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In order to work as a private investigator you have two choices: you can work for a private investigation agency or you can work for yourself until you gain enough experience and money to obtain your own private investigator license. Taking the PI courses The main goal in you career should be to attain private investigator licensing. Throughout almost all of the United States it is required that you obtain your license in order to practice as a PI. It is not complicated at all, to get you own license the only thing you have to do is take a couple of courses. There are lots of schools where you can choose from different types of programs, from full-time to long distance learning to online. The average time for acquiring your private investigator licensing is about three months. When you go to PI school, you shouldn t worry if you have zero experience in this area. You will meet lots of students like you, as well as seasoned professionals who will impart their valuable knowledge onto you. They will share their experience, and you will have the opportunity to apprentice with them on real PI cases that they are working on for in field experience . This is by far the best way to learn something new and you will usually be paid for your time, which means you can make some extra cash while getting your private investigator licensing. The courses are divided into 4-7 main chapters, depending on the school. The main things that you will learn are the surveillance techniques, ways to locate and recover stolen or lost property, ways to locate missing persons, interviewing techniques, tips for determining the responsibility of damage, loss, fire, accident or injury to a person or to property. Getting the license After finishing the courses you will get your private detectives license. Are you asking yourself what is the deference between a private detective and a private investigator? Well, there is no difference, but most of the states use the term investigator while few states use the term detective . Private investigator licensing is not ALWAYS necessary. For example, if just want to help your family to find people, who have done them wrong, there are means to do this online, that don t involve having a private investigators license. Getting a job Approximately 25 percent of the private investigators work for themselves and the rest usually end up working for the various agencies. Getting a job with an agency will mean more security as you are guaranteed a paycheck month to month, but the payoff is small. Whereas owning your own agency has a higher level or risk associated (and more upfront cost) but the payoff is far greater!
Private Investigator Levinson Still Missing in Iran, Believed Alive
by site admin
22 Oct 2009 at 11:06am
It’s been more than two and a half years since former FBI agent Robert Levinson vanished in Iran. Levinson was working as an independent contractor for London-based Global Witness, an international non-governmental organization, in March 2007 when he was sent to Kish Island on a 24-hour assignment in connection with a cigarette smuggling case. […]
This new second edition serves as both a comprehensive first step for the aspiring private investigator as well as a useful resource for the experienced investigator. The text is a manual of procedures, concepts, forms, and guidelines presented in plain, clear language, yet with substantial depth of technical knowledge. The author examines diverse sources of information, including local, county, state, and federal records, and informants; detailed pretext interviews; physical surveillance and surveillance photography; and executive protection services. Also discussed are such areas as report writing; interviews, interrogations, and statements; locating missing persons; industrial and commercial undercover operations; accident investigations; business and industrial espionage; and legal constraints. Strongly featured are expanded and updated chapters on information technology, optical related visual aids, and managing a detective agency. Appen-dices provide common visual and verbal errors in vehicle license numbers, states of origin for social security numbers, and workers’ compensation fraud indicators. In addition, the book is generously illustrated with diagrams and examples to clarify specific points for the reader. This new edition continues to be an essential tool and resource for all private investigators. It will also be of benefit to attorneys and their investigative staff, as well as law enforcement investigators. Private Investigation





