To prove protection order breaches, you require evidence, use our private investigators, private detectives. Email us at [email protected], alternatively phone us at 1300 966 103. There are private investigator information tabs to the left of the page. When you need an experienced licensed private investigator, including ex-police investigators, call us.
A Protection Order, Apprehended Violence Order, or Domestic Violence Order are orders made by a court requiring named persons to not do something, generally. The trap many people fall into is they accept a DV Order, a AVO, without admission, because they can no longer afford the solicitor. This will bite you, be used against you, for many years. The system does not care that you made no admissions. It cares that the order exists, that is all the evidence required.
Some breaches of these orders are accompanied
by criminal activity. Some activity may sustain a stalking charge. Some
may be difficult to prove. Private Investigators are often utilised to provide both written (journal) and video evidence of breaches.
To investigate a breach of an order, to gather evidence to support a Federal Circuit Court action, a child custody, or a local court action, for breaching an order, often requires the services of a private investigator. The Police truthfully cannot afford the manpower to conduct surveillance, to wait for a breach to occur.
They are reactive, once they are contacted. Private
investigator surveillance is legal, when done correctly; the evidence
obtained can be used for a court, tribunal, or personal information.
When you need to prove a breach, to gather evidence, to conduct
surveillance, we have experience. You suspect, we investigate.
We are a private investigator service. We conduct a private investigation, using licensed private investigators. We are licensed to gather private information, to conduct private investigator surveillance, or to search for a missing person. Our Government licence means the evidence we gather is lawful, able to produced to a court. For family law matters this means evidence supporting the truth, evidence revealing a lie, or deception. This includes evidence of a breach, or failure, such as a failure to comply with a supervision order, or exclusion order.