These private investigators report that calls for help from law firms and corporate general counsel have increased substantially in recent years.
Attorneys are looking for assistance on a wide range of problems, including: corporate espionage, intellectual property theft and workplace discrimination claims.
At the core of many of these problems, lawyers note, is a mountain of computer evidence too technical and too overwhelming for attorneys to dissect on their own.
"Most lawyers do not have the technological experience or the accounting expertise to do almost any of the stuff that these guys do," said attorney Alan Brudner, head of litigation and investigations of the U.S. division of UBS Securities LLC, an international financial services firm.
Brudner said that his reliance on former federal agents has grown in recent years. In his 13 years with UBS, he's gone from calling on private investigators only rarely to calling them once a month. He said that's largely the result of increased government regulation, investigations and inquiries into the banking industry.
"They're credible," he said of the hired help. "They've got experience. They know their way around the courthouse and understand how evidence is used and presented in court. There's always a value in talking to these guys."
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