Tracing Missing Property | Locating Persons by Our Düsseldorf Detectives

Tracing missing persons or items is part of the daily work of our private investigators in Düsseldorf. Recovering a lost or stolen object or documenting its whereabouts is in most cases easier than locating a missing person. In both scenarios, the detectives of Kurtz Private Investigations Düsseldorf possess extensive expertise, experience, and a wide range of methods: +49 211 9874 0021.

Various Investigative Approaches

There are many possible reasons why people become untraceable: a child running away from home; an individual obliged to pay maintenance trying to evade their payments; a grandmother suffering from dementia who has lost her way; an heir who needs to be located; or, in the worst case, an abduction. And just as there are many reasons for a person’s disappearance, there are just as many ways to track them down.

 

Especially in a metropolis such as Düsseldorf with global air traffic connections, it is easy to disappear unnoticed in the crowds or to flee abroad. The more facts you can provide us with, the more quickly we can investigate successfully. Neighbours, friends, and colleagues of the missing person often provide indispensable assistance. In many cases, it is possible to reconstruct the paths taken by the missing person. Children who have told their school friends that they intend to run away — and where to — can often be found quickly based on those statements. Particularly in solving abductions and child removals, mantrailing has proven to be a reliable method in recent years.

 

We, the private investigators of Kurtz Detective Agency Düsseldorf, conduct case-specific, comprehensive, and professional research and surveillance nationwide and worldwide: +49 211 9874 0021.

A lounge or living room with two armchairs, a fireplace, and various paintings and artworks; Kurtz Detective Agency Düsseldorf, detective agency Düsseldorf, detective office in Düsseldorf

Stolen, sometimes significant, artworks are often sold via the so-called “grey art market”, a fencing market specifically for stolen art objects, and from there passed on to private individuals, after which they are kept hidden in their homes.