
Case Overview
There is a particular kind of helplessness that comes with co-parenting when you suspect something is wrong. You cannot just show up, you cannot demand answers, and without documented evidence most people will not take your concerns seriously no matter how certain you feel. This parent had concerns about where their child was living during the other parent’s custody period, who was in that home, and whether the people around their child were who they had been told they were. They called Terrance Private Investigator and Associates, and we set up five days of co-parenting surveillance in Houston to get them the answers they deserved.

The Challenge
In a co-parenting situation, feelings do not win arguments and suspicions do not move courts. What moves things forward is documentation — dates, times, names, vehicles, and a documented pattern that tells a clear story. This parent had noticed things that did not add up, but nothing they could point to and say, here, this is what is happening. That is the gap we were brought in to close.
- No way to independently verify the child’s living situation
- No clear picture of who had regular access to the home
- Things that did not add up, but nothing concrete to point to
- A need for a documented, timestamped record an attorney could use
5
Days of Field Surveillance
May 2026
Investigation Period
2
Recurring Males Documented
Court-Ready
Documented Record Delivered
The Investigation
Five days near a Houston-area residence. Every arrival, every departure, every vehicle documented one observation at a time.
Our investigator set up near the Eagle Pass residence starting May 15, 2026 and returned every single day through May 19. Afternoon arrival, evening coverage, same area, same consistent presence. One day tells you something happened; five days tells you how they live.
Every vehicle at the location was logged with plate numbers. Every person coming and going was tracked, and every departure, return, and late-night arrival was noted. When conditions allowed, photo and video documentation was captured to go with the written record.
On Day 1 our investigator positively identified the subject at the residence and observed the minor child going on an evening outing. On Day 2 a male the client had concerns about arrived, loaded the child into his vehicle, and took her to a secondary location for several hours before returning — operating like someone who lived there.
A second unidentified male showed up at the residence regularly across all five days, sometimes arriving late at night, sometimes bringing food or groceries, sometimes leaving and returning within the same hour. This was not someone stopping by occasionally — this was consistent, routine access to the home where the child was living.


The Results
This parent left with five days worth of documented truth — the foundation their attorney needed to move forward:
- A complete record of who was in the child’s environment across five days
- Documentation of how the child was transported and what the daily routine looked like
- All recurring individuals and vehicles at the residence identified
- Timestamped observations and photo/video evidence delivered as a factual record to act on
One day tells you something happened. Five days tells you how they live.
Terrance Private Investigator & Associates
Looking Ahead
If you are sitting with that feeling right now — the one that keeps you up at night and makes you question what you thought you knew about your child’s custody time — do not sit with it alone. A licensed Houston co-parenting investigator can document what is actually happening and give your attorney the factual record they need. You do not have to have it all figured out before you reach out.