,
mobile or fax phone number. |
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Name and Address from
Disconnected Numbers |
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Search name and address associated
with a disconnected number. Current, Historical, Old phone books,
directories, yellow and white pages. |
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Search
Cell Phone Number by Name
and Address |
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Search Cell phone number associated
with a Name and/or Address. |
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Lookup Name and Address of Toll
Free or Payphone Number |
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Search the name and address
associated with a Toll free or payphone number. |
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Search Name or Address from
Internet Phone Number |
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Search name or address associated
with VOIP, IP, Wi Fi, Net, Web, IP Phone, Broadband phone, Web
phone or internet phone number. |
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Search past Landline phone number |
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Search past landline phone numbers
that may be associated with a person including disconnected
numbers. |
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Search past Cell phone number |
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Search past cell phone numbers
associated with an individual including disconnected numbers. |
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Past Name Address
profile of Phone
Number |
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Search possible Names and
Addresses of a landline phone number. |
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Past Name Address
of Cell phone number |
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Search possible Names and
Addresses of a cell phone number in the past. |
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Cell Phone Number from Name
and last known Address |
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Search cell phone number associated
with Name and last known Address. |
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Search all phone numbers
associated with Name or
Address |
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Search all phone numbers such as
landline, cell phone, fax phone numbers associated with Name or Address. |
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Search new phone number from
old landline or cell phone number |
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Search possible new number
associated with disconnected old landline or cell phone
number. |
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Search Phone
Number from Property or Street Address |
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Search phone number associated with
street address or real property location. |
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Search Name, Address from
Voicemail or Pager Number |
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Search lookup name or address
associated with Voicemail or Pager Number |
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Search Name, Address from
Satellite Phone Number |
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Search name or address associated
with Satellite phone number. |
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Instant telephone directory
assistance helps search Up to the minute information for any
caller ID, residential, business, cell, internet, fax, mobile, pager or pay
phone including name, current address (when available), phone
company, connection status and more..
Worldwide. |
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How to find
source of Secretive or harassing Phone Calls?
Often times the
source of the harassing or
obscene calls will show the
phone number as unlisted,
unpublished, non published,
anonymous or private. What is
the difference between the phone
number labels of unlisted,
unpublished, non published,
private or anonymous? All the
above labels essentially mean
the same thing. Continuous,
Secretive, Obscene or harassing
phone calls can be very scary
and stressful. Even if calls are
not threatening they can be of
great inconvenience. However
there are various options
available to you to put an end
to these calls. In most
cases, simply uncloaking the
individual is enough to bring
your problems to swift and
successful resolutions.
What type of
phone calls are generally
considered to be harassing?
When someone
calls and uses obscene or
threatening language.
When someone calls repeatedly
and hangs up.
When someone calls and breathes
heavy or remains silent to
intimidate you.
How often do I
have to get these calls to
consider it as harassment?
Generally any
unwelcome call is harassing
however your telephone company
or law enforcement will not take
any action unless calls are
frequent. If caller threatens
you with specific threats of
bodily harm to yourself or your
family then the phone company or
law enforcement will take prompt
action.
What options do
I have when I get harassing
calls?
The first thing
to do is to call your phone
company. Different phone
companies have different
policies on whether you should
call the phone company or the
police first. Some phone
companies may ask you to call
the phone company's local office
and explain the problem. Other
phone companies may require that
you to file a formal complaint
with local police before they
will deal with the matter. You
should contact your local phone
company and find out what their
policy is in matters of
harassing calls. If the threats
are serious and your life or
property is threatened or if the
obscene phone calls are very
frequent then you should call
your local police immediately
and file a report and provide
all details and information.
You should also note down dates
and times of calls and if the
caller sounded male or female
and describe his/her voice. If
caller said anything or if there
was any background noise then
note down what the caller said
and other details on the
background noise. If any phone
number was displayed on your
caller ID you should note that
down too.
What does it
mean when sometimes my phone
rings and there is no one on the
line?
Often when you
receive frequent hang ups on
your phone line it could be that
someone is checking to see if
you are home or its simply
harassment. It could also be
calls from telemarketers who use
computers for "predictive
dialing" to call consumers where
the computer dials many phone
numbers in a short period of
time. When anyone answers, the
computer finds a sales
representative who is not
occupied at that time and
connects the call. If all sales
reps are busy then consumer may
hear only silence. These type of
calls are called "abandoned
calls." If you are receiving
many abandoned calls in a day,
you can call the annoyance
department of your local phone
company. If these repeated calls
are from a malicious individual
who is harassing you rather than
a telemarketer, the phone
company will generally report
the number to law enforcement.
What options do
I have to stop other kinds of
unwanted calls?
To avoid
unwanted calls you can use many
services offered by your phone
company. Call Screen (*60):
Your phone can be programmed to
reject calls from selected
numbers with a service called
Call Screen (Phone companies
might use different names).
Instead of ringing on your line,
these calls are routed to a
recording that tells the caller
you will not take the call. With
Call Screen, you can also
program your telephone to reject
calls from the number of last
person who called. This allows
you to block calls even if you
do not know the phone number.
Most phone companies charge a
monthly fee for this service.
However Call Screen is not a
foolproof way to stop unwelcome
calls. A determined caller can
move to a different phone number
to bypass the block. Also, Call
Screen does not work on long
distance calls from outside your
service area. You can also use
Priority Ringing: You can
assign a special ring to calls
from up to 10 numbers – calls
you are most likely to want to
answer. The rest can be routed
to voice mail. There are ways
callers can get around Priority
Ringing when it is used as a
screening tool. Harasser can
switch phone lines and avoid the
distinctive ring. You can try
Call Return (*69): This
service allows you to call back
the number of last person who
called, even if you are unable
to answer the phone. Some people
suggest that Call Return can be
used to stop harassing callers
by allowing you to call the
harasser back without knowing
their phone number. Use caution
with this method of discouraging
harassing callers, however, as
it could actually aggravate the
problem. This service is paid on
a per-use basis. You can use
Caller ID to identify the caller
if they are not blocking their
number or use a service offered
by most phone companies called
Privacy Manager. It works
with Caller ID to identify
incoming calls that have no
telephone numbers. Calls
identified as "anonymous,"
unavailable," out of area" or
"private" must identify
themselves in order to complete
the call. Before your phone
rings, a recorded message
instructs the caller to unblock
the call, enter a code number
(like inbound call blocking
devices mentioned above), or
record their name. When your
phone rings, you can choose to
accept or reject the call, send
it to voice mail, or send a
special message to telemarketers
instructing them to put you on
their "do not call" list. |
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Phone Area Codes in USA:
Due to number portability and VOIP phones the old system of
classifying area codes by phone numbers is not always valid
anymore. However wired landline numbers are assigned area codes
according to the following geography. Phone area codes are the
first three digits of any phone number in USA. |
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