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professional investigtor magazine

January/February 2005 - Issue 77

 

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COVER STORY:
THE FTC ON PRETEXTING

THE PI MAGAZINE INTERVIEW WITH JOEL WINSTON
By Jimmie Mesis, Editor-in Chief, PI Magazine
An interview with the Associate Director of the FTC, Division of Financial Practices, that clarifies the concerns and confusion surrounding the effective investigative practice of pretexting.

FEATURES:

THE VARYING LEGALITIES OF GARBOLOGY
By Ed Thompson
A search of one’s garbage at the curb without a warrant is not a Fourth Amendment violation. However, individual states interpret their own constitutions differently. Find out where this leaves private investigators in your state.

CARBON MONOXIDE ACCIDENTS: EVEN OUTDOORS
By Jane Cracraft, Associate Editor, PI Magazine
Until recently, few investigators suspected carbon monoxide unless the death occurred in an enclosed place. In the late 1990s, researchers for the CDC began to study carbon monoxide as a factor in boating and swimming deaths. A new area of outdoor hazards has been identified.

RETURN TO SENDER
By Warren J. Sonne, Associate Editor, PI Magazine
An attempt to answer the question, “is it illegal to peek into mailboxes during an investigation?” Discussing the questions of who owns a residential mailbox, when mail is considered delivered, what mail tampering consists of and the laws involved.

DEPARTMENTS:
WHEN FAST ISN’T FAST ENOUGH?
By Rosemarie T. Mesis, Publisher, PI Magazine
Affordable web-based case management systems, that offer clients instant access to investigative results.
Excerpt: Successful private investigators are always searching for the latest technologies and the newest services they can offer their clients. Utilizing these new services can make a big difference in being considered just a regular investigator or a great investigator. Most clients expect their investigators to provide them expedited service without risking the loss of quality. There was a time for example, when providing insurance clients with surveillance videos, photographs, reports and an invoice within a few days was considered fast. Now many want them within hours...

OUTSOURCING PAYROLL:
A NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION THAT MAY BE RIGHT FOR YOU!
By Michael Alter
Eliminate your payroll pains! Whether you process payroll manually or use a service, the outsourcing options available to small businesses are better than ever.
Excerpt: 2005 is here and it’s time to make a new year’s resolution. This year, why not make a vow to eliminate your payroll pains? Whether you process payroll manually or use a service, the outsourcing options available to small businesses are better than ever...

TAX DEDUCTIONS FOR THE EDUCATED
By Mark E. Battersby
Whether you are a self-employed investigator or an employee, there are educational tax deductions and unique write-offs in the pages of our tax laws and regulations for anyone willing to look for them.
Excerpt: Each year, more and more private investigators realize they are not smart enough to cope with our federal tax laws and seek professional assistance. Surprisingly, those same confusing, complex and frequently overwhelming tax laws contain a number of tax breaks for anyone attempting to get smarter—or continue their professional education.
It matters little whether an investigator is self-employed, an employee or an employee of his or her own investigative business...

NETWORKING LIKE A PROFESSIONAL
By Jimmie Mesis, Editor-in Chief, PI Magazine
Tips on how to take advantage of one of the most valuable marketing tools for a professional investigator.
Excerpt: Networking is probably one of the most valuable marketing tools that every professional investigator should learn to master. It offers the opportunity for others to meet you and learn what you actually do. You also get to meet many others and learn what they do for a living. Savvy investigators..

GOOGLE™: ONE, LIBRARIAN: ZERO
A PROFESSIONALLY TRAINED LIBRARIAN MEETS HER MATCH WITH GOOGLE'S RANKING SYSTEM
By Cynthia Hetherington
How your agency’s site can rank higher on the web search engines such as Google™ and Yahoo™.
Excerpt: Working as a youthful librarian I was eager to answer all those questions about businesses, health issues and Christopher Columbus. I’d wax and wane for hours trying to locate the annual reports of a company, or the true cause and effect of bromide poisoning. I sought advice from experts who could only be found through books dusty and old on the shelf, or associations with less than 300 members. Librarianship in part was a gatekeeper job. We didn’t have the answers, but we knew where to find them.

WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE SURVEILLANCE SNACK?
The story of how Private Investigator Greg Schmauss went to a CALI meeting and, unexpectedly, became a spokesperson for the Quaker Oatmeal Company.

FINDING FAKES AND FORGERIES:
By Joe Devanney
The secrets of how fakers have gotten away making forgeries in the past and how new forensic tools are now aiding
investigators on forgery cases.
Excerpt: Insiders know that fakes are a constant problem in certain areas of the antiques trade. Arguably, the greatest danger exists with objects that are both highly priced and one-of-a-kind. These include such things as handmade furniture, antiquities, Kentucky rifles and rare manuscripts. Items that were originally mass-produced are more likely to be authentic because they typically sell for less money and, ironically, are harder to fake...

KATE WARNE, PI:
The First Female Private Investigator Had a Baltimore Connection
By Lynn H. Levy
A PI profile of Kate Warne, who had a part in stopping a plot to assassinate President-elect Abraham Lincoln.
Excerpt: She hung out in downtown Baltimore, making connections with Confederate terrorists. She wore disguises, talked with accents, and used pretexts to get secret information. She worked with the Pinkerton National Detective Agency, and became known as the first female private investigator...

USING PRETEXT IN INSURANCE INVESTIGATIONS:
IMPORTANT CONSIDERATIONS FOR EFFECTIVE USE

By Daniel W. Draz, CFE
The proper use of a pretext to obtain non-financial information.
Excerpt: Investigators have used pretexts to obtain information for quite some time. When used correctly, it is an effective investigative technique for gathering difficult information, which might otherwise be unattainable. Despite the 1999 Gramm-Leach-Bliley (GLB) legislation restricting its use in certain financial investigations, pretexting is not dead. Specifically, not all pretext investigations are conducted to obtain personal...

A MOLESTER’S MEMENTOS
By Dan S. Willis
A child molester’s mementos of his victim sealed his
conviction 27 years after the crime.
Excerpt: During the summer of 1974, the only thoughts of 8-year-old Larry Brown were those of Little League baseball and having fun. At his young age, there was no way for him to understand the perverted intentions of a friendly 35-year-old man, Harold Levin, who lived several blocks away in La Mesa, California, a suburb of San Diego. There was also no way for Levin to foresee that his compulsive desire to re-live his deviant fantasies with his victim...

SOMETHING IS AMIS IN COMMON INTEREST DEVELOPMENTS
By Randall Frost
Investigators are needed to assist homeowner associations due to the increase of embezzlement.
Excerpt: Although legislators around the country introduced a handful of bills in 2004 aimed at extending protections to homeowners in common-interest developments (CIDs), far less attention has been paid to looking at the long-term financial integrity of these developments.

GADGETS, GIMMICKS & TRICKS OF THE TRADE
By Julius “Buddy” Bombet, Associate Editor, PI Magazine
New technology, equipment and advice that every PI should know.

BOOK REVIEW:
THE SOURCEBOOK 6th Edition
By Don C. Johnson, Editor, PI Magazine


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