Private Investigators Looking for Runaway Children

| 4 Comments October 29, 2008

How Do PIs Find a Runaway?

Many times as a private investigator you’ll receive a desperate phone call from a worried parent begging for help in finding a runaway. The novice PI might refer the parent to local police and call it a day. They know that databases are useless in finding a runaway since they are likely under 18 and have no reported credit history reported to credit headers.

Although it’s unlikely you’ll find a runaway using standard locating or skip tracing techniques it is possible to use old fashioned investigation methods and state of the art forensic technology to find runaways. But you’ll need to think outside the box.

In the rest of this article we will attempt to provide a game plane for finding runaways.

1. Make a police report. Be sure to advise the parents to make a police report and establish a rapport with the detectives assigned to the case. These detectives are overworked and you need to make a persona; impression on them.

2. Make a detailed list of all the child’s friends. Especially boyfriends and girlfriends. You’ll need names , addresses, pictures, names of their parents and their friends too.

3. Secure the child’s computer, cell phone, blackberry etc. These devices will have evidence like detailed emails, text messages pics and caller Id. All these things can be recovered by a forensic examination but not unless the devices are secured. If you use them or tamper with them in any way you’ll be overwriting evidence.

4. Locate secret emails, blogs, Myspace and personal ads. These are valuable clues into finding where the child has run off.

All of the above information will be a wealth of solid leads for you to follow up with. Interview their friends and the friends of friends. Locate emails and trace the emails to see where they are being read. Usually in the first weeks a teen that has run away they will stay with friends. Contact the people on their Myspace list to see what they know. Contact the people on their personal ads to see if they know anything.

Kids that run away will have little to no resources so they will rely on their parents. They will use the family cell phone and email accounts. This activity can be traced by a private investigator that has experience in this area. If they leave behind a laptop or cell phone these devices can be examined forensically to uncover deleted emails and text messages, pics and address book entries.

If you are going to take on a case that involves finding a runaway you should be experienced in digital forensics, online investigations and email tracing. If you are not you should outsource that portion to an investigator that is experienced in those areas and how they apply to finding a runaway.

Email tracing is especially valuable in locating a runaway. An investigator experienced in email tracing send an email to the child and when that child opens the email to read it, the investigator can locate exactly where they are. The same can be said for social network sites like Myspace. These are incredibly valuable recourses that are often overlooked by the local police departments when it comes to finding a runaway.

Article by Ed Opperman

Ed Opperman is president of Opperman Investigations Inc. He is considered an expert in locating runaways via digital forensics, locating by email and internet investigations into blogs and Myspace accounts. If you need help in finding a runaway visit www.EmailRevealer.com

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Category: Private Investigation, Skip Tracing

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  1. Yes, it seems that with the advent of technology it should be easier to find runaways using the computer or Blackberry or cell phone information. I do hope that tracking devices can be considered also to track the movement of vehicles.
    Natalie Pinter

  2. Jesse Rudolph says:

    Any tools can be used, but the viability of gps type tracking devices are almost 0 when you lack prior knowledge. I would also like to say that cellular phones have to communicate with towers local to the area that the phone is being used from. If the cellular phone is in the name of the parent, an investigator, and or the parent, could work with the cellular phone company, under the premise of ‘theft’ to find out where the last call was made from, or what tower the phone is actively paired with. A cellular phone alone will give you a 1-5 square mile aproximation of where the user is located.

  3. Jesse Rudolph says:

    Also, I was wondering, is it tabu to solicit the family of a missing person, on a amber alert lead or something similar? I think it is often beyond the immediate foresight of a frantic parent or spouse to request the services of a private investigator in a timely manner. Is there a certain protocol that an investigator might follow in pursuing missing persons cases without being contacted by a family member first? I am under the impression that in such cases, there are only a few days prior to initial disappearance that any sort of inquiry would turn up a favorable outcome. I personally would be much more interested in pursuing missing persons with time to spare on my side.

  4. jerry hebrid says:

    Ms. Pinters suggestion reeks of a self-serving nature. Is she trying to sell tracking devices ??? Lets keep product sales, or at least the promotion of, out of serious discussions such as this !!!

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