08th October 2016
Mr and Mrs Leisnig had been married for twelve years and had two children together. Mr Leisnig’s best friend, Mr Nossen, had served as best man at their wedding and continued to maintain a very close relationship with the family: they went on holidays together, met regularly after work and at weekends, he looked after the children when his help was needed, and he was also their godfather.
The weekend before last, Mrs Leisnig went to a professional training seminar on the island of Rügen, while Mr Nossen allegedly spent the weekend with his cousin’s family in Göttingen – or so they both claimed. The following Monday, however, Mr Leisnig was stopped after work by an acquaintance who, visibly uncomfortable, had something to tell him: she had spent the previous week with her partner on holiday in the seaside resort of Binz on Rügen, where she had seen Mrs Leisnig and Mr Nossen walking arm in arm along the promenade. Mr Leisnig brusquely dismissed her – that was an outrageous accusation and could not possibly be true! Yet in the days that followed, the matter would not leave his mind. His best friend and his wife, the two people who meant more to him than anyone else apart from his children, betraying him in such a perfidious way? That could not be! Or could it? Had he overlooked the signs because he could never have imagined such a thing? Searching his memories, he recalled situations that other husbands might have found odd and questioned. Eventually he could no longer bear it and therefore commissioned our detective agency in Chemnitz* to investigate his wife.
The surveillance began at Mrs Leisnig’s workplace, the hospital where she was employed part-time. The client of our private investigators in Chemnitz wished to determine whether she really met a friend for coffee after work, as she claimed, before returning home to prepare dinner for the children. The suspect’s statements proved accurate: the friend collected her from work, drove with her to a café, and later dropped her off at a dental practice. Mrs Leisnig then walked home alone, without any contact with Mr Nossen that day.
On the second day, the investigators observed a visit to a savings bank and a stay at a sports centre.
The outcome of the third day’s personal surveillance by our private detective agency in Chemnitz would, taken together with the previous findings, almost have led to the end of the assignment, as the target person’s activities remained inconspicuous: a hairdresser’s appointment, a few errands at a DIY store, and some shopping at a supermarket – all alone, with no sign of the suspected lover. Mr Leisnig was audibly distressed, as it appeared that he had falsely suspected his wife and his best friend. At the same time, he was angry with the acquaintance who had planted the idea in his mind. He was not completely at ease, however, and – as a final safeguard – decided to check his wife’s mobile phone.
Although no suspicious messages were found in the chat between the two target persons on Mrs Leisnig’s smartphone, there was a photograph hidden in a family holiday album showing a male genital organ that did not belong to Mr Leisnig. Moreover, the call log revealed an exceptionally high number of calls between his wife and his best man – many lasting only a few seconds, others up to two hours, the longer ones always occurring when Mr Leisnig was not in the same building as his wife. Accordingly, he decided to continue the investigation.
Interestingly, Mr Nossen was due to visit the family the following day to spend time with the children and play a few rounds of skat in the evening with Mr Leisnig and another family friend. When our detective team in Chemnitz observed Mrs Leisnig that day, she went straight home from work for the first time without visiting any other place. The time was evidently well used, for shortly after her arrival at the detached house, Mr Nossen also appeared – on foot. Our private investigators found his vehicle parked several streets away. The children were due home from school at about 2:45 p.m., but Mr Nossen left the house at 2:32, walked to his car, waited there for about fifteen minutes, and then drove back to the family’s property, this time parking directly in front of the house before going back inside – a very suspicious sequence of events. However, our private and commercial detective agency in Chemnitz could of course not provide concrete proof, since a person’s own home constitutes an inviolable private sphere, making both visual observation and photographic documentation by our detectives absolutely prohibited.
In the following weeks, at Mr Leisnig’s request – who was naturally even more convinced of his suspicions after the previous observations – the investigators carried out occasional spot checks of his wife’s activities. Twice more they documented Mr Nossen spending time alone with Mrs Leisnig in the house before the children returned from school, once for just over thirty minutes and once for almost fifty. To assume there was no affair at this point would have bordered on naïvety, though these observations still could not entirely eliminate the residual doubt that there might be an innocent explanation. The client of our detective office in Chemnitz pondered the matter day and night, coming up with various alternative explanations – for instance, his milestone birthday was approaching, and it was conceivable that his wife and best friend were secretly planning something special. But why, then, did they conceal it so determinedly from the children, and why did Mr Nossen park his car so conspicuously inconspicuously? All the speculation was in vain; proof was needed, and so the investigation continued.
Certainty was soon to come. Some weeks later, Mr Leisnig’s mother suffered a fall in her Dresden flat, breaking bones in both arms. She required surgery and considerable assistance, meaning that our client travelled repeatedly to Dresden, often staying overnight to support her. For him this naturally meant additional emotional strain and stress, but for our detective agency in Chemnitz it presented an opportunity, as it was now more likely that the two target persons might dare to meet outside the house in the husband’s absence.
Indeed: on one of those evenings, Mrs Leisnig, after consulting with her husband, hired a babysitter because she said she was going to the cinema with a friend. This friend, however, had a noticeable three-day beard, short stubbly hair, and a clearly visible Adam’s apple – it was Mr Nossen. The two targets met in a car park in the Adelsberg district, greeted each other with kisses on the mouth that were clearly not platonic, and then drove together to a cinema in Limbach-Oberfrohna. They had probably chosen that location because they feared being recognised by friends, relatives or acquaintances in a Chemnitz cinema. During the screening, which they attended under the observation of one of our Chemnitz private detectives, they cuddled closely and occasionally kissed. After the film, they went to a short-stay hotel, spent just under an hour there, returned to the car park in Adelsberg, and finally said goodbye with kisses.
When Mr Leisnig learned of the results of that day’s investigation, he did not appear devastated – he had long seen confirmation of his suspicions coming. Nonetheless, he seemed disillusioned and was understandably deeply saddened, having lost both his wife and his best friend. After the separation, which our client initiated immediately upon his return from Dresden, Mrs Leisnig moved in with Mr Nossen – another heavy blow for the betrayed husband. Both admitted that the affair had been ongoing for six years, though they assured him that the children were definitely his. Our client now plans to apply for custody.
For discretion and to protect the personal rights of clients and target persons, all names and locations in this case report have been altered beyond recognition.
Kurtz Detective Agency Leipzig | Germany
Beuchaer Straße 10
04318 Leipzig
Tel.: +49 341 6970 4082
Mobile: +49 163 8033 967
Email: kontakt@kurtz-detektei-leipzig.de
Web: https://www.kurtz-detektei-leipzig.de/en
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Tags: Detective agency, detective, private investigator, commercial detective agency, detective bureau, private detective agency, private investigator, Rügen, Chemnitz, seaside resort Binz, Göttingen, Saxony, Dresden, adultery, infidelity, cheating, affair, deception, Limbach-Oberfrohna, detective team, personal surveillance, observation, custody, inviolable private sphere, Adelsberg, short-stay hotel
Kommentare: 1
#1
(Donnerstag, 10 November 2016 22:02)
Starker Tobak für den Mann! Wir haben auch schon einmal über einen spannenden Fall in Chemnitz berichtet, schaut doch mal vorbei: https://www.aaden-detektive-leipzig.de/detektei-chemnitz-detektiv-chemnitz/.