The role of private investigators and commercial agents in law enforcement

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Author(s)
Prenzler, Timothy
King, Michael
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2002
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study estimates that there are about 25,000 private investigators in Australia and explores the nature of their work, based on 40 in depth interviews in Queensland and New South Wales. The study examines the kinds of work done by private agents, how effective they are, the legal and ethical issues involved, the issue of regulation and training, and how the benefits of private agents can be maximised by their clients, most notably agencies affected by fraud. Overall, the study finds that private investigators, process servers and debt recovery agents occupy a critical place in the justice system.This study estimates that there are about 25,000 private investigators in Australia and explores the nature of their work, based on 40 in depth interviews in Queensland and New South Wales. The study examines the kinds of work done by private agents, how effective they are, the legal and ethical issues involved, the issue of regulation and training, and how the benefits of private agents can be maximised by their clients, most notably agencies affected by fraud. Overall, the study finds that private investigators, process servers and debt recovery agents occupy a critical place in the justice system.
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Journal Title
Trends and issues in crime and criminal justice
Volume
234
Publisher URI
aic.gov.au/publications/tandi/tandi234
Copyright Statement
© 2002 Australian Institute of Criminology. The attached file is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.
Subject
Criminology
Law