Surveillance

DO YOU THINK LIKE A PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR?

Every day, our private investigators are hired to uncover the truth, connect the dots, and find answers hiding in plain sight. But how sharp are your instincts?

In this quick surveillance laws challenge, you’ll face real-world situations inspired by cases our P.I.’s encounter every day. Your mission? Trust your gut, make your call, and see how your detective skills stack up.

Will you think like a licensed investigator… or fall for the same mistakes most people make?

Take the quiz below and find out.

Lead With Facts And Not Assumptions!

Question 1: A licensed PI is hired to surveil a subject. The subject walks into a restaurant and sits near a window. The PI photographs them from the parking lot. Is this legal?

A) No, the subject is in a private establishment
B) Yes, the subject is visible from a public space
C) Only if the PI has a court order
D) No, photographing someone without consent is always illegal

A) Yes, if the purpose is to gather evidence for court
B) Yes, if the camera does not record audio
C) No, placing a recording device in someone’s private residence without consent is a criminal offense
D) Only illegal if the footage is shared publicly

A) No, that is stalking
B) Yes, surveillance in public spaces over multiple days is legal for a licensed PI
C) Only legal for one day at a time
D) Only legal if the subject is under a court order

A) No, your backyard is private property
B) Yes, if the camera is mounted on their property and captures only what is visible from their property
C) Only legal if they notify you first
D) No, any recording of private property without consent is illegal

A) Yes, airspace is public
B) Yes, if the drone stays above 400 feet
C) No, the subject has a reasonable expectation of privacy in an enclosed yard
D) Only legal if the PI has an FAA drone license

A) Not useful, it only shows them near the location
B) Moderately useful on its own but far stronger when combined with other documented evidence
C) Fully conclusive, a judge will act on it immediately
D) Not admissible because it was gathered by a PI

A) Yes, Texas is a one-party consent state so any recording is legal
B) No, you were not a party to the conversation so this recording is illegal
C) Yes, if the conversation took place in a public space
D) Only if your attorney subpoenas the recording

Number 1: Answer: B
In Texas, anything visible from a public space is fair game for surveillance. A parking lot, sidewalk, or public street gives a licensed PI legal standing to observe and photograph. The subject has no reasonable expectation of privacy when they are visible to anyone passing by.

Number 2: Answer: C
Placing any recording device inside a private residence without the occupant’s consent is a serious criminal violation under both Texas and federal law. Any PI offering to do this is not only operating illegally but exposing you to criminal liability as well. Walk away immediately.

Number 3: Answer: B
Licensed PIs can legally conduct multi-day surveillance in public spaces. In fact, a pattern of behavior documented over multiple days is far more valuable in court than a single observation. One sighting is a coincidence. Three days of consistent documentation tells a story a judge can follow.

Number 4: Answer: B
Texas law allows property owners to install cameras on their own property, even if those cameras incidentally capture neighboring areas visible from their vantage point. Where it becomes illegal is when a camera is deliberately aimed to capture areas with a reasonable expectation of privacy, such as inside a window or a fully enclosed backyard with no sightline from public space.

Number 5: Answer: C
A privacy fence signals a reasonable expectation of privacy. Using a drone to peer over that fence and photograph someone in their private outdoor space crosses a legal line regardless of the altitude. Texas law and federal drone regulations both factor into this, and any evidence gathered this way is likely inadmissible and potentially criminal.

Number 6: Answer: B Surveillance footage is powerful but rarely a slam dunk on its own. When a licensed PI combines location documentation with timestamped logs, photographs, and corroborating evidence it builds a credible pattern that is much harder to dismiss. Courts want the full picture, not a single frame.

Number 7: Answer: B
Texas one-party consent means you can record a conversation you are personally part of. Recording a conversation between two other people that you are not participating in is illegal wiretapping under both Texas and federal law. Location does not change this. If you are not in the conversation, you cannot legally record it.

 

How Did You Score???

7 correct: You think like a PI. You know where the lines are and why they matter.


5 to 6 correct: Strong instincts. A couple of blind spots that a good PI can help you navigate.


3 to 4 correct: You know enough to ask the right questions. Let a professional handle the rest.


0 to 2 correct: You were about to do something that could destroy your case. Call us first.

Get Answers. Get Results.

Contact Terrance Private Investigator & Associates

Surveillance done wrong can ruin everything.
At Terrance Private Investigator & Associates, we know exactly where the legal lines are and how to build a case that holds up when it counts.

Call or visit piterrance.com to schedule a confidential consultation.

getanswers@piterrance.com

🌐 Website: https://piterrance.com/ 

📞 Call or Text:(832) 404-3400

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