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O Trucking
Active Authority Property Broker MC Age: Mature (5+ yr)

Clark Scott Brown

DBA: Svb Broker Service

USDOT# 2829052 MC-939980 Troy, OH Est. 2015 (10 yrs)

Active

Authority Status

Est. 2015 (10 yrs)

Authority Age

Linked Authorities

Yes

MC# on File

About this broker: Clark Scott Brown is an active FMCSA-licensed property broker based in Troy, Ohio (Est. 2015 (10 yrs)). Operating under MC-939980, the broker connects shippers with motor carriers for general freight movement in interstate commerce. FMCSA records last updated 2026-03-05.

Broker Overview

Clark Scott Brown is a federally-licensed property broker headquartered in Troy, Ohio · Est. 2015 (10 yrs). The company operates under MC-939980 with USDOT 2829052.

Source: FMCSA daily census & SAFER public records · Last synced: 2026-03-05

Authority & Dockets

USDOT Number

2829052

Active

Motor Carrier / Property Broker

MC-939980

Active

Authority granted: 10 years, 7 months ago (December 1, 2015)

Carrier Packet

Looking to get set up as a carrier with Clark Scott Brown? A "carrier packet" is the broker's standard onboarding paperwork — broker-carrier agreement, W-9, certificate of insurance request, references.

No carrier packet on file yet for this broker.

Have you been set up with Clark Scott Brown? Share the packet link to help other carriers — we don't share your contact info.

Does Clark Scott Brown Work With New MCs?

Most freight brokers prefer carriers with at least 6–12 months of operating history. Some accept brand-new MCs. Help fellow owner-operators by sharing your experience.

No verifications submitted yet for this broker.

Did you get set up with Clark Scott Brown? Tell us when your MC authority started — we'll aggregate the data.

Verify on Official Sources

Cross-reference this broker's records with official FMCSA systems before doing business:

Insurance & Broker Bond

BMC-84 Surety Bond / BMC-85 Trust

Federal regulation 49 CFR 387.307 requires every property broker to maintain a $75,000 surety bond (BMC-84) or trust agreement (BMC-85) on file with FMCSA. This bond protects motor carriers against non-payment. Active broker authority generally indicates a valid bond is on file.

View current bond status on FMCSA L&I →

What You Should Verify

  • Bond is currently active (not pending cancellation)
  • Bond meets the $75,000 federal minimum
  • Surety company is reputable and financially solid
  • No active complaints on file with the FMCSA

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Clark Scott Brown a legitimate freight broker?
Clark Scott Brown holds an active FMCSA license under USDOT 2829052 and MC-939980. Active authority means the broker is currently registered with the federal government and authorized to arrange motor-carrier shipments. Always verify current authority status on FMCSA SAFER before working with any broker.
Where is Clark Scott Brown located?
Clark Scott Brown is headquartered in Troy, Ohio, with FMCSA broker authority dating back 10 years, 7 months.
What is Clark Scott Brown's MC number?
Clark Scott Brown operates under MC-939980 and USDOT 2829052. These are the unique federal identifiers issued by the FMCSA for any company arranging interstate freight in the U.S.
How can I contact Clark Scott Brown?
FMCSA records list contact information for Clark Scott Brown as: phone (937) 339-9734. Contact information is reported by the broker to FMCSA and may not always be current.
How do I become a carrier for Clark Scott Brown?
To haul loads for Clark Scott Brown, you'll typically need: (1) active MC operating authority, (2) a valid carrier packet signed and on file, (3) certificate of insurance naming the broker as additional insured, (4) a W-9, and (5) a signed broker-carrier agreement. The exact requirements vary by broker — contact Clark Scott Brown directly to start the setup process.
Does Clark Scott Brown work with new MC authorities?
Many freight brokers prefer carriers with at least 6 months to 1 year of operating history before granting setup, but policies vary widely between brokers. If you're a new MC and want to know whether Clark Scott Brown accepts new authorities, the fastest way is to call them directly. We crowdsource this data — if you've been set up with Clark Scott Brown as a new MC, please share your experience on this profile.
What kind of carrier packet does Clark Scott Brown use?
A carrier packet is the broker's standard onboarding paperwork — typically a broker-carrier agreement, W-9 request, certificate of insurance request, and reference forms. If you have a current Clark Scott Brown carrier packet link, you can share it on this profile to help other carriers get set up faster.
Is Clark Scott Brown's broker authority active right now?
Yes — based on the most recent FMCSA sync, Clark Scott Brown has active broker authority. Authority status can change at any time; always verify on the FMCSA SAFER system before signing a carrier-broker agreement.
What is a BMC-84 broker bond and does Clark Scott Brown have one?
Federal regulations require every property broker to maintain a $75,000 surety bond (BMC-84) or trust agreement (BMC-85) on file with FMCSA. This protects carriers from non-payment. Active broker authority generally means a valid bond is on file — verify current bond status via FMCSA's L&I (Licensing & Insurance) public search.
What's the difference between a freight broker like Clark Scott Brown and a truck dispatch service?
A freight broker holds FMCSA broker authority (MC-FF), legally arranges transportation between shippers and carriers, and earns commission from the rate spread. A truck dispatcher works on behalf of the carrier — finding loads on load boards, negotiating rates with brokers (like Clark Scott Brown), and handling paperwork. Brokers represent shippers; dispatchers represent carriers. See O Trucking's guide on dispatcher vs. freight broker, or learn about O Trucking's dispatch services for carriers.
How can a broker like Clark Scott Brown find reliable carriers in Ohio?
Brokers source carriers through: (1) FMCSA-verified carrier directories where MC numbers and safety records are pre-checked, (2) load boards (DAT, Truckstop) that match active carriers to posted freight, (3) direct relationships with dispatch services that represent multiple carriers, and (4) referrals from current carriers. O Trucking maintains an FMCSA-licensed carrier directory — see active carriers based in Ohio. We also dispatch hundreds of owner-operators and small fleets — see O Trucking dispatch services.
How should I verify Clark Scott Brown before hauling and protect against broker fraud?
Before accepting any load, do the full broker verification check: (1) confirm active MC broker authority on FMCSA SAFER, (2) verify BMC-84 surety bond ($75K minimum) or BMC-85 trust on FMCSA L&I, (3) check days-to-pay reputation on broker-credit databases, and (4) search carrier forums for fraud history. O Trucking maintains an FMCSA-licensed broker directory for Ohio with verified authority data and authority-age sorting so older, more-established brokerages surface first.

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