Archive for the ‘General’ Category.

Kidnapped Katie and Emma Peterson Have Been Found!

Press Release

For Immediate Release

“Kidnapped Katie and Emma Peterson Have Been Found!”

Dallas Tx – Two children who were abducted by their mother and grandmother have been found and final extradition orders have been issued for Katie and Emma Peterson. The children were found in Tralee Ireland living with their mother and grandmother who abducted them in March of 2005.

In March of 2005, the children’s father Michael attempted to pick the children up for visitation. He found that his ex-wife, Tedra Peterson and her mother Kay Marie Erickson, had left their home in Plano Texas and the children were missing. A nationwide search was undertaken in an attempt to locate the children. Full custody was granted to the father and warrants for the arrest of Tedra Peterson and Kay Erickson were issued by the Collin County Grand Jury after it was determined that the children had possibly left the country to Canada.

In August of 2006, in coordination with the Plano Police Department, Child Rescue Network and Klein Investigations and Consulting were brought into the case. In November 2006 a possible lead was found to suggest that the children may have been taken to Ireland by their mother and grandmother by Lead Investigator Philip Klein. A positive ID was made by undercover agents in Tralee Ireland.

In cooperation with the US Department of State, The US Department of Justice and the Collin County District Attorney, an indictment and extradition order was issued to INTERPOL.

Upon deportation and arrival in the United States in the next week, Tedra Peterson and Kay Erickson will face trial for felony Interference with Child Custody in Collin County, Texas. The children will be reunited with their father after almost two years.

This is the second major missing child cold case abduction return by Child Rescue Network and the sixth successful in 2006 for Klein Investigations and Consulting of kidnapped children around the world.

References On The Web : www.kleininvestigations.com, www.childrescuenetwork.org

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What\’s it like being an investigator?

Excellent story on a yong private investigator presented by The Post standard
Monday, January 16, 2006
By Emily Kulkus
Staff writer

Liz Calver makes a living as a camera-toting, cultural chameleon.

The 24-year-old private investigator has used many disguises on the job, posing as a construction worker and even a wildlife surveyor looking for exotic birds.

Last month, Calver became co-owner of Northeast Investigations, the Manlius private investigation firm her father Robert Calver started in 1992. Robert, Elizabeth and her sister Laura Calver, 30, now own equal shares in the business.

While \”extensive, under-cover surveillance experience\” isn\’t what you\’d expect to find on a visual arts student\’s resume, the 2004 St. Bonaventure University graduate wouldn\’t have it any other way. Elizabeth Calver\’s been helping her father at Northeast since the seventh grade and has worked there full-time for 1 1/2 years.

The company specializes in worker\’s compensation and domestic cases, which means they spend most of their time watching and documenting people out of work on disability or who might be cheating on their spouses. They also handle missing persons, arson investigations and accident reconstruction.

But it\’s those who cheat be it worker\’s compensation or marriage that keep Northeast in business. The firm has an office in Manlius and employs three full-time local investigators and a handful throughout the state. The majority of Northeast\’s investigators are women, which Calver said, is a great business tool.

Calver and Christine Ricci, another Northeast investigator, answer a few questions about their not-so-average occupation.

How does being a woman help what you do?

\”This is no male with a bad polyester suit in a smoke-filled office,\” Ricci said. \”We\’re females, so we\’re sympathetic to their cause and it helps us a lot.

\”Women blend. Most of the time they\’re much more comfortable talking to a woman.\”

What do you use for surveillance?

\”It\’s all video,\” Calver said. \”We video in public places or use hidden body cameras. We have cameras that fit into purses, pagers and ball caps.\”

How much surveillance do you capture per case?

\”For a domestic it\’s usually about four to eight hours,\” Calver said. \”Usually (clients) don\’t take it home. They watch it here with us or alone.\”

What\’s the most difficult part?

\”It\’s hard not to get that attached to the clients,\” Ricci said. \”They\’re coming to us at a low point in their life and 99.9 percent of the time their hunch is correct. You become the investigator/therapist.\”

Do you take the job home with you?

\”I\’m extra paranoid now,\” Calver said. \”My boyfriend will come home late and I\’m like, \’what are you doing? Where have you been?\’ \”

What\’s your most valuable tool?

\”Our feet,\” Ricci said. \”Sometimes the technology will only take you so far. Sometimes you have to go out and physically look for the truth.

\”A lot of it is common sense. It\’s like a big jigsaw puzzle and our job is to put it back together.\”

How long do your cases last?

\”A week to 10 days,\” Calver said. \”Our turnover is quick. Some cases drag out for a month.\”

You must see some interesting things on camera.

\”There are some things you don\’t want to see,\” Ricci said. \”People being people.\”

\”They do interesting things when they think no one\’s watching,\” Calver said.

Do you ever get caught?

\”Never,\” Ricci said. \”We could be anyone. We\’re ghosts.\”

But don\’t you get called to court?

\”Sometimes in a worker\’s compensation case they\’re sitting across the table from you and they\’re trying to figure out when they talked to you,\” Ricci said.

Do things ever not go quite as planned?

\”It\’s not fun when you are following someone and you lose them and then you look in your rearview mirror and they\’re behind you,\” Ricci said of one particular case.

Do you ever catch people committing other crimes?

\”We\’ve never seen anything illegal,\” Calver said. \”But usually people who are committing insurance fraud are up to much more. Like dodging creditors.

\”Many people may suspect they\’re being watched, but they don\’t know why.\”

What do you charge?

\”It\’s $50 to $65 an hour,\” Ricci said. \”But it depends on the type of case, what they need and for how long.\”

What\’s your case load?

\”Usually about 20 at a time,\” Calver said. \”We had at least 1,000 cases this year.\”

How do people react to your services?

\”They\’re thankful,\” Calver said. \”There\’s a sense of comfort with us, especially when it\’s a woman.\”

What do you like most about what you do?

\”I like to think that we\’re making a difference, that we\’re helping people,\” Ricci said.

How do people perceive what you do?

\”A lot of this job is patience,\” Ricci said. \”The hours can be long and it\’s frustrating. A lot of people think it\’s glamorous. But it\’s long, cold days in the winter and long, hot days in the summer.\”

Liz, are clients surprised by your age?

\”They don\’t really say anything but you can just see it on their faces,\” Calver said. \”When they see a young woman in a job that requires a lot of trust and confidentiality, it freaks some people out.\”

Good to know

Private investigators in New York are licensed by the Department of State. To obtain a license, individuals must have three years experience working as an investigator for a police agency or for a private firm.

Robert Calver worked in the special investigations unit for the Onondaga County District Attorney\’s Office, with the Onondaga County Department of Corrections and for a private investigations firm, before obtaining his license in 1992, under which Northeast operates.

Northeast Investigations is one of 54 licensed private investigators or agencies in Onondaga County. There are an additional 25 licensed private investigators in Cayuga, Madison, Oswego and Cortland counties combined.

California Death Row Inmate Kenneth Clair, an African American Convicted of a Murder Which Eye Witness Claims Was Done by a White Man Back in 1984, May Have New Evidence to Acquit

However, Local Authorities Are Reluctant to Run the Unidentified Fingerprints That Could Acquit Mr. Clair of This Murder, Says C. J. Ford Private Investigations

SANTA ANA, Calif.
July 1
PRNewswire

California Death Row inmate Kenneth Clair has new hope of proving he is innocent of a murder that he was convicted of back in 1984. Clair was convicted of murdering Linda Rodgers in Santa Ana, CA. A child witness told police back in 1984 that a white man killed his baby sitter. Clair is an African American.

C. J. Ford Jr., a licensed private investigator who is working for Mr. Clair, has discovered unidentified fingerprints that were not properly tested at the crime scene. However, local law officials are reluctant to test these prints. Ford claims that these prints could possibly reveal the actual person that committed the crime. There has never been any physical evidence to link Kenneth Clair to the crime scene. Mr. Clair was convicted by a combination of a story told by a girlfriend, who has recently recanted her story, and ineffective assistance of counsel.

Kenneth Clair privately hired C. J. Ford Jr. of C. J. Ford Private Investigations, an independent criminal specialist based in California, to investigate his case. Mr. Clair claims that over the last 15 years no one has ever fully investigated his case. Clair believes that his defense team is just trying to prolong his case so that he will die a natural death in prison instead of being executed, and never had the intention of investigating into his case, or trying to get him acquitted of the crime.

Mr. Ford discovered that there were unidentified fingerprints that were not properly tested at the crime scene, and states that authorities know about them. Ford also found and viewed evidence that disappeared in police custody. He feels that DNA testing that did not exist in 1984 could acquit Mr. Clair. Mr. Ford also interviewed a key witness who testified against Mr. Clair, his ex-girlfriend, who now has recanted her story.

Ford comments, \”There is no one who can place Mr. Clair at the scene of the crime, because he wasn\’t there and there has never been any physical evidence to link Mr. Clair to this crime. The child witness told three police officers that it was a \’White Man\’ who committed the crime. It is outrageous that Kenneth Clair, an African American, has been in prison for over 20 years for a crime that he did not commit. Authorities empowered to uphold his constitutional rights are ignoring Mr. Clair\’s opportunity to be acquitted.\” To learn more visit http://www.cjfordpi.com (Kenneth Clair Story).

Contact Information:
C. J. Ford Jr./ C. J. Ford Private Investigations
Chief of Investigations
Phone: 714-203-8370
Email: cjfordpi@adelphia.net

This release was issued through eReleases(TM). For more information, visit http://www.ereleases.com.

Advanced Surveillance Group, Licensed Private Investigators, Celebrates 1st Anniversary of Forensic Data Investigations Unit

The computer forensic investigation team at Advanced Surveillance Group has mastered the skill of locating and recovering any and all relevant information or traces of same that may exist on a computer or storage device. This includes recovering items such as e-mails viewed but not “saved”, websites visited, deleted documents, uninstalled software, etc. We are proud to say that if a piece of information exists on a computer or storage device, our forensic private investigators will be able to locate it and produce it for inclusion in evidence.

(PRWEB) June 8, 2005 –

With over 90% of the world’s business documents being drafted on computers and the relentless use of e-mail, instant messaging and internet business by nearly everyone, much of today’s civil litigation evidence can be derived from computers. The computer forensic investigation team at Advanced Surveillance Group has mastered the skill of locating and recovering any and all relevant information or traces of same that may exist on a computer or storage device. This includes recovering items such as e-mails viewed but not “saved”, websites visited, deleted documents, uninstalled software, etc. We are proud to say that if a piece of information exists on a computer or storage device, our forensic private investigators will be able to locate it and produce it for inclusion in evidence.

Originally just focusing on cases in Michigan, A.S.G. has grown and engaged clients in Chicago, Miami, New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and beyond over the past year and expects to be adding to the computer forensics team shortly.

Paul Dank, Principal reports: “We are really off to a great start this year. We have honed our skills and expertise in this area. Our investigators now have the ability to recover electronic evidence from any number of electronic devices, including computers, digital cameras, personal digital devices like a cell phone or black berry, fax machines and even digital answering machines.”

All of our http://www.asginvestigations.com/computer_evidence_recovery/ [computer forensic investigations are conducted in a forensically sound, court room tested manner, thus preserving the integrity associated with that piece of electronic evidence. As http://www.asginvestigations.com/about_michigan_private_investigators/ [licensed private detectives, we are in a far better position to find evidence, than the office I.T. guy or other companies, because we already have the investigative knowledge, training, and mindset. We have a multitude of court recognized software programs and tools to employ along with our vast experience in both the technological aspects as well as generally accepted investigation practices. This combination is vital to preventing any corruption of the evidence.

Not only do we provide the greatest depth of investigation, but we also offer the protection of our work product under the confidentiality laws, something that non-licensed computer professionals cannot.

If you are in need of a computer forensic evaluation to capture information off of a hard drive or other electronic device or simply require more information, we encourage you to visit our website at www.asginvestigations.com/computer_evidence_recovery/ or call one of our investigators for a free, completely confidential discussion of your case.

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Grove Police Associations Citizen of the Year Award Given to P.I.

Rick Mills, President and CEO of I.F.R.S. Group, Inc a California Licensed Private Investigation Agency, received the Garden Grove Police Associations Citizen of the Year Award

(PRWEB) April 12, 2005 — Rick Mills, President and CEO of I.F.R.S. Group, Inc a California Licensed Private Investigation Agency, received the Garden Grove Police Associations Citizen of the Year Award at an awards banquet held in Garden Grove California on Saturday April 09, 2005.

Rick Mills was nominated by Detective John Gatine of the Garden Grove Police Department for his assistance in locating one of Garden Grove’s most wanted, Edward Chapin, \”The Wizard\”, in Mexico.

Edward Chapin, a major methamphetamine manufacturer in the Garden Grove area, had fled to Mexico after being released on $100,000.00 surety bond. After months of investigation, which included investigating erroneous reports of Edward Chapin having been killed by the drug cartel in Mexico, I.F.R.S. Group, Inc and its lead investigator, Rick Mills, positively located Edward Chapin deep in Mexico where he was manufacturing methamphetamine and reportedly teaching others how to manufacture it. This information was passed on by Rick Mills to Detective Gatine and the F.B.I.

Edward Chapin was finally deported by the Mexican authorities and arrested at the border by the Border Patrol. He is currently in custody in Orange County Jail and his trial is set to begin in May 2005.

\”If it was not for Rick Mills, Eddie Chapin would still be in Mexico\”, said Detective John Gatine.

NCISS Statement Regarding ChoicePoint Fraud Case

February 22, 2005

For Immediate Release

Re: ChoicePoint Public Records, Inc.

Contact: Bruce Hulme, Chairman
NCISS Investigations Legislative Committee
P.O. Box 3392, Church Street Station
New York, NY 10008-3392

Tel: 1-800-475-1399

The National Council of Investigation and Security Services believes that every entity with access to personal information should be fully vetted. As consumers of information ourselves, we welcome scrutiny by providers. Our members have entered into agreements with information providers that require us to verify our clients and to use the information for legal purposes. In most cases the providers are able to audit our records. In some instances, they have even conducted “stings” to assure that investigators are only providing the information for legitimate purposes.

We urge Choicepoint and other providers to conduct appropriate due diligence before sharing personal data with others.

Licensed investigators need access to some information provided by brokers in order to serve our clients by helping find witnesses, locate heirs, prevent fraud and solve identity theft cases. We are a vital cog in the system of justice, providing many services that overburdened law enforcement cannot. It is critical to continue the flow of this information to investigators for these, and other, vital purposes.

We will work with data providers and public officials to assist in the effort to protect personal data while avoiding interrupting the dissemination of information for legitimate purposes.

NCISS is aware that our members and colleagues are rightly concerned with the fallout over the ChoicePoint matter. Our investigative profession also suffers from any attempt by government to close access to the information that we regularly obtain for legitimate purposes in conducting legal investigations.

NCISS at this time is proceeding in a cautious manner, not casting aspersions on ChoicePoint’s missteps, but seeking constructive avenues to ensure that information providers conduct proper vetting of their accounts and licensed investigators likewise know their clients and ensure that personal information is used for legitimate purposes.