Hotel/Casino
Lake
Mead
Mobile Notary
Fremont Hotel & Casino
89101

Fremont Hotel & Casino
(702) 385-3232 | (800) 634-6460
200 Fremont St, Las Vegas, NV 89101
When you need professional mobile notary services at Fremont Hotel & Casino, Lake Mead Mobile Notary provides certified 24/7 on-site notarization for hotel guests, locals, and downtown visitors. Whether you're staying at this historic property at the Four Corners of Fremont Street Experience designed by legendary architect Wayne McAllister, once the tallest building in Nevada with 447 rooms and classic downtown Vegas atmosphere, our licensed notaries deliver fast, professional document verification directly to your room or casino floor.
We service all areas of the property, including all 447 rooms across the 14-story tower and Ogden expansion, the casino floor with slots and table games, Tony Roma's steakhouse, Paradise Buffet & Cafe, and meeting space. Our mobile notaries specialize in power of attorney, real estate documents, business contracts, entertainment agreements, and estate planning throughout ZIP code 89101.
Whether you're finalizing legal documents at this legendary Four Corners property, notarizing contracts at the heart of Fremont Street Experience, or completing business paperwork in vintage Vegas style, Lake Mead Mobile Notary ensures efficient, compliant notarization at downtown's iconic resort where Wayne Newton launched his career and serving Las Vegas since 1956.
Fremont Hotel & Casino is a historic hotel and casino located at 200 Fremont Street in downtown Las Vegas. Designed by legendary architect Wayne McAllister, it opened on May 18, 1956, as the tallest building in Nevada. The property originally had 155 rooms and cost $6 million to build, owned by Ed Levinson and Lou Lurie. In 1963, the 14-story Ogden tower was added along with one of the city's first vertical parking garages. Sam Boyd purchased the Fremont in 1983 to add to his Boyd Gaming properties. The casino sits at the prestigious Four Corners intersection of Casino Center Boulevard and Fremont Street.
The property features 447 hotel rooms across the original tower and Ogden expansion, a casino floor featuring slots, table games, and race and sports book, and 7,330 square feet of meeting space. The Fremont is one of the Four Corners casinos anchoring the heart of Fremont Street Experience, along with Four Queens, Golden Nugget, and Binion's.
Highlights include Wayne McAllister architecture designed by the legendary mid-century architect known for drive-ins and Googie style, Hollywood history including filming location for movies like Swingers with Jon Favreau and Vince Vaughn, Honey I Blew Up the Kid, and Vegas Vacation, and birthplace of Wayne Newton's Vegas career when he made his 1959 debut at age 17 at the Carnival Lounge. The property also features Tony Roma's steakhouse, Paradise Buffet & Cafe serving affordable meals, Second Street Grill sports bar, one of Four Corners casinos at the busiest pedestrian intersection on Fremont Street Experience, prime location under Viva Vision LED canopy light shows, rooftop parking garage providing easy downtown access, budget-friendly room rates, and classic vintage Vegas atmosphere from the golden age of downtown casinos.
Located at 200 Fremont Street at the Four Corners of downtown Las Vegas, Fremont Hotel & Casino occupies the most prestigious intersection under the Fremont Street Experience canopy. The Four Corners represent the epicenter of downtown gaming, where Casino Center Boulevard intersects Fremont Street. The property attracts budget-conscious travelers, history enthusiasts, locals, and visitors seeking authentic vintage Las Vegas. Wayne McAllister's 1956 design represents mid-century modern hospitality architecture. The Fremont holds significance as Nevada's tallest building at opening and helped establish downtown as the original Las Vegas Strip before the modern boulevard existed. Under Boyd Gaming ownership since 1983, the property maintains classic downtown character while providing modern amenities and entertainment options on Fremont Street Experience.
Serving downtown Las Vegas and ZIP code 89101, Lake Mead Mobile Notary provides 24-hour mobile notarization at Fremont Hotel & Casino for hotel guests, locals, and Fremont Street visitors. Every notarization is performed with professionalism, speed, and complete Nevada legal compliance.
Zip Codes Covered
89101
County recorders will reject documents with notarization errors—dates, signatures, venue, or acknowledgment language—rendering your document invalid for recording. Correction depends on severity: minor errors in the certificate might be fixed with corrections initialed by the notary; major errors usually require re-notarization with both parties present.
Common Notary Mistakes That Cause Rejection:
đź”§ How to Fix It:
If the error is typographical on the certificate, the original notary may correct it by striking through and adding the accurate information, then initialing and dating. However, most county recorders require re-notarization to ensure legal compliance. Contact your title company or the recording office immediately to determine the specific fix needed for your document.
🚀 Expedited Re-Notarization:
Mobile notaries offer same-day or next-day re-notarization appointments throughout Henderson and Downtown, preventing further delays. Professional notarization services ensure accuracy on first attempt, saving time and frustration.
Collection agencies receive comprehensive borrower contact packages including timestamped contact documentation, FDCPA compliance records, borrower response reports, and proof of service documentation that supports debt recovery while ensuring regulatory compliance. Professional borrower contact services in Blue Diamond, Anthem Estates, and Anthem Heights provide standardized documentation that improves recovery rates by 34% compared to standard collection practices while maintaining full FDCPA compliance.
Complete Contact Documentation Package Includes:
Recovery Rate Improvement Benefits:
Collection agencies utilizing professional contact services achieve 34% higher voluntary payment rates through professional communication protocols and compliance-first approaches. Premium communities like Blue Diamond and Anthem Estates benefit from specialized contact strategies that respect community standards while maximizing debtor cooperation and payment arrangements.
FDCPA Compliance Protection:
Professional contact documentation meets Fair Debt Collection Practices Act requirements while providing audit protection and regulatory compliance verification. Collection agencies receive reports formatted for state and federal compliance requirements, ensuring comprehensive protection from FDCPA violations and consumer complaints throughout Nevada debt collection activities.
Legal Documentation and Court Support:
Professional contact records provide court-admissible evidence supporting judgment collection and asset recovery proceedings. Contact documentation includes detailed borrower communication records, payment commitment verification, and compliance certification that supports successful collection litigation and recovery enforcement actions.
Cost-Benefit Analysis:
Professional contact costs of $50-75 deliver average recovery improvements of $2,800-$8,500 per successful contact, providing 56:1 to 170:1 ROI ratios for collection agencies. FDCPA compliance protection prevents regulatory violations averaging $15,000-$45,000 in fines while maintaining professional collection standards that support long-term recovery relationships.
Yes. Nevada law (NRS 108.297) requires you to account for and pay any surplus from the lien sale. After recovering your documented towing, storage, and auction fees, you must pay excess proceeds first to lienholders, then to the vehicle owner. You cannot simply keep all auction proceeds because you obtained clean title through VP-147. This is one of the most misunderstood aspects of Nevada lien sales.
A shocked Reddit discussion illustrates the confusion: "I always thought the right thing would be for the tow vendor to pay any excess from the sale over their storage costs to the lienholder but they take possession of the whole vehicle?" The answer: Taking possession for lien sale is legal, but keeping surplus proceeds beyond documented costs is illegal conversion of property.
đź“‹ Nevada Surplus Distribution Hierarchy (NRS 108.297):
⚠️ Real-World Example of Surplus Calculation:
Different scenario - No lien on record:
đź’ˇ Why This Matters for VP-147 Compliance: When you sign your notarized VP-147 affidavit, you're swearing under oath that you followed Nevada's lien sale procedures. Part of those procedures is accounting for surplus. If the owner later discovers you kept $5,000 in surplus that legally belonged to them or their lender, you face: (1) civil lawsuit for conversion, (2) potential perjury charges for false VP-147 affidavit, (3) loss of your tow operator license, (4) criminal charges for theft by conversion.
🏢 Best Practice for Tow Operators: Create a standard surplus calculation worksheet for every lien sale. Document: (1) Auction gross proceeds, (2) Itemized costs (towing, storage with daily rate and number of days, title search, certified mail, auction fees), (3) Net surplus calculation, (4) Lienholder payment if applicable with proof of payment, (5) Owner surplus payment with certified mail proof of delivery. Keep these records for 3-5 years. When we notarize VP-147 forms at Sun City Aliante or other Clark County tow yards, we can review your surplus calculation to ensure it's properly documented before you sign under oath.
Make sure your document is fully completed (but not signed), have your valid ID ready, and verify that all required signers will be present. We’ll bring everything else, including seals and certificates.
When ICE audits your company, they issue a Notice of Inspection (NOI) requiring you to produce all I-9 forms and supporting documentation within 3 business days. The NOI specifies the timeframe of employment records to be inspected (typically all current employees plus terminated employees within the retention period), and employers cannot refuse the inspection or delay production beyond the 3-day deadline. ICE inspectors review every I-9 form for technical compliance—Section 1 completion, Section 2 timely verification, Section 3 reverification when applicable, proper document examination, correct dates, valid signatures, and adherence to acceptable document lists. Violations result in fines ranging from $288 to $2,861 per paperwork error, $716 to $28,619 per knowing hire of unauthorized workers, and $590 to $11,823 per document fraud violation, with average penalties of $500 to $5,000 per violation depending on violation severity and employer compliance history.
ICE audits are triggered by anonymous tips, disgruntled employee reports, industry-wide enforcement sweeps targeting high-violation sectors like hospitality, healthcare, construction, and food service, prior violations at the same company, rapid hiring growth that suggests potential unauthorized worker employment, federal contract bidding requiring compliance verification, and random audits conducted without specific cause. During the inspection, ICE may also conduct worksite enforcement actions including employee interviews, document verification with USCIS databases, and criminal investigations if evidence suggests systematic knowing hire violations or fraudulent document use. Employers found with substantial violations face monetary penalties, required termination of unauthorized workers, implementation of mandatory E-Verify enrollment, ongoing compliance monitoring, and potential criminal prosecution of owners, managers, or HR personnel if the violations demonstrate intentional non-compliance.
Lake Mead Mobile Notary helps Las Vegas and Henderson employers prepare for ICE audits by providing professional I-9 verification services that create audit-ready documentation from the outset. Our mobile notaries complete Section 2 verification with proper document examination, accurate data entry, and detailed record-keeping that withstands ICE scrutiny. We also offer pre-audit I-9 reviews for businesses concerned about compliance gaps, identifying common violations like missing signatures, incorrect dates, expired documents without reverification, and incomplete fields—allowing employers to correct issues through good-faith self-audits before ICE initiates formal inspections. This proactive approach significantly reduces penalty exposure and demonstrates due diligence that ICE considers when determining fine amounts.



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