Who Needs To Locate A Person
Locate A
Person|How
To Find Someone|categories|
These days, private
detectives and personal locators are becoming a huge
business. Some work of course to spy on spouses suspected of
infidelity, and some work for companies that need to run background
checks on potential employees. Some specialize in helping
people locate a person. Who would need such a service, and
why would you ever have to do this?
Adoptive Parents
and Children
One
such time when someone may want to locate a person is if they are
adopted or gave up a child for adoption some years ago. While
these adoption records are often sealed and there's not much you
can do through the government or adoption agency to find missing
birth parents or birth children, you may be able to hire a private
investigator to help you locate a person in such
circumstances.
Your information may be somewhat sketchy, but obviously the
more information you have the more chance you have of being
successful. If you're the adopted child, you may know what
hospital you were born in and of course the date of birth. If
you are the parent, you may have the same information and may also
have record of the adoption agency or attorney that arranged the
adoption. While they do not need to help you locate a person
and of course their records are confidential, sometimes a private
investigator can put together other bits of information to help you
narrow your search.
Typically when it comes to adoption, there is a neutral third
party that is used to contact the parents or the child, telling
them that the other party is requesting a meeting. If both
parties are interested (and if the child is now of age) then a
meeting can be arranged. However, if you are trying to locate
a person because of an adoption, it's wise to not get your hopes up
too much. Sometimes people prefer the past be in the past, or
may have painful memories that they cannot face. A family
counselor specializing in adoption issues can help you with these
issues.
Missing
Children
It's
unfortunate that in the United States, hundreds of children go
missing every single year. Sometimes this is because of being
abducted by strangers, but often it is a parent that does not have
custody of the child that takes them and disappears. This may
not seem dangerous to outsiders, but often a person does not have
custody of their children for a reason. And this leaves the
other parent out in the cold, unable to see their children for
years and years - if they are ever able to find them again.
Some cases of trying to locate a person are those parents looking
for their children after the police and other officials have given
up, or after the time when the child would now be an
adult.
Police usually
don't share their investigation files with outsiders but sometimes
a private investigator is able to locate a person by tracking down
relatives, employment records, utility bills that are registered
with their social security number, and so on. They may also
know how to subpoena or legally request those police records, which
can sometimes help them locate a person by picking up where the
police have left off.
While the
police have an obligation to look for minor children as long as
their underage, regardless of how long they've been missing,
sometimes a case does go cold and they do turn their attention to
other cases. Anyone missing a child will probably go to any
lengths to locate a person that may have their child or know where
their child is, and sometimes these private investigators can
help.
Extended
Family
Sometimes
people lose track of their extended family over the years because
of many factors. Their parents may have a falling out with
their grandparents, or the family may be divided because of a
religious choice or marriage that others don't approve of. In
cases like this, someone may want to locate a person in their
family that they haven't seen in some time. It may be their
grandparent or favorite cousin or someone else that they've lost
touch with.
All of these
are common reasons why someone may want to locate a person and hire
an investigator or some other professional to help them.
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