Sunday, November 28, 2010

Another One Down

Got another one a couple nights ago, and when we got to IRC it took more than 4 hours to turn him in. They had a shift change. Apparently when it's time for a shift change at IRC, the offgoing crew simply drops everything and leaves, and then the oncoming crew tries to pick up the pieces.

Then, the new crew lost the paperwork and we had to dash over to the bondsmen to get another Authorization to Surrender.

Finally finished and headed home. Going out tonight for another.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Road Warriors



So, we went out Saturday night to get a guy with seven warrants out of Tennessee. We'd been checking some areas where his rental car had been located, but didn't see it anywhere. We had an insider at the hospital where his wife had just had a premature baby, who was now in intensive care.

The guy called us at 2305 and said the guy was there, so we headed out and got there at 2325. Pretty good time.We checked the parking garage and surrounding streets for the car our intel said he was supposedly driving. It wasn't there, so we waited outside the hospital, because we didn't want to rattle too many cages by going in and causing a ruckus right in the preemie ward.

Eventually a couple came out and the man looked kinda like the photo we had of our fugitive. Couldn't tell for certain, but we followed the truck anyway and he was going towards one of the areas we had checked previously. Finally, he stopped at a gas station and got out, and sure enough, it was our guy. So we took him there at the window (this was about 0100 Sunday morning) and transported him to IRC (Inmate Reception Center) at the L.A. County Jail in downtown.

A brief interjection about IRC. They have a lot of policies and procedures in place for bond surrenders. Forms to fill out, things to sign, mysterious bureaucratic back-room things to be done, and you even have to call someone and get permission to surrender the prisoner. The fastest I've seen all this happen was an hour and a half, and I was ecstatic to be done that fast. Normal is at least 2 and a half hours, and can be as much as 4. Here's the kicker: they're so confused over there about what to do with the whole situation that every time I turn someone in, the procedures are different. EVERY TIME.

Well, back to our new friend. This time, the difference was that they now told us they couldn't accept a surrender for an out-of-state warrant. Never mind that the warrant specified that Tennessee would extradite. Never mind that we surrendered a guy on an out-of-state warrant just two weeks ago. They wouldn't take him. This was now 0200.So now our choice was to let him go or take him to Tennessee.

We called the bondsman in Tennessee and got him to commit to more money, and by the time we got situated (had to get Miss M out of bed and meet her across L.A.) it was 0300. Then it was non-stop except for gas and food, all the way to Nashville. Thirty-five hours because we kept mostly to the speed limit. We got there and bought our boy a beer to calm him down. We'd heard his story along the way and, although scumbags get good at lying, I think he was telling the truth. He kinda got screwed.

No matter, though, because whatever the original offense was, what I'm enforcing is the contract he willingly signed with the bondsman. So we met the bondsman at his office right across the street from the jail, and his partner walked us over to show us where to surrender the guy.Now here's the perfect end to a hard trip: Remember how I said it's a pain in the neck to surrender a fugitive in L.A.? In Nashville it took one minute. Not a single form to fill out, paper to sign, or BS to deal with. We took him through the door, told the officer his name, and waited for him to (a) put his cuffs on the guy and give us ours back and (b) check the computer system to find the guy's warrants. That was it. One. Frickin'. Minute.

Now, remember where I said I left really quickly when I got the got the call our fugitive was at the hospital? Well, I had no idea I'd be spending four days in a car, so I didn't have anything with me. Same socks, same underwear, same T-shirt with body armor over it. After we surrendered the guy I could have bought something, but at that point why bother?

Anyway, we slept a bit on the way back, but still did it in two days. Too much to do.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Long day

Surveillance today on a possible (probable) worker's compensation fraud. He was working in a condo in a semi-closed complex and I couldn't get any video. What I did was go around the block to the TV studio and convince them to let me sit on their property and video the truck from across a drainage canal. Got solid video of him closing a truck tailgate with a hand he supposedly couldn't use.

SCORE!

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Oh say can you NCIC?

Going out tonight to attempt to recover a fugitive from another state. He doesn't know anyone's looking for him here, and we have an address where he's reportedly living with his mother in a suburb of L.A.

The way this works, out-of-state warrants may or may not be entered into NCIC, the National Crime Information Center, making them visible to authorities in all 50 states. If the warrant is in NCIC, then jails in any state can accept custody of the fugitive. If not, they won't. When we arrest this guy (assuming he's where we think), we're going to take him to downtown L.A. to the Inmate Reception Center (IRC) and attempt to surrender him. See, we can't access NCIC to find out if the guy's warrant is there. If it isn't, we're gonna drive him to... let's say, "another city," (the chances he's reading this blog are less than minute, but OpSec is important) and turn him over to the bondsman, who will then take him back to the state where he's wanted and surrender him there.

On the one hand, since taking him to that other city involves the same pay plus expenses, I want to turn him in at IRC. On the other hand...

ROAD TRIP!

UPDATE: IRC took him.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Introduction

A bit about me and this blog:

I chose the name because, to me, Mike Hammer is the prototypical private detective. Mike Hammer cared passionately about each and every case, and always saw them through to a successful conclusion, whatever it took. Like Mike, I have a healthy respect for what's right and and an equally healthy contempt for the law when the two don't coincide. Unlike Mike, I rarely get physical. It's usually counterproductive in the real world, although it works to great effect for Mickey Spillane.

Stylistically, my instincts turn more to Philip Marlowe than Mike Hammer. Like Marlowe, I am a great appreciator of cheap whiskey, good coffee, and fedoras.

Me, I'm fairly new to the PI business. I've signed on with a more experienced PI in order to get my foot in the door and learn as much as I can as I move towards an eventual PI license and hanging up my own shingle.

We cover not only investigations, but personal protection and fugitive recovery as well. This fits with the plan I once conceived to open a truly full-service security firm. Actually, my plan was even more expansive: I wanted (and still do, eventually) to offer contract security, personal security, investigations, firearms and martial arts training, firearms sales, alarm systems and installation, locksmithing, IT security, and consulting for all of the above.

On this blog, you can expect a running commentary on my work and education in private investigations. I welcome comments and criticism.