SERVICE TAPS WOMEN FROM ORIENT Made in Hong Kong* people live is very tough. People are sold a dream, a hope, an escape from the existing.environment." "IT'S A CRUEL exploitation," he ad- ded, "and they're selling it ih a very vicious manner." But Broussard brushes aside these accusations. "All we do is sell ad- dresses," he stated. "We don't sell oriental ladies." Yet Broussard's defense appears to be undercut by excerpts from a "May- June Hot Line," which is received by subscribers. In it he offers, for a fee, photographs and the original letters of women who didn't make it in Cherry Blossoms. The descriptions are listed by number and subletter: "6c) A 25 or 26-year-old Filipina ac- counting girl who is half Chinese, 5 ft., 132 lbs. She has a mole below her mouth, but if she weren't overweight we think she would be rather pretty. 3 letters & photos: $3. "14n) These three ladies are rather homely so we are selling them as a group ... All three letters and photos. $2." This story was reprinted from the summer edition of The Daily. Eyeing a private eye eyeing a crook parent hires a private eye to determine whether the other parent-usually the mother-is fit to care for the child. Conrad said that the investigator might watch the individuals as they go to and from work and follow them into bars and restaurants. The investigation terminates either when the spouse runs out of money or when the investigator finds something out.' Clare LeFerier, of LeFerier Security and Detective Agency in Ypsilanti, said because of no-fault divorce laws, fewer individuals hire detectives to gather in- formation which might prove helpful in divorce proceedings. BUT RICK MALIS, a detective for Security Services, Inc. in Farmington, said that often "girls call up and ask me to check on their boyfriends." "People are just more or less suspicious of everyone these days," he added. Other non-criminal matters which a detective may be employed to in- vestigate'include checking on a person who is collecting workmen's compen- sation, acid background and credit checks. CONRAD SAID HER agency is often employed by attorneys whose clients have been accused of rape and who claim they are innocent. "What we try to do," explained Conrad, "is prove the woman asked for it-that she enticed (the assailant) or is promiscuous." Most of the private detectives agree that surveillance is a fairly dull part of their job, because it usually entails many hours-and often days-of sitting in a car watching, or following the path of, a person. But then there are those few investigations which have all the excitement of a "Rockford Files" episode or a detective thriller. And 60- year-old Booth has a variety of in- triguing stories. WHEN A MEMBER of the Detroit Mafia; who was also a witness in a $4 million suit, jumped bail in California and returned to Michigan, Booth was hired to serve a subpoena on him. But since he couldn't find his witness, Booth guessed that maybe a Detroit Mafia don might lead him to his man. The don, whom Booth refused to iden- tify, had a tunnel leading from his Detroit home to his garage and was always trailed by two cars driven by his hencemen. Late one night, Booth said, the don "went to a store . . . on Mack Avenue, picked up two big cases of groceries, and headed out to the lake." There, Booth said he watched the three men list the canvas off a boat anchored in a marina on Lake St. Clair, and board the boat, and within minutes, head back to their cars-without the groceries. Booth, figuring that the groceries must, have been intended for someone on the boat, then called FBI detectives, who found the man hiding out there. As the detectives led the suspect away, Booth handed him the subpoena. IN OTHER INCIDENTS, Booth ser- ved a subpoena on a major area Mafia figure who invited Booth to have a glass of wine with him; dressed as a skid-row bum to find out the source of poisonous wine which resulted in the death of two bums; and discovered that a former chief of police in a city near Ann Arbor was consorting with the Mafia. The average fee charged by the private investigators is about $20 per hour, although some detectives, if the case is especially dangerous, charge up to $50 an hour. Just as the substance of the cases varies,, so does the time spent on each: LeFerier said he has put in 20-hour days workingi on a case. Conrad said in- vestigators in her office have spent up to 150 hours on a case, while Booth said that he has worked on an investigation- for a year. BOOTH SAID that a detective must possess certain characteristics to be successful. "You can't be meek, and you have to be inquisitive," he explained. "And you have to have a lot of common sense." But aside from personal qualities; there are state laws which govern the performance of private detectives. ACCORDING TO SGT. Clare Fox of the Private Security and Investigators Section of the Michigan State Police, an investigator must be a U.S. citizen, at least 25 years old with the equivalent of a high school education. The potential investigator must never have been con- victed of high misdemeanors or felonies, and must have either three years experience in the investigating area of a licensed detective or police agency, or possess a degree in police administration from an accredited college. One of the most widely-abused rules, according to Fox, is that which states private detectives cannot pose as representing a police agency or unit of government. This story was reprinted from the summer edition of The Daily. Hewlet- Paekard's Calculator Line-up t 14, e+ 4 85 ' ... 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