Link:  HomeLink: OfficersLink:  MembershipLinks:  CalendarLink:  NewsLink:  Links
Image: St. Louis Arch and PIC logo
 
 

  Home

 

Important Missouri PI Licensing News

The Missouri Board of Private Investigator Examiners (BPIE) has notified us that Private Investigator, Private Investigator Agency and Agency Investigator Employee applications are available on-line using the link in the caption (above.)

More information you'll need: L-1 Identity Solutions is the approved vendor for both Missouri State Highway Patrol and FBI fingerprint background checks. You can schedule your appointment online. The ORI for this purpose is MO920673Z and the OCA is PI.

If you discover other Missouri PI licensure information you'd like to share on this site, please let us know.

  


 

Next Meeting: March 17, 2010 - Youth Violence and Gangs

We are honored to welcome as our next guest speaker, Dr. Finn-Aage Esbensen, the E. Desmond Lee Professor of Youth Crime and Violence in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. He received his B.A. and M.A. degrees from Tufts University. His Ph.D. (Sociology, 1982) was awarded by the University of Colorado, Boulder.

His research has covered a broad spectrum of methodologies and topics from participant observation in a county jail to conducting longitudinal national surveys of adolescents. Throughout his career, he has been interested in the nexus between research and policy, working on both evaluation and basic research projects. He is currently the Principal Investigator on two multi-site evaluations of school-based prevention programs and serves as the current Chair of his department.


Dr Finn Esbensen

  


 

  

PIC: A Professional Organization With A Half-Century Legacy

The Professional Investigators Council of Greater St. Louis, Inc. (PIC), was established in June 1957 after a meeting at the Crown Hotel, St. Louis, MO. The original purpose for the formation of the organization was to provide a private forum in which the members could exchange information on investigative techniques and experiences as an aid to one another. Confidentiality and trust among the members was accorded the highest respect. This concept was clearly evident in these excerpts from an original prospectus to illustrate the objectives of the council.

  

 

 

  • To determine from its members the investigative methods which have proved to be the most successful by actual test and to make these available to all in the profession.
  • To keep its members up to date on changing techniques, conditions and problems and to provide a forum for mutual discussion among its members.
  • To conduct meetings at which its members might hear speakers of outstanding achievement discourse on subjects of special or general interest to its members.


 


 

  • To promote friendship and cooperation among its members for their common benefit.
  • To work for the adherence of all members to high professional standards of conduct in their chosen field.
  • To provide an organization within whose framework members may freely exchange information of a confidential nature, enabling each member to discharge his/her duties more efficiently.

 

 


 

 

The prospectus also stated, "It has been the policy of the Board of Directors that everything should be done to prevent the council from becoming a social organization as such. In like manner, the council has not become involved actively in the sponsorship of legislation of any character, as we are aware of some evils attendant on the position of that type."

  

 

Conditions and times have changed over the past 50 years. The organization has also evolved. The original council of 17 has now grown to over 150 members. Private investigators, once barred from membership, are now active participating members. Training academies, seminars, workshops, and conferences have all contributed toward the education and profession of the investigator. Science and technology available to the investigator today was unheard of 50 years ago. Liaison between public, corporate and private investigators is an open reality.


 


 

 

Once parochial sentiments between federal, state, county and municipal law enforcement agencies have blended into a spirit of cooperation. This cooperative spirit has also extended into the judicial system of the courts. Some examples are the crime labs, forensic science, computers, citizens against crime, court watchers, neighborhood watch programs and other community crime prevention and awareness programs.


 

  

 

 

 

Clues
You
May
Have
Missed

 


 

 

Our Meeting of January 20, 2010

Missouri officials are reminding private investigators, consumers, attorneys, law enforcement and others that State law will require PIs to be licensed, commencing with the acceptance of applications starting as of February 1, 2010. This meeting addressed requirements under the new law and regulations for enforcement. Our guest presenter, Mr. Francis M. "Chris" Rey, a member of the Missouri Board of Private Investigator Examiners, has worked toward this milestone for the past 13 years. The interaction was lively and got the New Year off to a terrific start. Many thanks to Mr. Rey and to all who attended.


 


 

  

Our Meeting of November 18, 2009

Our speaker for the evening was Assistant United States Attorney Howard Marcus on the topic of "The Changing Role of the Justice Department in a Post-9/11 World" Mr. Marcus' presentation described many of the roles and responsibilities of AUSA's and more specifically his mission within ATAC in the Eastern District of Missouri.

  

 

 

You may contact PIC at the address below:

Professional Investigators Council of Greater St. Louis, Inc.
PO Box 50115
Saint Louis, MO 63105

 

  


 


 

Copyright © 2009 PIC St. Louis, St. Louis MO USA. All rights reserved.  


Webmaster: Vadon Willis ~ Company: Ispirian
PO Box 50115 St. Louis, MO 63105
Site by SyllogisTeks