Top Bail Bonds in Mesa, AZ 85210

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American Eagle Bonding Agency Inc

5.0

By Flower Delivery Cleveland Ohio

I worked with Kathy White she was friendly, knowledgable, attentive, helpful. This is one of the best customer service experiences I've ever had and will definitely recommend USA AMERICAN EAGLE BONDS INSURANCE AGENCY LLC to anyone. ...read more

Budget Bail Bonds

5.0

By herman85050

Thanks Paulie heha lol for great service an great true affordable bail bonds. You sure stand-by your website ...read more

Budget Bail Bonds

5.0

By herman85050

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A Plan to Prevent Domestic Violence

On average, there are 15 intimate partner homicides each year in . That's just one statistic from the state domestic violence fatality review report, but another stat has startled prevention advocates into action. Karen Jarmoc, who leads the Connecticut Coalition Against Domestic Violence, said the latest fatality review report uncovered a troubling fact. "In the majority of domestic violence homicides," she said, "victims and their families, we are learning, were not aware of where to get help. They weren't even necessarily seeing themselves in a domestic violence situation." Jarmoc said it was a wake up call or the state to raise awareness about where victims can go for help. She said, "Our 18 domestic violence agencies across the state served over 56,000 victims of domestic violence through shelters, and the hotline, and court advocacy. It's important that we look at prevention, and what we can be doing with limited resources to stop the cycle of violence within families in our state." The coalition spent the last year and a half drafting a statewide domestic violence prevention plan, something Jarmoc said exists in other states, but not in , until now. The plan focuses on educating the community, especially youth, about risk factors for intimate partner violence and awareness about services available. This week, the Coalition against Domestic Violence is launching its 10x10 campaign that calls on male leaders in the community to talk about the importance of healthy relationships. Meanwhile, Jarmoc reminded residents that no matter what part of the state they live, there is a regional domestic violence agency that can offer free, confidential help. ...read more

By Lien & Bond Investigations January 11, 2014

Why Her? What You Need To Know About How Pimps Choose

In 1943, Abraham Maslow published “A Theory of Human Motivation.” His theory is that humans have a hierarchy of needs ranging from the most fundamental needs at the lowest level to the need for self-actualization at the highest level. Humans can’t reach the next level of “need” until they achieve the prior level. Here is a simple example of this concept: But today traffickers are using this theory to identify the needs of our youth. Traffickers may follow a recruitment process similar to this: Identify the need of the child Fulfill the need Remove any other sources of need fulfillment  Exploit the child’s dependence for need fulfillment by forcing them into prostitution One reason traffickers pray on kids is because they are more vulnerable than adults. They are more naive, and at-risk kids who have experienced abuse or extreme conflict in their homes may not only be eager to run away, but may also be desperate for the love and attention of an adult. Many kids who run away from home do so because they experience abuse, or because a member of the family is an addict, is violent, or both. If runaways have nowhere to go – no friends or other family members they can rely on and trust – they need to find food and shelter someplace else, which makes them especially vulnerable to trafficking. Here’s how a pimp might use Maslow’s theory: “It could never happen to my child” That’s what Brianna’s parents thought too. Unfortunately, the scary, inconvenient truth is that unless your child has reached self-actualization and has no further needs, they could unsuspectingly fall victim to a trafficker. Brianna was a 17-year-old high school student, involved in cheerleading, taking college courses for an early start on her nursing degree and worked at a local restaurant with her sister. She had no idea that friendly conversations she had with a regular customer could end with a trafficking ring planning to transport her to Arizona, likely to be sold. You are not powerless. On the contrary, you are the best advocate we have. Know why? Because you are here, reading this article about an issue that has still barely crept on to the radar of our society. We’ve created a comprehensive presentation package for you, complete with a short 20-minute video based on the stories of two girls who were tricked by traffickers, pre and post presentation PowerPoints, suggested discussion questions, action ideas, indicator and reporting cards, and more. “Chosen” which will be released on May 1, 2013 is great for adult and youth audiences. Find out more… If you know or meet a girl who exhibits some of these signs, don’t be afraid to ask questions: At risk of being homeless or running away from home Severe family issues like drug addiction, alcoholism or abuse Signs of fear, anxiety, depression, tension or nervousness Hyper-vigilant or paranoid behavior Interest in relationships with older men Unexplained shopping trips or purchases of new clothing and/or jewelry, especially if the clothing is revealing or suggestive A “boyfriend” who seems overly-concerned with her whereabouts or is otherwise controlling. If she is in trouble, you may be the only one who tries to intervene. If you need help or guidance, or want to report a suspected case of human trafficking, or if you know someone being held against there will; call Kelly Townsend, Chief Investigator with Lien&Bond; Investigations. Toll Free: 1(855) 477-8648 or Direct dial (480)251-7373 Email: tracker@ArizonaPis.com.  Websites: www.ArizonaPis.com. Or www.StealthFIND.com  ...read more

By Lien & Bond Investigations August 26, 2013

Private Investigator Interviewed about GPS Tracking and Investigations

Today, anyone with $300 can compete with Jack Bauer. Online, and soon in big-box stores, you can buy a device no bigger than a cigarette pack, attach it to a car without the driver’s knowledge and watch the vehicle’s travels — and stops — at home on your laptop. Tens of thousands of Americans are already doing just that, with little oversight, for purposes as seemingly benign as tracking an elderly parent with dementia or a risky teenage driver, or as legally and ethically charged as spying on a spouse or an employee — or for outright criminal stalking. The advent of Global Positioning System tracking devices has been a boon to law enforcement, making it easier and safer, for example, for agents to link drug dealers to kingpins. Last Monday, in a decision seen as a first step toward setting boundaries for law enforcement, theSupreme Court heldthat under the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution, placing a GPS tracker on a vehicle is a search. Police departments around the country say they will be more likely to seek judicial approval before using the devices, if they were not already doing so. Still, sales of GPS trackers to employers and individuals, for a multitude of largely unregulated uses, are growing fast, raising new questions about privacy and a legal system that has not kept pace with technology. This easy tool for recording a person’s every move is a powerful one that, when misused, amounts to “electronic stalking,” in the words of one private investigator. “That, to the victim, is just as terrifying as seeing someone face in the window at night before they go to bed,” said the investigator, Julia Dalfonzo, who heads an investigation agency based in Arizona. But Ms. Dalfonzo said "the advent of GPS tracking keeps the private investigator safer and saves clients thousands of dollars in physical surveillance."  She further stated that "Law Enforcement officers are saving tax dollars and staying alive by using GPS Trackers. In the absence of legislation in most states, putting a GPS device on a spouse’s car, or hiring an investigator to do so, is widely considered to be legal as long as the GPS tracker is installed on a public street, or Mall plaza parking lot, and this law varies by State. But some privacy experts question this standard, and there is little to stop a jealous suitor, or an abusive man trying to prevent a battered woman from escaping, from doing the same. GPS trackers are increasingly being cited in cases of criminal stalking and civil violations of privacy. One increasing use of GPS tracking — by as many as 30,000 parents, one seller estimates — is to monitor the driving habits of teenagers; some devices even send a text message when the car goes over a certain speed. Kelly Townsend, a private investigator with Lien&Bond Investigations in Mesa, Arizona, who also sells GPS Tracking devices with a company he Co-founded calledStealth Find LLCsells the most recent GPS Tracking technology Tracking device through his company onwww.StealthFind.comrecalled a couple whose 15-year-old daughter had a drug problem and would disappear for hours at a time. Worried that she might overdose, they hired Mr. Townsend investigation business Lien & Bond Investigations to place a tracker on her car. When they saw that she was visiting the same house repeatedly, they informed their clients the parents who ordered his agency to bring their daughter home at any cost.  Mr. Townsend set up a surveillance team & sent a covert agent into what his team found to be a crack house into the home.  The agent had covertly videoed the teen smoking crack cocaine.  Mr. Townsend than sent the digital recording to the parents and the parents than instructed Mr. Townsend to extract their daughter from the drug house immediately.  Lien & Bond Investigations team of agents raided the drug den and removed their clients daughter.  They than transported their clients daughter to a drug rehab center Mr. Townsend sends teens to "after jobs like this per the parents instruction".  Mr. Townsend said, "if it was not for the GPS tracking device this matter would have taken twice as long to resolve, and when it comes to children and drugs their is no time to wait." Also rising is the placement of devices in the cars or pockets of elderly parents with dementia. Mr. Townsend said one client with an erratic 76-year-old mother discovered that she had driven to the west side of Phoenix into a really bad area off Van Buren street in Phoenix, and they were able to retrieve her.  When they found her the mother was so confused she could not figure out how she was to get home. Even if done legally and out of concern for family members, the covert use of GPS devices poses ethical questions. “To have this as a routine tool strikes me as a necessity when done ethically not criminally,” said Mr. Townsend, who has been a private investigator for over 20 years. “We are talking about partners, spouses, and children, not pets.” Kelly Townsend the Chief investigator for Lien & Bond Investigations in Arizona, recalled two recent cases in which women who were going through divorces hired him because they believed that their husbands were following them. He found GPS trackers on their cars and removed them. “It scared the hell out of these women, but they hired us to find out if the husbands had someone following them, when we found no one doing so, we suspected GPS tracking devices and were right” Mr. Townsend said. Sales of GPS trackers to private individuals may have already surpassed more than 100,000 per year, some experts believe. The marketing is just getting started. ...read more

By Lien & Bond Investigations February 14, 2012