Answering Writers’ Questions: Hidden Offshore Assets and Bail Skipping
Posted by Writing PIs on July 27, 2009
Updated August 18, 2012
Today we’re sharing some fiction writers’ questions and Guns, Gams, and Gumshoes’s answers.
Writer’s Question: Regarding PIs searching for assets. What if these assets are set up in countries outside the US? What if your client lives in the US, but the account is in Switzerland or the Isle of Man? Actually, I thought tax-free accounts were supposed to be cracked down on by the IRS. How could a wife find out if her husband was hiding money during a nasty divorce? Can it be undetected without a bank number? I don’t think those types of banks use regular name and account numbers like here, but I’m not sure.

Seal of the United States Internal Revenue Service. The design is the same as the Treasury seal with an IRS inscription. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Guns, Gams, and Gumshoes’s Answer: Our agency doesn’t specialize in this kind of work, but we have info nevertheless that can be helpful to writers. For starters, a lot of countries now participate in reporting offshore bank accounts. To the best of our knowledge, Guernsey, England is still very private (i.e., not reporting offshore accounts), but in this case a U.S. citizen could hire a local U.K. attorney to open an account in Guernsey and act as an agent in that country. Bahamas, once a popular place in reality and many fiction stories as a place to hide assets, is no longer such a financial haven–after the U.S. threatened them with trade restraints, they agreed to disclose information about bank accounts. Another country that is private: a small country named Nevis (an island nation in the West Indies) that has extremely tight privacy laws. Check out e-gold.com, which is located there. There are probably other countries/regions that are also private, but one would need to research that.
Guns, Gams, and Gumshoes’s Answer: We’ve been hired by families and attorneys to find people in other countries. However, we’ve never tracked someone who had skipped out on bail (this is what bounty hunters, like Dog, are hired to do). So if
a bounty hunter is tracking someone who’s skipped bail and there’s indications this person is in another country, the bounty hunter would have to work closely with that country’s local and national law enforcement, the U.S. Embassy, and any private individuals who also specialize in bail/skip recapture. This is an extremely technical area, bound up in a mess of treaties concerning extradition, as well as that country’s local law as well as international law (including the Hague Convention). Remember all the trouble Dog got into a few years ago (for those who might not know, google Dog the Bounty Hunter and Mexico)? In that scenario, one man’s bounty hunter was another man’s kidnapper.
Guns, Gams, and Gumshoes’s Answer: We would tell her, and we would tell law enforcement.
Have a great weekend, Writing PIs
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