This page is educational and does not replace legal advice. Requests involving hacking, illegal tapping, spyware, intimidation, doxing, extortion, or unauthorized account access are not accepted.
Start with patterns, not accusations
Suspected infidelity often begins with small changes: unexplained schedules, private phone behavior, inconsistent travel stories, or social media activity that feels different.
A professional approach does not start with confrontation. It starts by separating facts, indicators, assumptions, and what can be lawfully verified.
What can be prepared safely
Prepare a short chronology, general city or area, relevant dates, lawfully obtained screenshots, and the decision you need to make after verification.
Do not send passwords, OTP codes, private account access, or sensitive personal documents during the first consultation.
What is not acceptable
Requests for hacking, illegal phone tapping, spyware, account takeover, intimidation, or forced access to private data must be rejected.
A discreet investigation should protect the client’s position instead of creating a new legal or personal risk.
When to consult
Consultation is useful when the pattern has repeated, family decisions depend on facts, or the situation may escalate if handled emotionally.
The first step can be a secure case intake, not a full disclosure of sensitive evidence.
Start with a safe summary
Share case type, city/general location, short chronology, lawfully obtained initial evidence, and your verification objective. Do not send passwords, OTP codes, or excessive sensitive data at first contact.
Send Secure Summary via WhatsApp