Private Eye Detective
Posted on November 11, 2009| Account limit of 2104 requests per hour exceeded. |
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
Private Eye Detective

Is hiring a PRIVATE DETECTIVE in 2007 a bit passe` with the INTERNET available now to the average person?
In old Movies and TV shows, a frequentyly used storline would have someone hiring a Privite Eye to find a missing person. So, considering all these for hire search engines used to locate people, is hiring a P.I. to look for a missing person a bit passe because he would just use the same tools that anyone can use who knows how to use the internet?
Curious as I want to find an most likely still living Army pal of my Uncle, and the free search engines come up empty and I suspect the ones you pay for would probably come up empty as well.
Here is the best way to find some one, it starts will doing a criminal records check.
There are NO reliable sites on the Internet to access anyone's accurate criminal record. Any that claim they do are scams and are just sucking cash out of people to provide them links to public records.
OK, here is what you need:
Call your state's State Attorney Generals Office. They can tell you the process in your state as to how to obtain an official Criminal History Report. This is the complete and official FBI's NCIC (National Crime Information Center) that lists a person’s every single adult arrest and charge disposition everywhere in the United States. These reports are not free, but it is only a very small administrative charge given to the Law Enforcement agency that runs and prints it for you.
Next, pay to get at least one credit bureau report for one of the big three credit bureaus. This can be use to see the persons financial history, which can tell you a lot about them. You can see prior addresses and what they owe and to whom and where.
With the above two documents, you can do your own search of public government records in the towns and states where they live. You can check county tax records, Clerk of Court records and local police / sheriff records just to name a few.
Or, you can contact a local Private Investigator and pay them to obtain all of this information for you. You will pay much more as they will add fees on to do the leg work for you.
So, do not believe any site on the net. They are just scams. Not a single one of them is tied into any official government data base as only authorized government agencies have access to this information.
And no site out there can give instant access to all of this info. It will talk some of your own detective work to do it, or, as I said.... hire a P.I. Agency to assist you.
detective conan the private eye's requiem part 6
| To display Amazon results, you must first enter a keyword or keyword phrase. Please consult the user manual. |
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
![]() |
No items matching your keywords were found.
I first started my career as a Private Investigator in 1990; I was 17 years old and as green as grass. My nick-name in the office was ‘two-sugars’ as I was often expected to make the coffees for the experienced investigators. It was tough going at first, with low wages and very few challenges to begin with; due to my lack of experience. After 12 months I was in charge of the new trainees. I was dedicated and so I was given responsibilities fairly early on. By 1995 I was investigating major commercial crime, and had developed contacts in the major financial institutions, and continued to build a large portfolio of contacts and resources to enhance my ability to do the job. I have been running my own agency for many years, and still get a great deal of satisfaction from the profession.
Most Private Investigators are ex-police or ex-military, and enter the profession as their learned skills can be very portable to Private Investigation work. For example, as an ex-police officer you will probably have very good interviewing skills, whereas ex-military people tend to excel in difficult surveillance type work. There is no hard and fast rule as to what makes an effective or successful private eye.
By far the bulk of the work that most of us do is mundane and to some extent repetitive. Contrary to popular belief, surveillance work can be extremely boring; imagine you are sat in a car for 8-10 hours watching someone’s front door waiting for them to leave some premises? You can hardly listen to the radio or read! Take your eye of that door for just a few seconds and you will miss someone entering or leaving, and probably a photo or video opportunity. Not to mention what we have to do under these circumstances if we need to use the bathroom.
Imagine you have to serve a ‘non-molestation’ order from the Courts upon someone who has been extremely violent to their partner or family? This can be met with enormous verbal abuse to which you can only stipulate that you are ‘just the messenger’, sometimes this is also followed by threats of violence from the person you are serving. Perhaps you are re-possessing a car on behalf of a finance company? I can recall one occasion when the former owner of the vehicle being repossessed, chased me and a colleague with an axe handle and a very large angry dog.
To clear the air, it isn’t always like this, in fact being a Private Investigator is rarely hair-raising at all. Surely it has its’ moments, it can be very interesting or dull, stimulating and depressing. You will see the darker side of human nature from time to time, and naturally cynicism will set in accordingly. It isn’t glamorous or sexy. Is it dangerous I hear you ask? Like most things in life, it is as dangerous as you want to make it, which for most P.I.’s I know means little or no danger at all. I have always maintained that a Fireman or Police Officer, a Soldier or Paramedic has a dangerous job; I do not.
About the Author:
Alexander Moore is a London based professional investigator with 18 years experience. Private Investigator
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - A Private Investigator Provides an Insight Into His Seemingly Murky World
Tags: detective, private, private eye, private eye detective, reference, research, search
Categories: Ebook Reader Devices

Speaking as a truther, I don’t carry signs around in public trying to convince willing human cattle that they’re cattle. If someone asks me about 9-11, personally, I say “false flag”. Then, if they do to me what this Niko did to you, they risk me going off on their person (not pretty). And the cattle? When cows get scared they run into a barn—maybe a safe haven, maybe a slaughterhouse. But they generally don’t stop to read signs telling them which is which.
21.01.2012 21:31
One of the best Aussie bands ever… shame they never reached the level of international recognition they deserved. Then again, maybe that's why they remain the legend we all so much appreciate.
28.01.2012 18:20