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The Complete Idiot's Guide to Private Investigating, 2nd Edition |  | Author: Steven Kerry Brown Publisher: Alpha Category: Book
List Price: $18.95 Buy New: $9.47 as of 9/10/2010 12:48 CDT details You Save: $9.48 (50%)
New (30) Used (16) from $7.54
Seller: bookshop2 Rating: 49 reviews
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Pages: 384 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 1592576524 Dewey Decimal Number: 363.289 EAN: 9781592576524
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | ISBN13: 9781592576524 | | • | Condition: New | | • | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The gumshoe go-torevised and updated.
Easy-to-use and fantastically inclusive, this is the book on private investigation, whether you want to establish yourself as a professional or just use some of the tools of a P.I. for your own business. Youll get the low-down on pre-employment research, tenant screening, adoption searches, safeguarding yourself from investigation, and much more.
Completely revised with all-new chapters on skip tracing and due diligence searches Skills and techniques for average citizens, as well as professionals Includes the most usefuland little-knowndatabases
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 49
Informative. Fascinating. Fun. September 28, 2002 J. Adair (Alexandria, VA) 59 out of 61 found this review helpful
Private Investigating by Steven Kerry Brown is a great resource for anyone wanting to be a Private Investigator, hire a private investigator or do their own investigating. The book is peppered with vignettes from Brown's expansive investigative career. What a life! By sharing his personal experiences as an FBI agent and private investigator, he has let the reader into a world few can imagine or experience. He is certainly the one to write this book. From practical information on understanding caller ID and what to do if your home is burglarized to more complicated techniques of interrogation and surveillance, this book has it all. I found the chapters on locating missing persons especially useful. Don't waste time or spend a cent trying to find someone until you exhaust the free search tools outlined in this book. Just the resources he lists are more than worth the price of the book. It's a great read and an essential reference tool.
A Must Buy For Both The Experienced And Novice Investigator. December 23, 2003 Michael Beltz, FCI (Orlando, Florida United States) 97 out of 104 found this review helpful
As a licensed private investigator and college instructor of private investigation courses, I must commend Mr. Steven Kerry Brown for writing a book that is, in my humble opinion, the best book currently in print covering the basic techniques/procedures of the private investigation profession. This book is of great value to both the experienced and novice investigator alike.
While there are many great titles available for specific areas of the private investigation profession, there are few good titles that cover the general aspects of private investigation; of those, this one is the best I've had the pleasure of reading. This book also contains detailed explanations of how to effectively employ the aforementioned techniques/procedures, including: tools of the trade, skip-tracing, employing public records, performing background investigations, interviews/interrogations, surveillance, and more. For the price, you should not think twice about adding this title to your investigative library.
I would also like to personally thank Mr. Brown for taking the time to send me multiple signed copies of this book.
As always, check with your local library or bookstore to see if you can read/review this or any title before deciding to make a purchase. This method has effectively allowed me to make the most of my investigative library budget.
I hope you found this review helpful. [...]
Make Your Ex Support His Children September 16, 2003 41 out of 41 found this review helpful
In 1992 my ex-husband took our daughter and fled to Georgia. Of course leaving me in Washington state. I got the child back but since then child support was hit and miss. In August of last year the child support stopped all together. I would call my caseworker at support enforcement every few months and finally realized that if you want something done, do it yourself. Not knowing where to start I called a private agency specializing in collecting child support payments. They wanted 34% of what is owed to your child. I felt that was robbery, so I bought The Complete Idiot's Guide to Private Investigating. I was on page 98 of the book when I started my hunt. It took me four hours and the only thing I paid for was 2 phone calls at seven cents a minute. Not too bad for my first try. I now have a lien against his property, drivers license, hunting and fishing license, and his income tax return.The amount owed to me was $7,566.62 as the author said in this book "not too shabby for 4 hours worth of work" THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU FOR WRITING THIS BOOK .
SMART MONEY BUYS THIS BOOK September 9, 2002 Robert Bailey (Southfield, MI United States) 23 out of 24 found this review helpful
Old detectives, like old magicians, rarely reveal their best tricks and techniques. I spent twenty-five years as a corporate security director and licensed private investigator and, dispite the fact that I am now retired, I would never have opened the door as wide as Steven Kerry Brown has for the readers of THE COMPLETE'S IDIOT'S GUIDE TO PRIVATE INVESTIGATING.The information detailed in this book, with regards to sources and methods, would require semesters in college classes or years of experience to aquire. College classes are expensive and mistakes made on the street can cause bad things to happen. This book is not only a good primer for people entering the private investigative field, it is a good desk reference for lawyers, insurance adjusters, and corporate security directors who frequently employ the services of a private investigator. Mystery readers will find this book illuminating. Mystery writers need to buy a copy now! Licensed private investigators should keep a copy of this book with dictionary and thesaurus.
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Private Investigating November 30, 2002 19 out of 20 found this review helpful
The following book review was released by the L.A. Times-Washington Post Service on November 24, 2002:Title: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Private Investigating Author: Steven Kerry Brown Data: Alpha, 384 pps. [$$$] soft-cover Review by Michael Pakenham Brown, an experienced professional PI with offices in Ponte Vedra Beach and St. Augustine, urges that this book really could guide the reader into a career. But its greatest charm - and I suspect its main utility - is as a truly entertaining, briskly presented, rundown on how the business is conducted. Or at least how it is done by Brown. One of the 24 topical chapters: "Moving Surveillance: How best to perform one-man and two-man moving surveillances, anticipating your subject's next move, communication between units, and dealing with stoplights." The others involve public-records checking, access to ostensibly confidential information, electronic devices and their use, tracing missing or elusive persons. Any armchair gumshoe will find the details entertaining - sometimes debatable, often provocative. L.A. Times-Washington Post Service
Showing reviews 1-5 of 49
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