Do I need one investigator or two?
One investigator may be sufficient for a fixed location or simple objective. Two may be justified by multiple exits, complex mobile movement, safety, traffic, or the need to maintain continuity. The scope should drive the staffing.
This page explains do i need one investigator or two? through LPIIA’s fact-first operating standard. It covers lawful scope, preparation, methods, reporting, sources, local context when applicable, and the limits a client or attorney should understand before assigning the work.
Direct Answer
One investigator may be sufficient for a fixed location or simple objective. Two may be justified by multiple exits, complex mobile movement, safety, traffic, or the need to maintain continuity. The scope should drive the staffing.
Why the Question Requires Context
The wording of “Do I need one investigator or two?” can hide several different objectives. A person may be trying to preserve evidence, confirm identity, locate a witness, document activity, protect a business, or understand a legal boundary. The method requested is not automatically the method that is lawful or useful. LPIIA separates the underlying objective from the requested technique and evaluates authority, jurisdiction, source access, privacy, and intended use.
Lawful Methods and Practical Alternatives
Depending on the objective, lawful alternatives may include public-source research, official records, surveillance from lawful vantage points, evidence preservation, client-provided records, device-owner forensic referral, attorney-directed discovery, identity resolution, or an authorized technical assessment. The alternative must fit the facts. LPIIA does not turn a prohibited request into instructions for doing it yourself.
Evidence to Preserve
Keep original messages, files, full email headers, URLs, account names, dates, payment records, photographs, device details, contracts, and notes showing how each item was obtained. Do not edit originals or rely only on cropped screenshots. Avoid confrontation, account access attempts, unauthorized tracking, or deletion. When safety, ongoing fraud, stalking, or immediate loss is involved, contact counsel or the appropriate authority promptly.
Limits and Next Step
The answer may change with authority, jurisdiction, and the exact facts. LPIIA provides educational information, not legal advice. A consultation can identify the objective, screen the method, and recommend a lawful investigation, preservation step, specialist referral, or attorney question. No automated answer accepts the matter or guarantees a result.
Common Questions
Do I need one investigator or two?
One investigator may be sufficient for a fixed location or simple objective. Two may be justified by multiple exits, complex mobile movement, safety, traffic, or the need to maintain continuity. The scope should drive the staffing.
What lawful alternative may help?
The alternative depends on the objective. Options may include public-source research, official records, lawful surveillance, evidence preservation, authorized device review, attorney-directed discovery, or a specialist referral.
What should I preserve before contacting an investigator?
Preserve original messages, files, URLs, dates, account identifiers, payment records, photographs, device details, and notes showing how each item was obtained. Do not alter originals.
Does this page provide legal advice?
No. It provides general investigative information. A Louisiana attorney should address how law applies to a specific set of facts.
Related Investigation Resources
Need a Lawful Case Review?
Send the underlying objective and known facts. LPIIA will identify a lawful investigation, preservation step, or referral path.