Woodbury massage therapist fighting cops over prostitution case

A Woodbury massage therapist charged with prostitution is accusing police of fabricating information for a search warrant to get themselves inside the establishment.

Chulalak Ratsbouth, 29, of Plymouth is also criticizing undercover officers, saying they stayed for a full 60-minute erotic massage when just a few minutes would have sufficed.

Ratsbouth is asking the court to dismiss the case against her, according to motion papers filed in Washington County District Court on Aug. 25. She also filed a notice that she will present an entrapment defense to the jury, if the case goes to trial.

Woodbury police are defending their investigation.

“We stand by what our detectives put in,” Cmdr. Jay Alberio said Thursday. “Our detectives aren’t going to falsify anything with the goal of charging someone with a crime.”

Ratsbouth was charged in June with gross misdemeanor engaging or soliciting prostitution in a public place. She has not yet entered a plea.

On April 14 and April 21, undercover officers went to Oriental Touch Massage in Woodbury posing as customers, each requesting a session with “Victoria.” The first officer, a Woodbury police investigator, requested sexual contact for money, but “Victoria” declined. The second officer, who was unidentified in court documents, claimed that “Victoria” touched his genitals and touched him with her breasts.

“Victoria” turned out to be Ratsbouth, an employee of the massage business.

http://liarcatchers.com/civil_investigations.html

The police investigation began with a tip from a “concerned citizen,” who suggested illegal activities were taking place at the business at 7700 Hudson Road. Ratsbouth contends that either the tipster lied, unbeknownst to police, or investigators willingly used false information to get their search warrant approved.
She points to statements in the application for the search warrant attributed to nearby shop owners and a FedEx delivery person. Those people later told a private investigator hired by Ratsbouth and her defense attorney that they “were never interviewed by the Woodbury police and report never making the statements alleged in the warrant and its affidavit,” Ratsbouth’s motion papers state. “Indeed, they were surprised they were even mentioned in the warrant.”

Alberio scoffed at the accusation.

“The detectives wouldn’t knowingly put inaccurate information in an application for a search warrant,” he said.

Ratsbouth is requesting a hearing to determine whether the search warrant contains falsifications and, if so, whether the search warrant supports probable cause without them. She is also asking the court to order disclosure of the anonymous tipster’s identity.

In another motion, Ratsbouth is seeking dismissal of the charges. She claims her constitutional right to due process was violated because police participation was “sufficiently outrageous.”

According to the second undercover officer’s report, the alleged sexual contact occurred at the beginning of the scheduled appointment, yet he “continued to enjoy the massage and sexual contact for the full 60 minutes of the entire massage,” the motion papers state.

“Not once did the officer object to this contact or discontinue it, despite (having) all the evidence he would ever need to submit a case for prostitution charging,” her motion states. “The officer’s conduct in this investigation went far beyond what is necessary, and their actions are repugnant.”

Alberio said it takes time to build a case and to “negotiate your deal” and that investigators go in knowing there are parameters.

If the case goes forward to a jury trial, Ratsbouth has invoked her right to an entrapment defense. In a final motion, she claims she was induced to commit a crime.

“Ms. Ratsbouth denies that she engaged in sexual conduct with the undercover police officer,” her motion states. “(H)owever any sexual contact that may have occurred was inadvertent and/or due to the entrapment of the undercover police officer.”

Her next court hearing is Sept. 29. Her attorney, Ryan Garry, has requested the appearance of the two undercover officers – primarily the one who reported extensive sexual contact – in order to question them.

“The moment this sexual touching supposedly occurred was the moment this thing should have stopped. But this guy let it go on and on and on,” Garry said. “If (the officer) says what’s in his report is true, then it’s a violation of due process. If he says his report isn’t true, then he lied.”

Alberio said he understands the defense attorney is doing his job, but he doesn’t like the approach.

“In Woodbury, we stand by our work and hold ourselves to a high level of integrity,” he said.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on Woodbury massage therapist fighting cops over prostitution case

One year later, no arrests in killing of Novato man in Costa Rica

On Sept. 9, 2010, Steven Edelson of Novato was lounging under a tree on a beach in Costa Rica when he was shot in the head at close range and killed.

One year later, family and friends are still searching for the culprit in the horrific murder.

“I feel I owe it to him,” said the victim’s son, Noah Edelson of Novato.

Steven Edelson, a retired psychiatric counselor, musician and longtime resident of Novato’s Black Point neighborhood, had traveled a half-dozen times with his longtime girlfriend, Marsha Wachs, to the Caribbean coastal area near the town of Puerto Viejo de Talamanca. The couple had never experienced crime there before.

After breakfast on the day of the killing, Edelson, 65, walked a quarter-mile down the beach from the couple’s hotel with a guitar and a small backpack containing sunscreen, a book, a water bottle and a beer. His body was found later that morning.

In the year since, Costa Rican police have investigated the crime but there have been no arrests or suspects named.

“The location (playa Cocles) where the homicide occurred is very secluded and obscure,” Marisel Rodríguez Solís, spokeswoman for Costa Rica’s federal Judicial Investigation Organization, wrote in an email. “There were also no prints or details that were part of the crime scene that could serve as clues to capture a suspect.”

Noah Edelson, who has expressed frustration at the lack of progress in the investigation, has

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

collected about $8,000 in pledged reward money but no tipsters have come forward. Police did investigate one man rumored to be involved but there was not enough evidence to implicate anyone, Solís said.

Meanwhile, Edelson has consulted with a private investigator and lawyers and is considering filing a civil suit against the rumored suspect, an action he hopes will lead to more evidence.

“The main thing that keeps on sort of ringing in my head is, I feel like Steve would have done a lot more for me,” said Edelson, 34, referring to his father by first name. “He would have been more persistent.”

For Wachs, a successful investigation would help end her speculation about exactly how her boyfriend was killed and who was responsible, she said.

“I think it would just close that wondering, but it may be that making up my own ending and my own story is probably going to be what it needs to be,” she said.

Family members and close friends in the Bay Area will hold a private memorial Saturday to commemorate the one-year anniversary of Edelson’s death.

In the close-knit community of Costa Ricans and expatriates where Edelson was killed, homicide is rare but petty theft and other crimes have been rising, said Manuel Pinto, a real estate broker in the village of Punta Uva. After the homicide local residents and business owners pitched in to hire a security guard at the beach where Edelson was killed, he said.

“It used to be extremely taboo to even talk about crime with the fear that it would severely negatively impact our tourism,” said Pinto, a dual French-American citizen who has lived in Costa Rica for nine years. “It (the homicide) basically completely turned it around to the point where everybody has now gotten involved or invested in trying to find solutions.”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on One year later, no arrests in killing of Novato man in Costa Rica

9/11 Memorial to open in Baltimore

Alan Linton called his mother moments after a plane hit the first tower on September 11, 2001.

Sharon Linton ran to the TV in time to see another plane hit the second tower. And she knew her son – a financial analyst – was working on the 104th floor.

“ I thought there was some way he’d get out,” she said. “He had time to get out.”

The family hired a private detective and searched New York homeless shelters. They had hoped he might have had amnesia and was wandering around the city.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Then, Alan’s identification cards came in the mail. And several months after that, seven of his bones were identified at Ground Zero.

Ten years have gone by and now Alan’s name — along with 67 other Marylanders who perished – will be inscribed in a new memorial. It’s being unveiled this Sunday in Baltimore.

Its centerpiece: Three steel beams pulled from the wreckage of the North Tower. Now these families will have a place to go – to remember.

“I think it’s important to remember and not just because it’s our son,” Linton said. “We need to remember that there are people out there who want to harm us. That’s why these memorials are good.”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on 9/11 Memorial to open in Baltimore

William Ayres granted 30 days freedom before reporting to Napa State Hospital

For outraged families seeking justice against William Ayres, it was hard enough to learn the prominent San Mateo child psychiatrist accused of molesting patients would be sentenced to a state mental hospital rather than prison.

On Wednesday, they were dealt another blow. Ayres, 79, who doctors say suffers dementia, was told he will get another 30 days of freedom before he has to report to Napa State Hospital, according to prosecutors.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe said he wanted Ayres to be remanded into custody Wednesday. But the judge granted the defense attorney’s request to give Ayres up to a month to surrender to the hospital. Ayres needed the time to prepare given his worsening mental condition, the judge ruled.

If Ayres is ever restored to competency, which prosecutors say is unlikely, he will be retried on the molestation charges, Wagstaffe said.

Ayres faced life in prison after being charged four years ago with nine counts of performing lewd acts on seven boys during counseling sessions between 1991 and 1996.

The former president of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry was also accused of molesting more than 30 other victims on dates that are beyond the statute of limitations.

But as the legal proceedings against him dragged on for four years and two trials, his mental health declined, prosecutors said. Last month, a judge ruled him incompetent to stand trial after court-appointed doctors declared he suffers from dementia.

That ruling outraged victims and their families, who say they have proof that Ayres is competent.

Victoria Balfour, the advocate for the families, said multiple doctors told the families Ayres is competent. They hired a private investigator to tail Ayres. Last month, only days before his competency hearing, investigators secretly filmed Ayres “hanging out in restaurants all over San Francisco,” Balfour said.

He appeared competent in the video, Balfour claimed, adding that he chatted with his wife and two doctors about the Iowa Straw Poll and future of the Republican Party.

He was also discussing past business ventures, and his future court date, Balfour said.

The families vow to seek justice against Ayres. They have petitioned California’s attorney general and governor for a change of venue in the case.

“This is not the last chapter,” Balfour said.

Balfour said many of Ayres’ victims have suffered from depression, alcoholism and drug addiction. On Aug. 7, a 48-year-old victim committed suicide by running into oncoming traffic in Southern California, she said. In February, a 44-year-old victim died of alcoholism, she said. Others have ended up in state prison, while others have filed civil suits against Ayres, she said.

“He needs to be retried,” Balfour said. “What the parents want now is a change of venue.”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | 1 Comment

New trial ordered in ‘Extreme Makeover’ bus case

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — An Iowa appeals court on Thursday ordered a new trial in a bizarre legal dispute involving the sale of a luxury bus featured on ABC’s popular show “Extreme Makeover: Home Edition.”
Rose Grady, a western Iowa woman who owned the Prevost motor coach, claimed her ex-boyfriend John Kyreakakis and bus salesman Robert Dingle took it without her consent when she was out-of-state getting cancer treatment in 2005.

http://liarcatchers.com/civil_investigations.html

She hired a private investigator to try to find the missing bus, which she and Kyreakakis had used to travel the country before they split up, and reported it stolen to authorities in Harrison County. Grady thought Kyreakakis was either living in the bus or storing it somewhere and demanded he buy it or return it.
Grady was irate in January 2006 when she saw the bus featured on the ABC show, which is known for host Ty Pennington’s catchphrase “Move that bus!” to reveal a family’s new home at the end of episode each. She called ABC and eventually learned the bus had been sold for $740,000 to the owners of Diamond Coach, a Tennessee company that leases it to the show.
One of the buyers testified that Dingle told them they were selling the bus in May 2005 because Grady had died, which wasn’t true.
“She was alive and kicking,” said her attorney, Warren L. Bush. “She just didn’t know where her damn bus was. She kept looking for it even though she was dying from cancer. Then she sees it on ‘Extreme Makeover’ and says … ‘They thought I was going to be dead and they thought they’d get away with it.'”
Bush said he believes the bus is still the one featured on the hit show, which involves building or renovating homes for families who are undergoing hardship. Diamond Coach President Kylee Ervin did not immediately return a phone message.
Grady died in 2006. Her brother, James Grady, now owns the company his sister created to buy the bus free of sales tax and filed a lawsuit in 2007 against Kyreakakis and Dingle to recover the money. Bush traced the proceeds of the sale to a bank account for a company created in Panama and linked to Kyreakakis.
A jury ordered the estate of Kyreakakis, who died in 2008, to pay back $375,000 for what Grady would have gotten from the sale of the bus. But a judge dismissed Dingle from the case, saying Grady had given him permission to sell the bus in an email message in March 2005. In the email, Grady told Dingle that she was considering selling the bus for at least $750,000 and wanted his thoughts. Dingle testified Grady gave him permission to sell in subsequent telephone calls.
But the Iowa Court of Appeals on Thursday ruled that dismissing Dingle from the case was a mistake and the jury should have decided whether his testimony was credible. The court cited “substantial evidence” that indicated Dingle and Kyreakakis may have conspired to sell the bus.
Dingle did not participate in the appeal and a phone number for him in Lady Lake, Fla., could not be found.
Bush said he was pleased to get another chance to recover money.
“Dingle probably doesn’t have any money, but I’m going to try it against him anyway,” Bush said. “The judge never in a million years should have directed him out of this thing.”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on New trial ordered in ‘Extreme Makeover’ bus case

Entire Homestead City Council Sued for Leaking Sexts

Back in 2009 the city council of Homestead wanted to fire City Manager Mike Shehadeh, but Shehadeh wouldn’t go with out a good severance package. So, the Homestead City Council, being as it is a Miami-Dade government body, decided to hire a private investigator. Shehedah, being as he is a Miami-Dade government official, of course had skeletons in his closet including a habit of sending numerous sexts on his City-provided Blackberry. Those sexts got leaked to the press, and now one of the objects of Shehedah’s sext binges is suing.

Johanna Faddis served as Deputy City Manager under Shehadah, but it seems that Shehadah wanted Faddis actually under him. He sent Faddis messages like:
“I have a problem! I cannot entertain another woman in my mind beside you. I am deeply in love with you girl. I am getting deeper and deeper into it.”
Faddis also was found to be visiting dominatrix sites during work. The head of the city’s Parks Department Robert Landen was also found to be sending more explicit sexts and sending racist jokes in the same scandal.

Those messages where then leaked to several in the South Florida media.
http://liarcatchers.com/employee_investigations.html
Obviously Shehadah got shown the door, but so did Faddis. The reasons given: “reduction in force.” Though, she’s none-to-happy that the City Council leaked the embarrassing messages to the press. Faddis is now suiting, and claims negligence, invasion of privacy, and defamation.

Named in the suit: the city of homestead, the entire city council, Vice Mayor Judy Waldman, and the private investigation firm who turned up the messages.

“In the city’s overzealous effort to bring down Mike Shehadeh, it failed to protect one of its own from collateral damage,” said Faddis’ attorney Kelsay Patterson in a statement. “Johanna Faddis never responded to Shehadeh’s advances, but instead of viewing this as a potential case of sexual harassment against a married city employee, the city and council chose the sensational route and cast her as a participant in an adulterous relationship. Faddis has been irreparably harmed.”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on Entire Homestead City Council Sued for Leaking Sexts

Private Investigator collects Dog of passed away?

New York, NY – The mysterious death of Rebecca Zahau at a California mansion in July continues to make headlines, as many question the assertion of authorities that she took her own life. On Wednesday, Jane Velez-Mitchell discussed Rebecca’s death on her HLN show and the actions of Rebecca’s billionaire boyfriend Jonah Shacknai.

“How and why would a beautiful woman – a beautiful woman with no history of mental illness strip naked, bind her own hands and feet in elaborate knots that sailors normally use and then hang herself?” Velez-MItchell pondered.

She added, “Investigators practically launched a public campaign to explain their ruling of suicide.”

Dylan Howard, senior executive editor of ‘Star’ magazine spoke to Velez-Mitchell about the matter saying, “…The San Diego Police Department are making noises that they are prepared to reopen this investigation in the event that new evidence is forthcoming… it’s interesting to note… they’re saying there is very little evidence to suggest this was anything beyond a suicide, as they initially concluded… we’ve also established at this time, a portrait of Jonah Shacknai, the billionaire businessman, the boyfriend of Rebecca Zahau, and his immediate actions in the aftermath of Rebecca being discovered at his mansion.”

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html
He continued, “What we’ve been able to establish is that Jonah Shacknai told… Rebecca’s sister’s husband that he immediately concluded that she had committed suicide. What’s more, he also hired a private investigator who went to collect, on the day Rebecca died, the couple’s dog from a dog daycare facility… it shows a level of inconsistency about his story. Because on the one hand, here he is hiring a private investigator, seemingly concerned about the suspicious nature of his girlfriend’s death, yet, at the same time immediately declaring it a suicide to her family.”

On July 13, Rebecca was found hanging nude from a balcony at the Coronado, Calif. Spreckels mansion, which is owned by her boyfriend, Jonah Shacknai. She had a red rope wrapped around her neck, was reportedly gagged with a t-shirt that was around the ligature and her hands and feet were bound.

Just days before, on July 11, Max Shacknai, 6, Jonah’s son, while in Rebecca’s care tripped and rolled over a balcony at the home and grabbed a chandelier as he fell.

Authorities speculate that Rebecca committed suicide after hearing a voice mail indicating Max was about to succumb to his injuries, which he did on July 16.

“…the medical examiner addressed all the questions people had after they said it was a suicide, and they offered explanations for each of these doubts,” Velez-Mitchell said of a statement released by the coroner Tuesday after officials conducted a news conference Friday deeming Rebecca’s death a suicide.

She noted that suicide is doubted by many who’ve read the autopsy because tape residue was found on both of Rebecca’s legs and she had several head injuries that created bruising on her scalp.

Attorney Ann Bremner, who’s representing Rebecca’s family also appeared on the show and said “…we’ve heard from experts all over… who say this doesn’t pass the smell test. I have been inundated with information, and experts have been hiring experts for the family, including Dr. Cyril Wecht, who said that it should at best be undetermined. Those blows to the top of her head. She’s bound, gagged, taped, she was bleeding.”

Bremner added, “…it would be great if they would reopen the case. That’s what we’ve been asking for… so it’s a great day if that’s going to happen, for the family and for me.”

Criminal defense attorney Roy Black chimed in on the matter, noting, “Four separate police agencies took a look into this case… everybody now has all kinds of opinions and theories about it. But there are certain incontrovertible facts that I think substantiate the fact that this is a suicide.’

Black continued, “Rebecca was a young woman who was considered to be a health nut, who aggressively worked out. She was pretty strong, pretty tough. In order to tie her hands behind her, tie her feet, put a rope around her neck and throw her over a balcony, you’d have to put up quite a fight with her to do that.. They took ten samples of DNA from the ropes around her feet, around her hands, on the bedside where the rope is tied. Numerous places. They only came back to her. Not a single flake from anybody else.

Black also mentioned the message investigators found painted in black on a bedroom door which read, “She Saved Him Can You Save Her,” saying, “The fingerprints, they’re on the door going into that room. They’re on the bedpost where the rope is tied. They’re on the paint tube, which she used to paint this message. Nobody else’s fingerprints are anywhere else… the balcony where she was on was extremely dirty, according to the police and the photographs that I looked at. Hers are the only footprints on there, showing in a V-type manner how she stood right behind the railing and then tipped herself over.”

Bremner responded to Black’s assertion and said, “…the fact is, she died on her back, the experts are saying. She probably was dead when she went over. She didn’t have a broken neck. There’s no fingerprints from the perpetrator because they probably wore gloves… She didn’t write that note. Her family says it’s not her handwriting. The fact that she had no depression, no suicidal ideation, no kind of psychiatric defect or issue before this… The family says no way she knew how to do slip knots, square knots, seafaring type of knots. And the footprints on the balcony… there’s two together, but then it’s just a partial kind of toe print right before the side…”

Black referenced reports that Rebecca had received a voice mail shortly before her death, which indicated Max was about to die from his injures, noting the news could have been so traumatic for her she decided to commit suicide.

“…there’s no phone message,” Bremner argued. “It’s erased… so there’s no evidence that she was told anything. There’s just nothing…. then the third party, she saved him, can you save her on the note?”

Bremner added, “…I believe in… thoroughness… they’re not done with the investigation. Seven short weeks and they say suicide… experts didn’t look at anything else in terms of any other possibilities. They didn’t even check her footprints against her own foot. They didn’t look at other people’s fingerprints… I mean this is just something that needs to be completed… maybe they conclude at the end of the day, it’s a suicide. I don’t think they will.”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on Private Investigator collects Dog of passed away?

Arturo Gatti did not commit suicide

NORTH BERGEN AND BEYOND – A group of 10 private investigators, pathologists and scientists all announced the same conclusion Wednesday morning at a press conference in North Bergen — they believe former world boxing champion Arturo Gatti did not commit suicide in Brazil in July of 2009 and that his cause of death was homicide.

At a press conference held at the Global Boxing Gym, it was revealed that head investigators Paul Ciolino and Joseph Moura concluded their 10-month investigation into the mysterious death of the boxing champ, who had lived in both Hoboken and Jersey City during his boxing heyday. Gatti died in an apartment in Brazil more than two years ago.
http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html
Brazilian police first ruled that Gatti’s death was a homicide and arrested his wife, Brazilian native Amanda Rodrigues, charging her with murder. However, three weeks later, Rodrigues, a former resident of Union City, was released from custody when it was determined that the 37-year-old Gatti took his own life, allegedly hanging himself with a strap from his wife’s purse.

But Ciolino and Moura, two veteran private investigators hired by Gatti’s manager Pat Lynch of Union City, went through an extensive investigation into the boxer’s death and determined — with the help of others — that Gatti did not take his own life and was in fact murdered.

“No one would ever know without a complete investigation,” said Ciolino, who has been involved in private investigative work for more than 30 years. “No matter what we found out, there were going to be doubters. But this is the result of 10 months worth of work and what we found.”

Ciolino and Moura both traveled to Brazil to investigate the scene of Gatti’s death.

“We had no control over the crime scene,” Ciolino said. “There were all sorts of problems. The body was moved. Evidence was moved.”

“We spent two days at the crime scene and we knew within two days that the crime scene did not fit the crime and was not what the Brazilian police said it was,” Moura said. “It was clearly not a suicide.”

Experts proved that Gatti was first injured with a blow to the back of the head that caused him to bleed profusely, although pathologists do believe that Gatti was apparently strangled to death.

Read more: Hudson Reporter – Investigators rule Gatti’s death a homicide not suicide

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on Arturo Gatti did not commit suicide

Life of an Inner West private investigator

FORGET men being the main culprits of cheating on their partners, women are just as guilty.

Is it a surprise? Not to our very own Drummoyne private investigator of 34 years, Warren Mallard.

“What was once 40 years ago a 80/20 balance in favour of men being the guilty party in infidelity, we now have a quantum shift where it’s now 60/40 in the same favour,” Mr Mallard said.

“Naturally the internet revolution, dating sites, the prevalence of brothels and the legalisation of prostitution, this can only grow further.”

While his business is located in the inner west, he’s busted cheaters all over Sydney.

“Cheaters are everywhere in every social demographic, it doesn’t cost much to cheat so there really are no social or economic boundaries.

“There are as many brothels, for instance, in the inner west as there are in the northern and eastern suburbs,” Mr Mallard said.

Unlike the American TV Show Cheaters, Mr Mallard never takes clients along to locations to bust their partners cheating.

He said he would never put them in a position where they can be exposed to risks of harm or stress.

“Professional investigators will gather the evidence and ascertain the psychological situation of their clients and always be considerate and sympathetic when delivering bad news.”
http://liarcatchers.com/aboutus.html
MALLARD’S PATH TO PRIVATE EYE
* Left school at 16 and became a goldsmith
* Joined the NSW Police Force, serving for 11 years until he retired after being run over by a petrol tanker on duty and underwent 52 operations in that year
* His passion for investigation had already been lit, so he started working for an investigation company at Concord
* A year later opened his own business on Lyons Rd, Drummoyne, plus five regional offices in Gosford, Newcastle, Orange, Tamworth and Canberra, employing 80 investigators
* He has been at Drummoyne for 33 years
* Lyonswood Investigations & Forensic Group also investigate bogus theft and personal injury claims, theft in the workplace and family law matters, including breaches of court orders related to child custody

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Comments Off on Life of an Inner West private investigator

Private investigator keeps eye on elderly abuse

AHWATUKEE, AZ – Private investigator Jacob Mueller has made it a full time job to protect elderly adults who can’t always look out for themselves.

The former police officer operates Global Eye Investigations , in Ahwatukee, which focuses on crimes against the elderly, from financial abuse to physical abuse.

“A lot of times physical abuse can be misconstrued as just normal slip and fall or just bumped into a door or something of that nature when in fact that may not be happening,” said Mueller.

Mueller said he’s helped worried families find enough proof to build a case so police could step in.

“We can assist people with in-home cameras, in-home surveillance, GPS tracking of a vehicle, stuff of that nature that might be able to gain a little bit more proof of the actual abuse,” Mueller said.
http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

He also tackles financial abuse which isn’t always so obvious, especially when caretakers make excuses.

“’Well it was a bad week, I deserve an extra few hundred dollars so I’ll just write a couple checks’ and as we know once you would get comfortable doing that then it might be $500, it might be $1,000,” Mueller said.

The abuse can happen at the hands of those closest to the victim.

“Families will do this just as much as caregivers do. It’s a really even scale,” Mueller said.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Add to favorites
  • Email
  • RSS
  • LinkedIn
Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on Private investigator keeps eye on elderly abuse