
Case Overview
Our client came to us with a pressing concern: they believed vehicles and other property located at a Humble, TX residence were being systematically moved out of reach. Acting quickly, we deployed licensed investigators to Humble and later conducted follow-up surveillance at a secondary location in Bellville, Texas. Surveillance spanned April 9 through April 13, 2026, with follow-up documentation extending the case timeline across eight active observation days. What we documented gave our client a complete, court-ready record of coordinated asset movement.

The Challenge
Suspicion alone does not protect anything. Our client had good reason to believe that vehicles of value were being relocated from the Humble property without their knowledge or consent, but they could not access the premises directly and had no record of who was coming and going. With each passing day, the risk that assets would move beyond legal recovery grew. Our client faced several obstacles:
- A strong belief that vehicles of value were being relocated, but no documented proof
- No direct access to the Humble property to see who was coming and going
- Every passing day raised the risk of assets moving beyond legal recovery
- A need for specific, timestamped, legally credible documentation
3
Days of Field Surveillance
April 2026
Investigation Period
2
Locations Surveilled
4
State Plates Documented
The Investigation
Two Texas locations. Every arrival and departure logged. A pattern that became impossible to ignore.
Operating under Texas DPS licensing and regulatory oversight, our investigators established stationary observation positions with clear sightlines to the Humble property while maintaining full discretion. Our team never made contact with any individuals at the location.
From the first day, we recorded vehicle descriptions, license plates, and exact times of arrival and departure. We noted who entered the property, how long they stayed, and whether the same vehicles returned across multiple days, then conducted background research and compiled HCAD property records and business filings to map the connections between the people and entities involved.
By the second and third day, multiple individuals were arriving in rotating vehicles — RAM trucks, SUVs, and sedans bearing Texas, Florida, and Alabama plates. Items were loaded and removed, and individuals were observed accessing the property through a window with a removed screen, an access method that stood out as deliberate rather than incidental.
On April 12, a tow truck arrived and removed a gray SUV from the property, confirming what the accumulating evidence had already suggested: the activity was coordinated, not casual. We also confirmed the presence of a second vehicle, one our client had specifically identified as a concern, inside the garage.


The Results
The operation moved our client from uncertainty to actionable evidence, producing a complete documentation package their counsel could actually use:
- A timestamped activity timeline covering the full observation period
- Vehicle identification records across four state plates and evidence of the confirmed April 12 tow event
- Background reports on the individuals involved, plus HCAD property records and business filings
- A factual foundation to consult a civil attorney on asset preservation, protective orders, and litigation
We observe, we document, and we deliver timestamped evidence that stands up in legal proceedings.
Terrance Private Investigator & Associates
Looking Ahead
If you are watching assets disappear, noticing coordinated activity at a property, or feeling unsure about what is actually happening, you need documentation, not guesses. Whether your situation is in Humble, Bellville, or anywhere across Harris County, Fort Bend County, or the Greater Houston area, our licensed team is equipped to observe, document, and deliver evidence that stands up in legal proceedings.