Are you concerned that your ex-partner is cohabiting with someone and avoiding alimony payments? Confidential Controls offers comprehensive cohabitation investigations to provide solid evidence and protect your rights.
What is a Cohabitation Investigation?
A cohabitation investigation determines if a person receiving alimony is living with a new partner. If proven, this could affect or terminate court-ordered alimony payments. Alimony is typically paid over a set period after a divorce or separation, but it can be stopped earlier if the recipient begins cohabiting with someone else. Cohabitation, in legal terms, often means living with and engaging in a relationship with another individual outside of marriage.
Our investigation process involves discreetly gathering evidence through surveillance, social media checks, and other methods to confirm whether cohabitation is happening. With years of experience in such cases, Confidential Controls ensures you get the detailed proof you need to challenge ongoing alimony payments in court.
Cohabitation investigations are primarily for individuals who pay alimony and suspect their ex-partner is living with someone else. If you’re paying alimony and notice signs that your ex might be cohabiting, this type of investigation can help you present evidence in court. These investigations can be conducted before, during, or after divorce proceedings, providing flexibility depending on your situation.
At Confidential Controls, owner Jason Shaw has over 30 years of experience and has successfully testified in many cohabitation cases. His testimony and the evidence collected by our team can be vital in ensuring that alimony agreements are properly adjusted or terminated.
We offer not just social media monitoring but also property surveillance and eyewitness reports. This strengthens your case.
In cases of alimony, sometimes time becomes a factor. We provide evidence as quickly as possible without any compromise on quality.
With a decades-long track record of cohabitation investigations, we can lower or eliminate unfair alimony payments for our clients.
You will receive a detailed report, including photographic and video evidence, statements from witnesses, and a professional summary that details what was learned through the investigation.
Yes. The evidence that our company collects is done so legally and can be used in court to help modify or terminate alimony payments due to cohabitation.
No, you don't need a lawyer to begin an investigation, though they will help represent you in the court when presenting your case.