Archive for February 2006

Firm Brings Private Investigators into the Fold

Brenda Sapino Jeffreys
Texas Lawyer
02-06-2006

In a perfect world, firms could employ private investigators who are as skilled as pseudo-bumbling television police detective Columbo, Dallas lawyer William Brewer III says.

That\’s rarely the case when Brewer contracts with private investigation companies to help with litigation at 35-lawyer Bickel & Brewer, so the firm launched its own investigative unit in January. It\’s staffed by three former agents and a former training instructor with the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

\”It saves the clients money, because it\’s more efficient,\” says Brewer, a partner in the firm. \”The thing that bothers us all too often [with outside investigators] is we are paying rates . . . for investigators that charge like lawyers, but who deliver sporadic quality.\”

Brewer says the firm\’s new in-house investigators will do a better job than outside investigators, because they will work closely with the firm\’s attorneys on litigation and have a better handle on the information that\’s needed.

\”They can help you review the evidence and help in the advocacy,\” Brewer says, noting the firm uses investigators in 90 percent of the civil suits on its docket.

All too often, Brewer says, reports from outside investigation firms prompt him to scratch his head and wonder, \”How is this useful?\”

Bickel & Brewer isn\’t the first Texas firm to have PIs on staff. But Bickel & Brewer, which also employs consultants with degrees in tax, finance and engineering, may be taking the concept to a new level by launching such a large unit of in-house PIs.

\”It\’s been tradition on the plaintiffs side to have one, because they are doing so much investigation on PI cases,\” says Thomas Ajamie, of Ajamie LLP in Houston. \”You can see how a medium- to large-size commercial law firm would benefit. It would make a lot of sense.\”

Investigative work is simply too important for Bickel & Brewer, which handles securities and large commercial suits, to rely upon a spotty network of outside investigators, Brewer says.

Rusty Hardin, of Rusty Hardin & Associates in Houston, is another trial lawyer in Texas convinced that having an investigator in-house at a firm is the way to go.

\”I don\’t understand why more firms don\’t do it,\” says Hardin, whose firm handles civil and criminal work. \”I am constantly shaking my head at the number of large firms that call us for a reference for an investigator.\”

Hardin says Jim Yarbrough, a former Houston Police Department homicide investigator, has worked at his firm for four years. Hardin says Yarbrough is a tremendous asset, particularly for the firm\’s civil work.

Hardin notes that law enforcement officers do a better job at witness interviews than lawyers, and at investigations. It\’s also cheaper for clients, Hardin says.

\”I would much rather have an investigator at $150 an hour interviewing people — and the client would — than being charged $300 or so by a lawyer,\” Hardin says.

Even though his firm has only nine lawyers, Hardin says he is seriously considering employing a second investigator.

Plaintiffs lawyer Mikal Watts says he employs eight investigators at his firm, the 27-lawyer Watts Law Firm in Corpus Christi. It\’s efficient, he says. Watts says he usually employs former Corpus Christi police officers.

The firm does a lot of automotive litigation, and Watts says some of the investigators he employs \”are real specialized in terms of being able to do seat-belt analysis and knowing how to document the scene of an accident.\”

Brewer says he frequently uses investigators to help develop a case outside of the formal discovery process.

\”One way to go in preparing a complex case is to take 100 depositions. Another way to do it is to find out which people may have information [and] who are relevant to the case, and send a seasoned professional to go out and interview them, like Columbo,\” Brewer says.

That informal discovery can be much more efficient than depositions, he says.

Brewer believes the in-house PIs will cost clients 30 percent to 50 percent less than outside investigators. That has been the experience with the other trial consultants who work for the firm, including employees with degrees in economics and engineering, certified public accountants, tax examiners and technology experts.

\”At a firm like ours, these people are worth their weight in gold. We do securities suits, lots of markets investigations,\” he says.

The firm doesn\’t sell any of the consulting services to other lawyers, despite requests, Brewer says.

John Dillon, the head of the investigation team at Bickel & Brewer, says he expects the lawyers at the firm to ask him and his team to conduct witness interviews most often. He says those interviews will be effective, because the investigative unit will work closely with the lawyers on the litigation and learn the \”big picture\” of what the suit is about.

Prior to joining Bickel & Brewer, Dillon was the white-collar crime coordinator for the Dallas Division of the FBI. The other members of the unit are LeeAnn Revell, Bradford Wheeler and George Webb.

Big Bills

But some lawyers aren\’t ready to employ investigators at their firms.

Houston trial lawyer Stephen Susman says the idea has some merit, as long as the firm doesn\’t use the investigation unit as a profit center by taking on work for other lawyers.

Susman, a partner in Susman Godfrey, says he occasionally hires outside investigators, but usually has legal assistants or associates handle gumshoe work. For instance, Susman says, if a lawyer at his firm needs to serve a complaint, a legal assistant at the firm uses the Internet to find addresses. The assistant may also do online research on a corporation the firm is preparing to sue, he says.

Susman says he has hired a private investigator if the work is beyond the abilities of the legal assistant or associate, but he\’s not always pleased with the results.

\”Frequently the bill gets out of hand. It\’s a huge bill. I\’m upset with it,\” he says.

Many Texas lawyers do use retired law enforcement officers for investigation work on an ad hoc basis.

David Finn, a partner in Milner & Finn in Dallas who handles criminal-defense and white-collar crime work, says he hires a retired Texas Department of Public Safety officer when he needs an investigator for a particular case. He says he doesn\’t have need for a full-time investigator on staff.

Finn says there are times when it\’s better to send an outside investigator to a witness interview than a lawyer. One situation is when he fears a witness may change his testimony, and he needs to be able to put the investigator on the witness stand to impeach that witness. Another situation is in a messy divorce, Finn says, when he wants to prevent a witness from making false accusations that he or another lawyer at the firm harassed or threatened the witness.

Finn says cost is the primary drawback to having PIs employed by a firm.

\”I can see some benefits to that, if you have the volume and the workload to keep . . . top-flight investigators busy, and they understand your nuances, how you like things,\” Finn says. \”The only downside would be if one of your employees harasses, threatens or hurts someone. There\’s a liability issue — did you sanction this, condone this?\”

\”Short of that, I see some benefits,\” he adds.

Ajamie, who does securities work, says he has many international clients and hires investigators around the world to assist with discovery, but doesn\’t have one in-house. For instance, Ajamie says, he has a client in Paris who lost a lot of money through a brokerage company in Monte Carlo. Ajamie says he hired an investigator to check out the broker and his financial condition, and to see if others have complaints about the brokerage.

Paul Coggins, a principal in Fish & Richardson in Dallas, says his firm does not employ in-house investigators but he occasionally hires outside investigators for certain cases.

\”If they are not on staff then you sort of pick and choose, you get a little bit more flexibility,\” Coggins says.

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.

Indiana Investigator takes interesting with mundane

Sound Bend Tribune

Long hours of waiting and watching take patience, according to one area private detective. Tribune staff writer Robin Toepp spoke with P.I. Steve Radde about the investigations business.

People tend to romanticize the life of a private investigator. What is it really like?

It\’s interesting. You might be sitting for four days with nothing, but that\’s what keeps some of the guys going: if you catch someone in the act.

Surveillances are something we get all the time. One time, I remember for 19 hours I was sitting in the car. It\’s boring. You\’re sitting, sitting, sitting, waiting for a movement. Back then, which is funny now, I didn\’t have a little TV to plug into a cigarette lighter, so it got very boring. If you have the file there, you just read the file over and over and just keep an eye for what you are looking for. Now they have plug-in DVD players.

How can you pay attention if a DVD is playing?If it\’s down the street and you\’ve got a car that you are looking for, you\’re just watching for movement, so you can just put the DVD player on the dashboard and keep looking straight ahead. Sometimes it\’s fun, sometimes it\’s not.

How long have you been a private investigator?

Since 1986. My father started in 1982 when he returned from working in the FBI.

What kind of special training have you had?

I went to Clay High School, and I went to Holy Cross College. Then to Ball State, where I studied criminal justice and sociology. But I left (before finishing the degree just an internship away from completion) and came here and started working.Also, when I started out I was connected to the hip to my dad and I listened to his interviews. He was a real professional. He was former FBI, dark pants, white shirt, dark tie.

How do you spend an average day?

I do interviews, I keep in contact with the person in charge of our security company and the person in charge of our alarm company, and I oversee all of our investigations.

What kinds of cases do you handle?

Murder cases; criminal cases. We get a lot of domestics that turn into child custody battles. That is difficult. We find out how many children there are, what the problem is — drinking, spousal cheating, gambling — that\’s one that\’s popping up lately. When they come in and say money\’s been missing, we follow people up to the gambling boat, take photos or video. With workers\’ compensation cases, they want movement of the body, so they want video.Cheating is just sad because you pretty much already know they\’re doing it, so it\’s just catching them — it doesn\’t feel good, especially if there are children involved.

Do you have a favorite part of the job?

I like the investigations, I like the interviews. We go make sure everything being said to police is true and matches up.

How do you get people to talk?

I try to put myself in their shoes. I try to understand, maybe explain to them about a similar case. Once you get the respect with each other it goes pretty smooth. It does take so much time (for them) to open up, sometimes two to three times to get the whole story, and time is money.Do you carry a gun?

In the beginning I did wear a gun, but I don\’t anymore. I am licensed to carry one, but I hardly shoot (practice) at all.

What kind of gun do you have?

I still have the old .357, and that\’s enough.

What are some cases that stick out in your mind?We did the investigation for the Alan Matheney case (the convicted murder who was put to death earlier this year). He said he was guilty, so what we had to do was the investigation on the defense side dealing with the insanity plea. I spent a year and a half with him (getting to know him). We just try to help find the truth and let the peers, the jury, decide.

The other one I remember was Fahad Al-Urayir (whose decapitated body was found in February 1998 on Sage Road). I was hired by the Saudi Embassy. We were trying to bring some new light to the case. We reinterviewed a lot of people. (The case is still officially unsolved.)

Why do these cases stick out?

Because those are more intense, higher-profiled in the paper, so you have to watch a little more what you do. It\’s a very touchy situation, and you always had to watch over what you were doing. With the Saudi one, it was very sad, everybody we interviewed thought that Fahad was just a fun guy, so it was sad.

How is it working with police?We try to let them know we are not trying to step on any toes, and we turn over information to them. They have the badge, they have the backup and the resources.

What kinds of surveillance do you use?

We have an alarm clock radio with a little camera hidden in it. We have a smoke detector with a camera in it. We have a transmitter, video cameras and other equipment we can put in (to monitor thefts, adultery, etc.).

How do you circumvent wiretap laws?

We rent equipment if it\’s someone\’s own home. (So they are the ones installing the equipment.)We caught one lady stealing money from a church (using hidden cameras). After we brought in people to look at the tape, someone finally recognized her as someone who worked at the church years ago and still had a key.

It sounds like an interesting job to have.

Every day something new comes in, and the last two years have been busy.

Michigan Businesses Embrace Computer Forensic Investigations To Protect Themselves

Detroit, MI January 31, 2006

With nearly all business documents and a large amount of business correspondence being generated on computers, more and more Michigan businesses are finding that their computers hold far more information than they thought.

Deleted documents, email messages, web pages visited, uninstalled software applications and many other types of business documents can frequently be found on a computer by a trained computer forensic investigator like those working for Advanced Surveillance Group, Inc., a private detective agency based in Mt. Clemens.

Evidence of employee misconduct, violations of company policies, including but not limited to electronic use policies, viewing and/or creating illicit and illegal material, sexual harassment, racial discrimination, and theft of proprietary information are often discovered in a computer forensic investigation of the subject’s P.C., laptop and/or email servers. Frequently we find inappropriate behavior in this type of investigation that would give your client a legitimate reason to terminate the employee or defend their position if they’ve already been terminated regardless of the original reason.
Worse yet are those employees who engage in the following on their computer:

• Theft of customer information
• Theft of financial information
• Altering financial records (usually done in conjunction with actual fraud)

Additional threats exist on a more frequent basis and result is lost productivity and massive personnel costs like reading/sending personal email, surfing pornography, online gambling, participating in E-Bay related activities, chatting, playing games and creating informal correspondence or files about work that are offensive or in direct violation to company policy that would not exist otherwise.

“We read articles about stock brokerage firms that have been successfully sued for hundreds of millions of dollars because of informal email messages about client activity, or cases involving discrimination or harassment

resulting in the same awards and all of the culpable information was derived from an employees computer utilizing computer forensics.” reports Paul Dank, licensed private detective and owner of Advanced Surveillance Group. “The good news is that we can easily employ this type of investigation to the benefit of the company by using it to locate threats ahead of time, to help defend employers in wrongful termination lawsuit and to catch thieves.”

Computer forensics is the process of gathering evidence from a computer or computers in a forensically accurate and verifiable manner. Aside from having the specialized hardware and software to get to the data, it is vital to have an investigator to analyze what they find and peal back layer after layer to get you complete results.

With so many computer consulting firms offering forensic work, one may ask, why should I hire a licensed private investigator trained in computer forensics to do this type of work rather than IT staff or outside computer consultants?

To answer that, there are a couple of reasons. In Michigan, as the client of a private detective, you have the same level of confidentiality that you benefit from with your physician or attorney, meaning, even if the evidence we locate is harmful or if you simply elect not to use it, no other third party can gain access to it or use it against you.

Further, IT staffers do not think or act like investigators. They are not trained to work with evidence nor are they knowledgeable in how it must be handled to be preserved as evidence usable in court. IT staffers are not trained in legal considerations associated with computer forensics. In addition, the evidence that the private detective finds often turns into additional non-computerized leads that need to be followed up on to make the evidence complete, and the IT staffer is simply not capable of doing this work.

The use of forensic specialists and a proactive approach to incident handling will improve organizational resilience and reduce the would be costs of expensive legal battles.

by Paul Dank, Licensed Private Detective