
When law enforcement classifies a disappearance as voluntary but something feels wrong — G3 builds an independent investigative record that families and attorneys can act on.
Missing persons cases involving suspected foul play are among the most difficult to navigate. Law enforcement may classify a disappearance as voluntary based on limited initial information. Families who believe otherwise often have nowhere to turn — until they engage a private investigator who is able to build a parallel investigative record that will compel law enforcement to re-engage and consider new theories.
G3 Missing Persons approaches suspected foul play cases methodically and carefully. We do not interfere with official investigations — we build an independent evidentiary record that strengthens official cases and, when necessary, provides the basis for reopening them. Every finding is documented to court-admissible standards from day one.
We review all known facts, the official case classification, and the specific circumstances the family believes point to criminal involvement. A realistic assessment of what is provable is provided upfront.
Physical and digital evidence that has not been formally collected is documented, preserved, and handled according to evidentiary standards before it can be lost or compromised.
Database intelligence and OSINT are applied to identify, research, and document individuals in proximity to the disappearance who warrant further scrutiny.
Communications records, social media activity, financial patterns, and location data for persons of interest are analyzed within legal parameters.
A complete, independently documented investigative record is built that can be presented to law enforcement, prosecutors, or attorneys as the basis for further action.
Findings are shared with law enforcement and, at the family’s direction, with attorneys or victim advocacy organizations — in formats designed for legal use.
Law enforcement reopens cases when presented with new evidence they cannot ignore. G3’s role in suspected foul play cases is to develop that evidence — documented, authenticated, and court-admissible — so that families and their attorneys have something concrete to act on.
This requires meticulous documentation from the start. We treat every suspected foul play case as a potential criminal proceeding from day one, because evidence that isn’t properly preserved and documented may never be usable.
No case is too thin to begin. Bring whatever you have — here’s what helps most.
Police report numbers, detective names, and any written communications from law enforcement about the case classification.
Specific circumstances, inconsistencies, or evidence that has led you to believe the disappearance was not voluntary. The more specific, the better.
Anyone you believe may be involved or who behaved suspiciously around the time of the disappearance — including any who were interviewed and cleared by police.
Any messages, calls, or contacts in the days before the disappearance that seem relevant — including anything that was unusual or out of character.
A written timeline of events as you know them — even an informal one. This helps G3 identify gaps and inconsistencies to investigate.
If you are working with an attorney or victim advocacy organization, their contact information helps us ensure our documentation meets their evidentiary needs.
Still have questions? Call or message us for a confidential conversation — no obligation, no pressure.
Talk To Us →Every case starts with a free, confidential conversation. No obligation, no pressure — just a licensed investigator listening and telling you honestly what can be done.
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