Hotel/Casino
Lake
Mead
Mobile Notary
Fontainebleau Las Vegas
89109

Fontainebleau Las Vegas
(702) 678-7777
2777 S Las Vegas Blvd, Las Vegas, NV 89109
When you need discreet, professional mobile notary services at Fontainebleau Las Vegas, Lake Mead Mobile Notary provides certified 24/7 on-site notarization for hotel guests, executives, and luxury travelers. Whether you're staying at this 67-story iconic resort opened in December 2023, relaxing by the resort-style pool, or dining at celebrity chef restaurants, our licensed notaries deliver fast, confidential document verification directly to your room or private meeting space.
We service all areas of the resort complex, including 3,644 guest rooms and suites, the 173,000-square-foot casino, Lapis Spa, celebrity restaurants, the pool complex, and meeting spaces. Our mobile notaries specialize in power of attorney, real estate transactions, business contracts, estate planning, and international travel documents throughout ZIP code 89109.
Whether you're finalizing legal documents before a show, notarizing business contracts from your suite, or completing real estate paperwork in the tallest building in Nevada, Lake Mead Mobile Notary ensures efficient, compliant notarization at the Strip's newest luxury destination named to Time's World's Greatest Places.
Fontainebleau Las Vegas is a luxury resort and casino located at 2777 South Las Vegas Boulevard. Opened on December 13, 2023, after a development journey spanning over 15 years, it stands as the tallest occupiable building in Nevada at 737 feet (67 stories) and was developed at a cost of $3.7 billion, making it the second most expensive resort in Las Vegas.
The resort features 3,644 hotel rooms across the iconic bowtie-shaped tower, a 173,000-square-foot casino, and world-class amenities. Named to Time magazine's 2024 list of World's Greatest Places, the property brings Miami's iconic Fontainebleau brand to the Las Vegas Strip with sophisticated design by Morris Adjmi Architects.
Highlights include celebrity chef restaurants like Mother Wolf and Don's Prime, Lapis Spa offering luxury treatments, resort-style pool complex with Miami vibes, and LIV nightclub. The property also features Poodle Room cocktail lounge, a 14,000-square-foot fitness center, and over 550,000 square feet of meeting and convention space.
Located on the north end of the Strip near Wynn and Encore, Fontainebleau Las Vegas represents a new era of luxury hospitality in Las Vegas. The property sits on the 24.5-acre site previously occupied by the El Rancho and Algiers hotels. As a sister property to Fontainebleau Miami Beach, it brings 70 years of hospitality heritage to the desert with a focus on sophisticated service and contemporary luxury.
Serving the north Strip and ZIP code 89109, Lake Mead Mobile Notary provides 24-hour mobile notarization at Fontainebleau Las Vegas for hotel guests, executives, and international travelers. Every notarization is performed with professionalism, discretion, speed, and complete Nevada legal compliance.
Zip Codes Covered
89109
No. Nevada cannot apostille FBI background checks or other federal documents because they do not originate under Nevada state authority.
FBI reports and most federal records follow a separate U S Department of State authentication path, and in some cases additional embassy or consular legalization, rather than a Nevada Secretary of State apostille.
The Nevada Secretary of State only authenticates signatures from Nevada public officials and Nevada commissioned notaries. Federal documents like FBI background checks, U S court records, and agency letters are issued under federal jurisdiction, so Nevada has no authority to attach an apostille certificate to them.
For FBI background checks and most federal documents, the usual path is:
Specialized federal apostille and legalization services exist to handle this routing if you prefer not to manage the Washington, D C steps on your own.
Many clients have a mixed set, such as a Nevada power of attorney plus an FBI background check for a visa, adoption, or professional licensing file. In that scenario, each document must go through the authority that issued it, even though they ultimately support the same foreign application.
Lake Mead Mobile Notary cannot submit federal apostille requests directly, but can still help you avoid misrouting and delays when Nevada records and federal records appear in the same packet.
Share your document list and destination country, and Lake Mead Mobile Notary can map the Nevada, federal, and consular steps so nothing is sent to the wrong office.
Yes. For expedited courier shipments, Lake Mead Mobile Notary charges a $15 coordination fee in addition to the carrier’s own rate.
This fee covers the time and handling needed to prepare apostilled documents for shipment, generate or apply labels, arrange pickup or drop‑off, and monitor tracking so your envelope moves correctly from Las Vegas to its final destination.
The coordination fee applies when you choose upgraded courier services such as overnight, 2‑day, or international delivery for your apostilled documents. It is not a markup on postage; it is a separate service charge for managing the logistics on your behalf.
The $15 coordination fee is charged per courier shipment when Lake Mead Mobile Notary actively manages an expedited or specialized delivery, such as next‑day or international courier service. Standard, non‑rush shipping paths may not require this fee, and you can always ask to see exactly which shipments include coordination on your quote.
If you prefer to use your own FedEx, UPS, DHL, or similar account, you can supply a prepaid label and still request coordination. In that case, the carrier charges you directly, and the $15 fee only covers the handling and logistics work.
Courier coordination appears as its own line item so you can distinguish between professional handling and the carrier’s base rate. You will see:
This breakdown makes it easy to compare standard shipping against expedited courier options and decide whether the extra speed and coordination are worth the added cost for your situation.
Definitely. Whether it’s a coworking space, shared office, or suite inside a business plaza, we’re equipped for efficient on-site notarizations.
Yes, I-9 violations are strict liability violations—intent doesn't matter. Even paperwork errors, technical mistakes, or missed deadlines trigger penalties of $288 to $2,861 per form regardless of whether the violation resulted from intentional non-compliance, negligence, or honest administrative oversight. ICE does not distinguish between deliberate fraud and accidental omissions when imposing fines; a missing signature, transposed date, incomplete field, or expired document without reverification all constitute violations subject to the full penalty range. This strict liability standard means employers cannot defend violations by claiming good faith, lack of knowledge, or reliance on employee representations—federal law places absolute responsibility on the employer to maintain complete, accurate, and timely I-9 forms for every employee.
However, good faith compliance efforts may reduce fine amounts within the penalty range. ICE considers mitigating factors when determining where in the $288-$2,861 spectrum to assess penalties, including: employer size and resources (small businesses may receive lower fines than large corporations), compliance history (first-time violators typically receive minimum penalties while repeat offenders face maximums), self-auditing and correction efforts (proactive I-9 reviews demonstrating due diligence can reduce fines), cooperation during ICE inspection (timely production of documents and professional conduct), implementation of compliance training programs, and absence of discriminatory practices. Employers who conduct annual I-9 self-audits, correct substantive violations through good-faith efforts (while preserving original forms per retention rules), train HR staff regularly, and use authorized representatives with expertise in employment verification demonstrate the compliance culture ICE values when exercising discretion in penalty assessment.
Lake Mead Mobile Notary helps Las Vegas and Henderson employers avoid honest mistakes by providing professional I-9 verification services that ensure accuracy from initial completion. Our mobile notaries examine documents carefully, complete Section 2 fields correctly, verify dates and document numbers, and create audit-ready forms that withstand ICE scrutiny. We also offer pre-audit I-9 review services for businesses concerned about existing compliance gaps, identifying correctable errors and implementing systems that prevent future mistakes. This proactive approach reduces penalty exposure and demonstrates the good-faith compliance effort that ICE considers when assessing fines. Book I-9 verification throughout Clark County including Chinatown Spring Mountain District and surrounding areas.
Yes, you can proceed with VP-147 lien sale even if certified mail returns as "undeliverable," "attempted - not known," or "refused." Nevada law requires you to attempt proper notification at the DMV-registered address, but you're not responsible if the owner moved without updating their address or refuses to accept the letter. The key is documenting your good-faith notification attempt.
This is the second most discussed lien sale question on automotive forums and r/legaladvice. Tow operators panic when certified mail comes back weeks after sending, thinking the entire lien sale process must start over. That's not correct. What matters is that you sent notification to the correct address on file with Nevada DMV at the time you mailed it.
đź“‹ How to Document Undeliverable Certified Mail for VP-147:
⚠️ Critical Distinction - Undeliverable vs. Never Sent: Nevada courts and DMV distinguish between "mail returned undeliverable" (proper notification attempt) and "mail never sent" (no notification attempt). If you skip certified mail entirely and claim the owner "couldn't be found," your VP-147 will be rejected and you could face liability for wrongful sale. But if you can prove you sent certified mail to the DMV-registered address and USPS returned it undeliverable, you've met Nevada's notification requirement.
đź’ˇ The 30-Day Waiting Period Starts When You Mail It: Confusion exists about when the clock starts. The 30-day waiting period begins on the date you send certified mail, not when it's delivered or returned. Example: You mail certified letters on May 1st to owner and lienholder. Owner's letter is delivered May 4th (signed green card returned). Lienholder's letter returns undeliverable May 8th. You can still proceed with lien sale on June 1st (30 days after May 1st mailing date) because you attempted notification to both parties.
🏢 Real-World Example from Las Vegas Tow Yard: Tow company in Boca Park area towed abandoned vehicle from apartment complex. DMV records showed owner at an address in Henderson. Certified mail sent September 1st, returned "moved - no forwarding address" September 9th. Tow company kept the returned envelope, waited until October 2nd (31 days after mailing), then had VP-147 notarized at their facility. Auction accepted the vehicle because notification attempt was properly documented. The vehicle sold, title transferred to buyer with no issues.
⚠️ When Undeliverable Mail Becomes a Problem: If certified mail to the lienholder (bank) returns undeliverable AND you cannot locate the bank through research (merger, acquisition, failure), consult an attorney before proceeding. While owner notification can be satisfied with undeliverable mail, lienholder notification may require additional steps if the lien is recent and valuable.



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