Field Note: The Bridge Between Borders
A German-American attorney asked a simple question before his client signed an international deal. What followed was a quiet investigation across jurisdictions, uncovering the kind of risk that hides between the lines of due diligence.
Field Note: The Sky Between Meetings
A public company CEO lived in motion. What began as a study of his travel security became something larger, a framework for privacy, continuity, and control in the sky, between meetings, and far from routine visibility.
Field Note: After the Headline
The morning after a CEO was killed in New York, a Florida board called asking what they were missing. What began as reassurance became a months-long audit of how leadership, family, and security intertwine when fear meets governance.
Field Note: The Spies Have Entered the Chat
A routine security plan for an international trip turns when one email doesn’t belong. What began as travel preparation becomes a counterintelligence exercise, and a lesson in how tradecraft can hide in plain sight.
Field Note: Echoes of Malmö
A Florida biotech executive travels to Stockholm for a closed arbitration. What begins as a precaution becomes a quiet reminder of an old Bureau case, and how protection often means being invisible until it matters most.
Field Note: Building a Boat to Sail Away
A husband and wife built a business with a partner they trusted. When something began to feel off, they sought clarity before the damage was done. What they found was not betrayal, but a slow departure already underway.
Field Note: Following the Yachts
When sanctions hit Russian oligarchs, a task force in New York was told to track their yachts. What followed was less glamour than patience, and a lesson in how truth always leaves a trail, no matter how far it sails.
Field Note: Moscow to Minot
A Russian procurement case led to an address that didn’t belong, a family feed store in North Dakota. What followed was long hours in a small office, diner food, and the reminder that whether it’s Moscow or Main Street, the money always tells the story.

