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Day 1: The following interrogation took place over a period of three days! The employee thief was interrogated on day one and supplied the first of three confessions. In a period of 4 short months she stole $20,000. She was in a trusted position of an assistant manager. Here is a copy of her first confession:








Day 2: While still under the hypnotic spell of the interrogator (we threw that in for the defense lawyers who seem to believe that in order for a person to confess they have to be hypnotized by a master interrogator/hypnotist) she returned to provide more information about her fraud activities and to return some of the stolen funds. KEEP IN MIND THAT AT NO TIME WAS SHE TOLD THAT IF SHE COOPERATED THAT SHE WOULD NOT BE ARRESTED OR LOSE HER JOB! (In fact, she was told from the beginning that the case would be turned over to the police and she would be prosecuted and she still cooperated--that is the sign of an interrogation being performed properly and effectively.)






Day 3: Again, she returned and provided more information and even more stolen money! And, she continued writing out a confession for the third day in a row.










Day 3: These are pictures of the stolen money and cashiers checks that she returned. This was done over a period of three days. Shortly after these photos were taken she drove herself to the police station and turned herself in. At no time was she ever promised anything if she cooperated. She was not coerced and she was not "hypnotized" or "brainwashed." (Yes, we have also been accused of brainwashing thieves into confessing. If only the defense lawyers understood just how the professionals in our industry performed their work, there might be less litigation and fewer incidents of fraud.) She simply "learned" she was wrong and was determined to set things straight. We met her at the police department and that was the end of day three and this case.

These are photos of the stolen money she returned totaling $20,000!