Detective Chemnitz, Germany | Private Investigator in Chemnitz – Kurtz Detective Agency Germany*

Ranked as Germany’s third-best detective agency by Wirtschaftswoche

IHK-certified Saxon private and corporate detectives in Chemnitz provide discreet and court-admissible evidence investigations across a wide range of assignments. Our fees are transparent and fair — you can find an overview here. Billing for hours and mileage is calculated from Chemnitz. We will gladly take on your case and offer a free, no-obligation consultation at +49 341 6970 4082.

 

Not convinced yet? Take a look at our references!

Case Study: Adultery with the Best Man in Chemnitz

Mr. and Mrs. Leisnig had been married for twelve years and had two children. Mr. Leisnig’s best friend, Mr. Nossen, had served as best man at their wedding and had since maintained a very close relationship with the family: they vacationed together, met frequently after work and on weekends, and he often helped with the children as their godfather.

 

Two weekends ago, Mrs. Leisnig allegedly attended a training seminar on the island of Rügen, while Mr. Nossen claimed to be visiting family in Göttingen. However, the following Monday, a mutual acquaintance approached Mr. Leisnig with visible unease. She told him that while vacationing in the Baltic Sea resort of Binz, she had seen his wife and Mr. Nossen walking arm in arm along the promenade. Shocked and angry, Mr. Leisnig dismissed the story as slander. Yet the seed of doubt was planted. Could it be that his wife and closest friend were betraying him? As he replayed memories, small incidents began to seem suspicious. Unable to bear the uncertainty, he hired our detective agency in Chemnitz to investigate.

Unremarkable Routine – At First

The surveillance began at Mrs Leisnig’s workplace, the hospital, where she worked part-time. The client of our private investigators in Chemnitz wished to ascertain whether, as she claimed, she really met a friend for coffee after work before returning home to prepare the children’s meals. The suspect’s statements were confirmed: the friend collected her from work, drove her to a café and later dropped her off at a dentist. Mrs Leisnig then walked home without having had any contact with Mr Nossen that day.

 

On day two, the investigators observed a visit to a savings bank and a stay at a sports centre.

 

The result of the third day’s personal surveillance by our private detective agency in Chemnitz would, combined with the previous findings, almost have meant 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 shopping at a supermarket – all alone and without sighting the suspected lover. Mr Leisnig felt noticeably worse by now, as it seemed he had unjustly suspected his wife and his best friend. At the same time he scolded the acquaintance who had put the idea into his head. He was not completely reassured, however, and – as a final safeguard – checked his wife’s mobile phone.

Chemnitz Hospital; detective agency Chemnitz, private investigator Chemnitz, detective Chemnitz, detective bureau

Chemnitz Hospital was the daily starting point for the surveillances carried out by our Saxon investigators.

Mobile phone finds raise new doubts

Although no suspicious messages were found in the chat between the two target persons on Mrs Leisnig’s smartphone, there was an apparently deliberately hidden photograph in a family holiday folder showing a male genital organ that did not belong to Mr Leisnig. In addition, the call log showed an extremely high number of calls between his wife and his best man, many of them lasting only a few seconds, others up to two hours – the longer calls always occurring at times when Mr Leisnig was not in the same building as his wife. Consequently, he decided to continue the assignment.

 

Interestingly, Mr Nossen was due to visit the family the following day to spend time with the children and to 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 venues. 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 a few streets away during a neighbourhood search. The children were due home from school at around 14:45; Mr Nossen left the house at 14:32, went to his car, waited there for about fifteen minutes and then drove back to the family’s property to park the car directly in front of the house and go inside again – a very suspicious sequence of events. Nevertheless, our private and corporate detective agency in Chemnitz could of course not produce hard proof, since a person’s own home constitutes a protected innermost private sphere and is therefore absolutely off limits for inspection by our detectives, let alone for taking photographic material.

Strong indications versus lingering doubts – continued assignments

In the following weeks, at Mr Leisnig’s instruction – who was naturally further confirmed in his suspicions by the recent observations – the observers carried out further spot checks of his wife. 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 the other time for almost fifty minutes. To deny the existence of an affair at this point would have bordered on naïvety, although these observations could still not entirely dispel the remaining doubt that there might be an innocent explanation. The client of our detective bureau for Chemnitz pondered the matter day and night and devised various alternative explanatory models, for example that an important birthday was approaching and it was conceivable that his wife and his best friend were planning something special together. But why then hide it so vehemently from the children, and why did Mr Nossen manoeuvre his vehicle so conspicuously unobtrusively? All the speculation helped nothing; proof was required, and so the investigations continued.

Unfortunate circumstances put to good use

Certainty was to come. Some weeks later Mr Leisnig’s mother fell in her flat in Dresden and broke bones in both arms, requiring surgery and considerable assistance. Consequently, our client travelled repeatedly to Dresden and sometimes stayed overnight to help his mother. For him this naturally caused additional emotional strain and great stress; for our detective agency in Chemnitz, however, it provided an opportunity, since 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, booked a babysitter because she wanted to go to the cinema with a friend. That friend, however, had a noticeable three-day beard, stubbly hair and a distinctly 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 of a friendly nature, 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 – to which they had been accompanied by one of our Chemnitz private detectives – they cuddled closely and kissed now and then. After the film they drove to a short-stay hotel, spent just under an hour there, returned to the car park in Adelsberg and finally parted with kisses.

Separation including a fresh humiliation

When Mr Leisnig learned of the results of that day’s investigation, he did not appear devastated – the confirmation of his suspicion had been building for weeks; he had seen it coming. Yet he appeared disillusioned and was certainly sad in a double sense, for he had lost both his wife and his best friend. Indeed, 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 going on for six years, though they insisted that the children were definitely Mr Leisnig’s. Our client plans to apply for custody.

Note

To preserve the discretion and personal rights of clients and target persons, all names and locations in this case report have been changed beyond recognition.

Chemnitz Opera House; corporate detective agency Chemnitz, private detective agency Chemnitz, detective team Chemnitz

Chemnitz Opera House

Examples of operational areas of our detectives in the Chemnitz region:

  •  
  • Detective agency for Augustusburg (Mittelsachsen District)
  • Detective agency for Burgstädt (Mittelsachsen District)
  • Detective agency for Burkhardtsdorf (Erzgebirgskreis)
  • Detective agency for Callenberg (Zwickau District)
  • Detective agency for Flöha (Mittelsachsen District)
  • Detective agency for Frankenberg/Saxony (Mittelsachsen District)
  • Detective agency for Hohenstein-Ernstthal (Zwickau District)
  • Detective agency for Limbach-Oberfrohna (Zwickau District)
  • Detective agency for Lichtenau/Saxony (Mittelsachsen District)
  • Detective agency for Lugau/Erzgebirge (Erzgebirgskreis)
  • Detective agency for Hartmannsdorf near Chemnitz (Mittelsachsen District)
  • Detective agency for Neukirchen/Erzgebirge (Erzgebirgskreis)
  • Detective agency for Niederwiesa (Mittelsachsen District)
  • Detective agency for Oberlungwitz (Zwickau District)
  • Detective agency for Zwickau (Zwickau District)
  •