The Intelligence Advantage

Welcome to The Intelligence Advantage podcast. 

In this episode, host Gary Miller sits down with with Jess Miller, an accomplished investigator who shares her fascinating journey from being a curious, multilingual child to founding her own investigative boutique. Jess Miller discusses her early love for languages, the impact inspiring mentors had on her career, and her experiences working in a male-dominated industry, touching on the challenges and advantages women face in investigations.

The conversation dives into the nuances of investigative work, from asset recovery adventures to the importance of instinct, adaptability, and maintaining strong ethics. Jess Miller offers thoughtful insight on the evolving landscape of fraud, especially as technology and AI reshape the industry, and candidly talks about building diverse teams, the value of international experience, and her hope for more women to enter and thrive in the field.

Timestamps:
00:00:00 Introduction
00:10:02 Learning to Adapt and Engage
00:11:46 Balance Self-Awareness and Growth
00:16:59 A Generous Gesture at Work
00:21:34 Male-Dominated Roots in Industry
00:28:27 Listening and Genuine Strength
00:33:32 Navigating Client Expectations Effectively
00:42:16 Chasing Leads on Hidden Wealth
00:46:43 Anglo-Saxon Culture Clash
00:49:36 London: Global Hub for Asset Recovery
00:55:46 Experience with Undercover Work
01:00:06 Generational Shifts and Industry Diversity
01:06:20 Advocating Women in Investigations

If you’re interested in the world of investigations and intelligence, or curious about career journeys that break boundaries, this episode is a must-listen. Don’t forget to subscribe to the Intelligence Advantage podcast for more fascinating discussions with industry leaders and to stay updated on future episodes!

#IntelligenceAdvantage #TheIntelligenceAdvantagePodcast #GaryMiller #IntelligencePodcast #Investigations #WomenInInvestigation #AssetRecovery #FraudPrevention #CorporateIntelligence #FemaleFounder #InternationalInvestigations #WomenInBusiness #PodcastInterview #CareerInInvestigation #DiversityAndInclusion #truecrime #EthicsInInvestigations #AIandFraud

What is The Intelligence Advantage ?

An insight into the character, personality and passion of the leading figures in the Investigation and Intelligence industry who have shaped the way we gather, analyse and utilise information and intelligence.

There's a quote in an interview with Sam Altman the other day talking about

the changing of what fraud will look

like when I can

copy. At the moment, I can copy a person's voice. So you have these

fraud cases where people ring up somebody pretending to be their

child saying, mom, Dad, I need help, please help me. And

it's just sickeningly abusive

and that. But then when you. When AI will be

able to be mimic a person.

So you wouldn't know if you are on zoom with me or if you are

zoom on zoom with AI pretending to be me.

Hello and welcome to the Intelligence Advantage podcast where we talk

to the movers and shapers in the investigation and intelligence

space. My name is Gary Miller. I've been an investigative

lawyer for nearly half a century and I'm also the chairman of the

IfG, a network of international investigative and

asset recovery lawyers. I'm absolutely thrilled

to be joined today by my first lady

investigator. There are not many of them around, but I

am hunting them down and making sure that they get

full exposure on the Intelligence Advantage as indeed they

deserve. I'm delighted to be joined by Jessica Miller.

No relation, but a great surname, if I may say.

Jessica, who is the founder and director

of her own intelligence investigative Boutique

and has been in this space for over 15 years. Welcome,

Jessica. Hi. It's wonderful to be here. Thank you very much. You are

very welcome. So I have. I normally start

off with different questions for different people, but

I think with you, having looked at your

background, you speak six

languages, is that right, Jessica? English, Spanish,

French, Italian and Russian. And Russian. I'm trying with

Arabic at the moment, but yeah, a bit of a polyglot.

And would it be fair to say that when you

or the way in which you started learning languages was always

with the view of being some kind of

investigative person, being in that industry, or was it

just you wanted to be multilingual? I

really enjoy language. I enjoy languages. I enjoy how

they are of and are representative of a culture, how things

are phrased, it informs how people see the

world. And I think it goes back to childhood

story. I had a friend at primary school who was from Germany and I was

invited. So I was about five or six and I was invited around to his

house for tea after school and he and his mom just spoke German the whole

time and he would speak English to me. Obviously they were speaking German. I didn't

speak any German. I found this so stressful. I just started crying and my mum

had to come pick me up. That's A great story.

I think the. The love of language probably comes from a fundamental

fear of missing out. That's understandable,

but clearly you've got an unbelievable ear for it, which is.

Which does help. So. So tell us a little bit about

what made you

lean into or pick up an interest in the

investigation space. What was it?

So I joined the industry in 2009, and I think it's fair to say it

wasn't something that anyone really knew anything about. It wasn't the case that

investigations firms were going to job fairs at university.

There wasn't. Maybe there was some publicity, but frankly, it wasn't anything that I was

really looking at whether I did have. I always loved spy stories and

adventure stories and these kind of things. And I

remember somebody say, you know, a teacher saying to me when I was younger, when

you grow up, you are never. You're never going to do a normal kind of

job. I thought, oh, that's interesting. Why is that? Because you

weren't a normal student, is that right? I did. I was a. I think

it was my drama teachers. They probably thought, okay, prima donna that we've

got is probably not going to work in it, maybe.

But I. I graduated in

2009, so right into the economic crisis, frankly, when

I started university, I thought, maybe I'll get a job, I don't know,

in banking in some kind of research position.

But I always knew I wanted to do something that had a lot. That was

very international, had a lot of travel to it. And

2009 came around, graduating, didn't really know

what I wanted to do because the world that I'd gone, that I was expecting

to graduate into didn't really exist anymore. And like

quite a lot of people actually in investigations, I got an introduction to

a firm that was just setting up and I

was graduating in Russian and Italian. They needed a Russian

language researcher. And I thought, I don't really know what I want to do with

my life, but this looks interesting, so I'll give this a

go. And then 15, 16 years later, I'm

still here. So it clearly worked out. It found me, I think, is

how it gets. No, that's fine. And when you were studying

you, you briefly touched on it. Did you have any particular vision

as to what you wanted to be? Were you. Did you have banker, investment

banker written all over your forehead or what would actually. What

were your parents hoping you would be? I don't think

they'd never pushed for a particular

career or a particular path in life.

I always wanted. So my dad's in oil.

And when I was little, he was going off all over the world doing these

sort of oil deals and traveling, and car would come very early in the morning

and pick him up and off he'd go. And I thought, I want that. I

don't really know what it is as such, but that

light. I want to be the person for whom the car comes early in the

morning to go off to do exciting things somewhere else. That's

what I wanted. And that's not really something you can

take as a kind of career center. What would you like? I would like excitement,

please. And I think I'd like a 5A. That is

interesting because part of my

bits or part of the bits I've picked up over the last

two months of doing the podcast is trying to

identify certain things that we all, all of us in this

space have in common. And

so far, I don't think anyone's

disproved or come outside

of my classification is that investigators

and people in this space, we like thrill, we like stimulation,

and we like the chase.

And there are some people that would walk

a million miles to be away from that kind of energy and

stress. And then there are others like you and

like me, who are inexorably drawn towards

what the hell is going on. I've got to be there. I've got a. It's

a journalistic kind of voyeurism

kind of. Of gravity. Is that. Is that what you've got, do

you think? Yeah, I think you put it more eloquently than I would. I always

just say I'm kind of a really curious sort of nosy person

that needs to have a beacon for things where it probably doesn't belong.

Nosy is good. My wife says that she could be an excellent spy because

she is without doubt one of the nosiest people that you could

hope to meet. One of the loveliest, of course, but certainly nosy.

So you didn't actually. You'd read Spy? What? Which of the books. Do you remember

any of the books that you read that you thought, oh. That looks like fun,

so do you. There are. I guess it was in the kind of 19,

1940s or 50s, there were these books produced called Adventure Stories for

Boys, and my parents had them on the shelf. And I sort of thought, well,

what are the boys doing that I'm not doing? So I got these adventure stories

and read all of the Enid Blyton Famous Five and all of their

mysteries, and pretty convinced that if you dropped me onto an

island, I could Competently build a hut and survive. And then I

started. The guy, I can't remember his name, who did Horrible Histories, he bought out

a series of books when I was probably 11.

That was about. It was spy stories.

He'd gone and found MI6 operators and US

intelligence and things, and their stories are being captured and they are

evading capture or escaping. And I just absolutely

loved those books. They're thrilling and they're just complete escapism.

So why didn't you think of. Sorry to interrupt you. Did you ever think of

going into the intelligence service? No, because I

was, When I was younger, I was very shy, so I escaped into these books,

but the notion of saying, going out and sort of talking to strangers, I wouldn't

even phone up a takeaway restaurant to place an order.

So I escaped into them, but I didn't. It was

when I, you know, when I was older, I thought, I actually really like this.

But the time I thought, oh my goodness, that's a bit scary. So how do

you, how do you get over? I mean, it's a really, it's a real achievement.

So well done you to get over that kind of.

It's some kind of morphic kind

of fear, isn't it? What, what was it that made you.

Was it. Yeah, what was it that made you shy? Do you think you

just inherited that from whatever environment?

I. Maybe it's a possible personality, I don't know. But I think I would say

I moved around a lot when I was growing up, so it was always. I

went to six different schools. I was the new person

a lot. And so some people

in those situations sort of run in arms open, say, ta da, here I am.

You're lucky to have me, which is, my brother is like this.

I am not like that. I want to observe a little bit, test the water,

see what's the vibe, what's going on, and then make my approach.

And I think that just sort of continued, that sort of way of operating

continued for a while. But I also, I got fed up of

being, you know, who doesn't want,

you know, what thing is this? I don't want to use the phone. I'm like,

sort of ridiculous. So I, I just made myself do it. I think sometimes

you have to recognize with something that you don't

like, it's in your best interest to learn how

to, to manage it. The same with going to

conferences and things, big events I recognized when I was younger, oh,

I find this a bit terrifying. So

how am I going to manage this? Or learn how to manage

this. And I thought, okay, well if I am very good at whatever it is

I'm doing that I'm in that room, that's tick one. So for me, for myself,

I have the confidence to be here because I know I should be here. And

then the second one is just exposure. Just do it over and over and over

again. And then you, you learn to live

with it. I'm not the same as say some of my friends who must have

extroverts who just walk into a crowd of people and think. I imagine this is

you, Gary. Just walk into a crowd of people and think, hello everybody, it's me.

I'm probably not, I'm never going to get to that stage. But you never know.

You never know. Maybe, maybe. But yeah, I

just thought, okay, well I don't like this status quo. So,

so you're quite a, you're quite a self aware person to have started to

deal with something like that. Would you say that that has

helped you in whatever you do, what you do as an

investigator? Do you think that knowing

yourself and being aware of your strengths and weaknesses is

a really important part of it? I, I think it

is. I think one can become a bit too trapped by it as well. It

depends if you think, okay, I'm very good at these things,

so I will do more of them. But I will also then work with

and bring in people who are good at the things that I'm not very

good at. I think that's, and you know, a great level of self awareness

to have. If it goes too much into

that sort of introspection, you can trap yourself in there

if you think these are my weaknesses so then you won't try at

them. You know, if you think, well, I'm never going to be

an Olympic long distance runner, I'm never going to be mo far as to. Why

would I ever get on a treadmill then that's, it's very self limiting. So

I think that there's an ideal point of self awareness that is helpful in what

you do personally and also what you do professionally. But I think you should

also be willing to sort of push your limits or work

on your weaknesses sometimes, you know, rather than think, okay, this is me,

I'm static, I'm not going to change. That sounds

like a really good life philosophy. And are you

somebody that engages in any of the yogic

meditation? What do you do to relax and when

and to sort of de. Stress yourself? I would say

after anything we've said in the conversation thus far, do you think I would be

any good at yoga? Well,

funny you should say that, but I took it up about 20 years ago. But

anyway, clearly that's not you. You like to what? Tried. You've tried. Okay.

But it's finding that inner peace that you're finding difficult, right?

I think so. I tried yoga and I was at a very

nice yoga studio and we're all

standing on our heads and I'm leaning against,

standing on my head, looking around the room, all the other people standing on their

heads and I just thought, Jessica, you

asshole, just what are you doing? You are,

you are so this, there's. There's a level of pretentious that

I can put up with and this was several degrees. I thought, how have I

got here? What's happening? This is not me say, right.

That was my last ever yoga class. Okay. But I like to think that. How

do you de. Stress? How do you de. Stress? I

read. Reading is my. Is

your joy. My relaxation. Reading and music. I

love opera particularly. I try to find things where

my mind switches off and.

And those are the. I find it increasingly difficult. I think we're so bombarded by

tech and doom scrolling all this stuff to switch off. But the things that

will do it for me will be live performances and

reading. So tell me, who

has had the most profound impact on your career?

Putting your parents at the moment to one side, although you did mention they

didn't really have any. Put any pressure on you to

follow any particular career. But in the investigation

world that you've lived in, who has had a profound impact on you?

I think actually the person that had the most profound impact on me,

and I recognize this more now that I have my own business, actually wasn't

in investigations. I did an internship initially just

after I graduated, and I worked

for an events company in Padua for a few months. And I had a boss

there, a woman called Ariana, who was absolutely

fantastic. She ran a really tight ship. Tough, tough

boss, but also very

rewarding. Ran a tight ship, but a meritocracy. And

it was her business that she'd built it up from scratch. We were an all

female team, which was. It was a matriarchy. It was. It was really awesome.

And she had the biggest

impact on me, I think

in my career in everything in terms of how I approach

work. A lot of the values that I have

are those that I learned working for her. And I think for

someone to have such an impact on you in such a short time is

quite incredible. Can you give us an example of A couple of

the, of the things that had such an impact on you

in terms of the way she behaved and her values in particular.

Yeah, there was a nice evening, we were getting, we were getting ready

for a conference. Lots of the conferences, they took place in Venice. So what would

happen is you'd pack up the whole office and move everybody out less, you know.

Sounds tough to me. Sounds tough, I know, yeah, it was really, it was the

worst of times, honestly. So the office would get

packed up, we'd move out to Venice for the course of the, of the conference.

And there's so much behind the scenes work that goes into conferencing. Everything from making

people's name badges and packing up their delegate bags and all this stuff. It takes

so much time. Anyway, there was a Friday night, I was an

intern, I didn't have to be there, but everybody else was and I thought, well,

pitch in. These are my colleagues, I like these people and I want to help.

Say I'm late in the office, but that weekend I was supposed to

go to Florence to visit one of my friends.

And Ariana used to bring her son into the office after

school sometimes and he play in the boxes and stuff. He was really little and

he came over to me and he's like, oh, my mum wants to talk to

you. And I thought, oh crap, what have I done?

I'm just putting braces in a bag. Anyway, so I followed him to her office

and she's in there and she, she said thank you, thank you very much, you

worked really hard this week. Thank you very much. I'd like to buy your train

tickets to, to Florence. And I just thought she

didn't have to do that and I certainly wouldn't have

expected it, but it was that kind of.

When I, when I had my interview to go and work with her, she

explained how it worked and the thing about going to Venice and things. And I

said, oh, well, I get to go to Venice. And she said, well, if you

work hard enough then you're required, you'll go to Venice,

but if you don't and you're not, you won't. And I did go to Venice.

I worked hard to just show value and see that she'd get to

take me, I get to go too. And that just made an

impression on me, that way of working with people. But she would also

didn't suffer fools. If somebody wasn't working very hard, then that's sort

of shorter career span, I think, and

that's the only way to run a business, I think Is that

recognize talent, reward it. Reward hard work and

don't suffer fools that don't want to pull their

weight or contribute. And did she start

off with this concept of a

woman only business or did she drift into it or

you don't know her well enough? I never asked her. That's a really good

question. And we're still in contact. Maybe I will. Maybe I will ask her.

I'm not sure if it was something that was more organic. I don't really know.

But I just know I turned up at this firm that had been going for

a while and we were all women. So you've been

in how many different

organizations in that are in the

investigation space, Jess? So I have only worked

for two and then I set up my own. Okay.

So looking at those two organizations, one of them

I know quite well. Gpw.

What was your sense of the ratio of men to

women in the investigative investigation industry?

That. So my first firm, I was the only woman. There are

only four of us, but it was three guys and me. And

then yeah, joined gpw. That was

for the most part all male partnership. Towards the end there were a

couple of female partners that joined, but

it was that at the analyst level,

at the junior level, we pretty much have parity

between men and women. And that petered out

the further you get up. Sort of up the pyramid. A couple of

female case managers. And then you know,

at one point, sort of no, no female partners. And that

is from. From old colleagues I've had that had

moved to other investigations companies. From what I observed,

just looking around the market and it's small, we all kind of knew each other,

that it wasn't atypical. That tends to be the structure. Very,

very few women at the top. But quite a

lot in the lower sort of analyst

strata. Yes. And

is that as much to do with the

individual's choice or is it the classic

long standing sentiment that

women don't necessarily. I don't know

whether it belongs in the investigation industry. I mean I know

that if you look at

the rougher end of the investigative industry where you're

on the street a lot and you're around a lot

in and you travel a lot sometimes people would think,

which actually nowadays has proved to be a

fallacy. There's lots of unbelievably

powerful and strong and

women around who are able to take care of themselves. But what

do you think it is due to the fact that it peters

out as you get to the top of the industry? I

think part of it is that the

industry hasn't been around long enough

to have had many people go

from junior to partner. When I

look at a lot of the partners of,

particularly the boutique firms,

they themselves didn't necessarily start in corporate

investigations. They came to it after one or two

other careers and which

are, you know, a lot of people came out of the military, for example, or

maybe the law or banking, but all very. They came

out of industries that were very male dominated. They were men that set up in

this industry. And so the dynamic of what they came from and

where they came to remains the same.

It's also, it is an industry

that has previously drawn on

family relationships and professional

relationships and word of mouth, recommendation and

introductions in order to bring new people in.

So if you have companies that are set up by certain

types of people, they will then recruit

a bit in their own image. So you definitely bring in,

if you're not open, you don't bring in people from other areas or from different

backgrounds. You kind of shut off diversity. I think that's,

that's one of the issues now. I think the

world of corporate investigations and corporate intelligence is a bit

more open and it still

struggles hugely for diversity in

many areas. Do you know any other, any other

brave souls like yourself who have decided to

go out on their own and start your own business as a, as a

woman founder, or are you the only one?

I see only one other, also

called Jessica. I've never met her, but she set up her company, I

think, last year. Right. There are a couple of women in

security and

enclosed protection and things who. Started their own

business. Close Protection. That's impressive. Yeah.

So Hayley and Kate. Who

else is there? I will. I

probably missed a couple. They're not many of us. No. If I know that, I

know them by name or knew them personally and.

Whereas if you ask me to list all of the men in the industry, I

probably wouldn't. Wouldn't be able to. No, I get that. Is

there somebody in the female figure in the

investigation industry who has been a bit of, and is maybe

a bit of a role model for you? Is there somebody that you really look

at and think you know what, she's done really well

and I like her style, etc, etc.

Yes. And you know what? I've never met her. So. Okay, so we're

gonna, we're gonna correct that, no doubt after this podcast, but who is

it? Very, very briefly met her. So there

is a, there's a woman called Sam Walker who is at a

firm called Field Intelligence, but she was actually a Partner at gpw. And she was

at Kroll for a long time before that. And

when I was researching gpw, some reporting came

up about work that she had done on the investigation into

the. I can't remember the name of the guy.

God, Spanker. You know, the banking on the black prize

bridge. And Kroll took on that investigation, the part of his family who always

believed that it was murder, it wasn't suicide. Yes, and she worked

on that. There was some press reporting about her move to GPW and the work

that she'd done. And also having studied it, studied Italian. I found that case

fascinating. Just. Oh my goodness, who is this woman? This is

incredible. So I joined GPW and she was a part of that. I think

she came into the office one day and sat next to me. I didn't talk

to her. So scared like just Sam Walker. Oh my

God. But you've never,

it's interesting. You've never come across her at conferences or anything

like that? No, she. I think she left the industry for a while and now.

And now she's come back and then now I've recorded this podcast, I'll be too

embarrassed to reach out to her. No, you won't know it. She'll

think you've. She'll think you've. You've become a celebrity.

So you'll be right. The right person to, to

meet up with. So she's back at Kroll now, is she or. No, she's at

a place called Field Intelligence. Field Intelligence, okay, so.

Oh, what we forgot to mention, but we won't at

the outro is mention Strela and where that name came

from. Yeah, Strela

means arrow in Russian. And so much of my career has been

linked to work from the CIS or related to the CIS

region. And I wanted to choose something

which didn't sound like every other

investigations firms which are typically the names of the

founders or you know, really

tough sounding things like risk and threat

and this stuff in their, in their names. That's not really, that's not really. That's

not really me. But strel, I mean it means arrow.

So if you speak any Russian, it's a sort of, if you know, you

know what this means. And it works for an

investigations firm but it also, in English and the

other languages I speak, it also just sounds pleasant and I like that, you

know, dichotomy of something that sounds really nice but when you realize what it. Means,

you think, oh, so you know, I

met you once or twice, we've spoken a couple of times.

And I feel your energy is a gentle energy.

Isn't this, Ma'. Am. Slam, bam, thank you, ma'. Am.

And yet you. And maybe this is my bad and

my perception, but you work a lot

in Eastern Europe and you speak Russian and your name is designed

to attract Russians. That's quite a culture

clash or a personality versus culture clash. How do you

get on with a group of people, most of whom I have

met, not all of them, but most of them are really,

certainly when you are being instructed by them, are

absolutely just not just no nonsense,

but really quite tough cookies. How do you deal with

that cultural kind of roughness, if I can use that

word? Yeah, well,

gentle is not weak. No, agreed.

In cultures that

have value, strength, or kind of

machismo to them, being

somebody that will quietly and sit and listen to what a client has to say,

what they want, what their problem is, and being

unruffled by it, and then

calmly coming up with some suggestions about what can be done

goes a long way. And

particularly if it is how you are as a person. That is a

genuineness to. It also works. If I

came into a room and tried to have loads of bluster and throw

my weight around, it would look funny. I'm five foot three. But

it wouldn't work. But going back to your

point about recognizing your strengths and your weaknesses,

I'm. I'm not very judgmental. It takes a lot to

shock me. And I will quietly sit there and take in a situation,

then decide what to do. That. That works

because it's also. It's strong and it's in its own way,

I think you can't go in and pretend to be your client.

You have to. You have to be who you are. And that. And that works.

Makes sense. Makes sense. So you combat

maybe brusqueness with gentleness and

calmness. And eventually or sooner

rather than later, you get your. Your

personality comes across, which is

pretty cool, if I may say so, because most of the

investigators in this space are quite

forthright. And I wouldn't say they have your energy.

So I think that in your space, I think you are

carving out quite an interesting part

in it. So you are

even out there. You can also be

direct, even if you're being calm, even if you are trying to be,

as you put it, more gentle.

You can be very direct about what

your boundaries are in an investigation. What's going to work, what's not, what is

a good idea, what isn't a good idea.

It doesn't need to be done with

assertion. Yes, aggression no,

but you can deliver some harsh truths in a fairly

calm way, and people don't necessarily always see

it coming, which can be a bit of an advantage too. So I think.

So you're quite good at the tough conversations, are you? You

don't flinch from, I'm sorry, guys, this

isn't working, or no, I won't do that. Because in

my experience, a lot of

investigators time is spent telling clients that what

they're asking you to do is absolutely

either a breach of the law or morally wrong or just cannot be

done with the budget that they've got available.

Saying no in a way that doesn't lose you the client is

an incredibly important part of any job. But in investigation, it's

critical, isn't it? Yeah. And maybe it will lose

you the client, but you

can't keep a client at the cost

of your reputation,

your ethics, your. What you are,

you are building. You also can't, if you deliver,

if you make a lot of false promises, if you say, yeah, yeah, yeah, we

can do that, we can do that, we can do that, sure, no problem. And

then you don't do it. You've lost your client because you are under. You

were over promising and under delivering.

So actually it's better. What's the most

bizarre. Sorry, what's the worst thing that you have been asked to do?

Make mentioning no names, that you just turn around and said, you've got to be

joking. I would

never put that on a public podcast, Gary. I see. Okay, fair enough.

If we wind it down a bit and come to something that was

only because, not that somebody I'm hoping, ever asked

you, would you mind putting a contract out on somebody? Because that's not

really investigation. That's a slightly different area of business.

Strategic problem solving, I think that.

Exactly. But would you please go out and place a

bug or hack into the account of. Is it something that people

ask you or have asked you? I guess now

the more. The more educated people are about what

you can't do, the less, hopefully they ask questions like that. But what's

the, as it were, the

example that you would like to share on a podcast?

So I wouldn't like to share an example.

What I will say is sometimes clients will come

with a very fixed idea of what it is that they want you to

do, because they sat around and they've

thought about the problem that they have and what, you know,

what they would do if they were able to do things. This is how. This

is what they want to happen and this is how it is and they come

to a meeting and they say we want X, Y and Z thing. And

for whatever reason those things might not be possible, but

then what you want to have a conversation around with the client about,

to have a conversation with them about is what are you actually

trying to achieve? So a blanket no

to a client sometimes is necessary

and they know what they want and if you can't do it, they're leaving. Other

times it's an opportunity to work with them, but

you have to turn the conversation around. So you say, okay, well

you want to do all of these things. What is it actually that you are

trying to achieve here and what is the problem? You've started from nothing and

you've gone to the finish line, but well, what's going on? And

then you can suggest things that are possible

and practicable and will assist them

and that's how you can work it.

So I won't give an example, but what I will say is if a client

comes to you with something utterly outrageous

that you can't do, there is sometimes an opportunity to work with them because what

they're actually trying to do is solve a problem. They're not trying to ask you

just to do something, something just because. And when you are

retained by, I don't know what

percentage, how much do you think what part

of your business is being retained by client direct as opposed to

being retained by a lawyer and introduced to the client.

It has become a real 50, 50 split.

And that can be from inter client referrals,

from your name being given out at a conference or you know, some event that

you're not even at. Sometimes lawyers refer

out their clients to me where it's an issue that's not

related yet to a dispute.

But the, really the, the pure private client

side of things has grown a lot since I first set up

the company. And that's been really interesting to you to see developers.

That's interesting. So when you are dealing with the

client instructing side of life,

to what extent do you think

that they understand the

parameters of what you can and can't do

or do they come to you with a fixed idea of,

of what they want you to do in order to help them solve their

problem? I think sometimes clients

come with absolutely no idea of what's, what's possible or what's not possible.

And a lot of private

detective TV shows

are distinctly unhelpful in terms of fostering what can be done and

what cannot be done. You see people posing as, oh, you

know, somebody from the Gas Board and I'm here to get into your house, go

and read them and say, you can't do that, that is illegal

and it's on TV and people think this is what PIs do, you know, do

all day. I'm going to pretend to be whatever British Gas and get in your

house. I mean, it's wild. So I can completely understand

why someone would come with no idea of what's possible or what's not, because they've

just spent ages watching whatever TV show and thinking you can

do all of this stuff. And

also clients might not know because it is

unnatural to have to deal with an investigator for

anything, be it a commercial problem or a personal problem.

It's not something anybody would ever expect to

do or to be in a position where they have to do it. So probably

won't have thought about what it would look like or what's possible, what's not.

So you actually get this opportunity to really educate clients as you work with them

about what is possible, where the boundaries are and what can be

found and what can't be found. And

in the course of the work you've done. This is a question that

I think I've managed to ask everyone. Has there been a time

when you feared for your personal safety?

Retrospectively, yes, but not

in the moment. Yeah, I can relate to that.

So can you talk to me without names? Talk me around that,

what that was. Now that you look back and think, gosh, that was a bit

dicey. I think when you are

driven out of a city by

somebody who's driving a little crazy on some very scary snowy roads and takes you

to a restaurant and you were the only two people in there to have a

conversation. I was so angry about

it. But about allowing yourself to be

in that situation, could you have done, on reflection, anything

differently? No, I was actually really angry at him. So why are you driving

like a lunatic? What are we doing here? This conversation is

going absolutely, that's absolutely out of hand. Everything can be

sorted out very, very nicely. What's going on?

I got into some kind of

Women's Institute level moral

indignation. That was what came from. I don't know

what happened, but tapped the surface and underneath it is just. Is

an aggrieved middle class English woman who just thinks

the situation is very unfair. And that was quite.

I think actually in that situation it worked because I think if somebody is doing

these things to try and sort of put the frighteners on you and

it doesn't work, they feel a bit Bereft.

They're the one that is destabilized. Was that person.

Was that person a prospective kind of

informant? Somebody that had information or. Sounds

like it. But what was the character? Not the

character. What was that person? Why were you speaking to them?

As part of a case, it was necessary that I went to have a conversation

with them. So they had something you wanted. What I'm saying is, is

that you would have approached them, they would have said in some shape or form,

yes, let's meet. And you would have

said, okay, where and how on earth does it end up with

you getting in a car, being driven up the. The left hand

side of a mountain? How does that work?

Suggested going out for dinner.

Oh, yeah, fine. I love it. It was

somebody I dealt with that I dealt with before. I see, so you did know

them. It's not as if someone listening to this will think, my

God, Jessica just met this random witness and jumped into his

car and, and she was lucky to get back with her life intact,

right? No, normally with, you know, if you're meeting witnesses or you're meeting

potential sources, it's a little bit like get online dating. You meet

them in. In a public place. Yeah,

so. So that's the. Is. Is that the only one you're

prepared to share with me or is that the one. Only one you can

remember in terms of you. Have you. Have any. Had any threats made against

you when you've got too close to the, to the. To something

that you people don't want you to find out about?

No, I haven't actually. Touchwood. Okay, well, that's good

news. So tell us about a particular

investigation. Obviously confidentiality preserve,

but the nature of it and

some of your fairy dust that you applied to that

situation, and lo and behold,

it changed the direction of the investigation

fundamentally. I want to understand a bit about the

way you think and how that impacts

or impacted a case that you're working on. There

was one where it's just asset recovery. So I do loads of asset recovery. That's

my favorite thing in the world. I love it. It's like a global treasure hunt.

And a small example would be

I obviously looking for somebody's assets and not really finding

them. The picture didn't. You know, sometimes a picture just doesn't add

up. You know, somebody's got money, you know, somebody. Something

about them, about their lifestyle, how they're traveling, and you just think there's

got to be something out there, because otherwise none of this works.

And I had some source intel about a Property

that all traveled into down to the south of France. They had a guy there

said, can you do some property searches for me to see if something.

Something comes up? And.

And then nothing came back. So I had to go to the lawyers and say

I got an extension to look at this, to look in this jurisdiction. Because I

said that I could really think there will be something there. And I had to

go back, tail between my legs, really sorry. There was nothing. Everyone's disappointed

around. Anyway, the guy in the

south of France called me up about a month later

and he said there is a property like. Oh, great.

Well, actually I was having a chat with somebody in the name of your.

Your subject was mentioned and, and this

property. And I went and had a look for you and he does own it.

Nor that had happened was that the registry had

misfiled it, filed it under the name of the lawyer, but not the name of

the owner of the property. And, and now we've got it. So that's not really,

not necessarily fairy dust on my part, but it just

shows if you've got, if you've got a gut feeling about it,

go with it. But I was, but it was fluky. There was a little bit

of fluke and a little bit of. What's

word. Yeah. Investigative nous to you to get so

instinct. So I, most of us have got an

instinct. Sometimes it's good, sometimes it's bad, sometimes it's. It's

really finely tuned. Do you have

that sort of nose for

when someone's telling you the truth or if someone's lying to you? Is that a

really a big part of your,

of your, of what you bring to the party as an investigator?

Yeah, I think I do have a good investigative

nous. I like to think that I've been in the, the industry now long enough

that if I didn't, I would have been rumbled. I wouldn't

have any clients. I certainly wouldn't be talking to you.

And it's a conversation that happens within investigators a lot about whether we are

born or we're made. I think we're bored. But

yeah. And it is. But you have to, you have to keep educating yourself. You

have to keep up to date with changes on structures and

tax treaties and which jurisdictions are popular

for money from, you know, individuals from whatever

countries. There's always a reason behind. So you, you get your,

your investigative now. So dealing with enough sources, talking to enough,

enough witnesses, the more time that you spend in

the field and learning what is possible and what is not possible,

if you're working with somebody and they say, you know, we can't do that

or you know, when you're being bullshitted, when you've been around

long enough. And

particularly in asset recovery work, we both

know that it's quintessentially

international. What's the. When you look around the world

at asset recovery. Big question. I know, but it's

actually not a huge community of lawyers in

different countries.

Can you share with me your view of how

lawyers, for example, in a civil law

jurisdiction think about asset recovery and fraud?

Do they? I found that they have a very different

perspective than Anglo Saxon English legal

system lawyers. But I wonder what you've come across and how

you feel they think about this problem of asset recovery.

I don't get instructed by civil

law lawyers very often.

Ever really. Okay.

The times were, the times where I have.

It's been to try and find jurisdiction in

England and I used to go, I

used to go out to Paris quite a lot to try and pitch in Paris

and never really got very far. Well, even

though I'm. Is French must be one of your languages, right?

Yes. Yeah. I found Paris

very, very difficult because why place to

pitch? I was, I was

told in one meeting, it's really funny, I was called an Anglo Saxon in, in

a meeting and I was, I was given sort of what's what in terms of

what's wrong with us. And it was that we're

too commercial. We're to the, the legal scene in, in

London, it's too commercial. We've got the litigation funders.

It saw a big litigation and

talk about money, which in French culture no one really

likes to talk about. So it was a bit of a

culture clash in that meeting. So turning up with the idea about

how you could do contingency fee arrangements or you could do the

litigation funding and work and stuff just seemed quite unpalatable.

But that's, I would say, put off. I haven't been back for a while.

Maybe things have changed now for Paris. But I found that. Which is in a

way was sort of a bit rubbish because actually there are some

on the white collar side, the government, particularly things that the state

prosecutors are doing in France when it comes to cracking down on illicit funds and

asset recovery, absolutely spectacular. And in terms

of looking at pitching as a investigator,

pitching for new business, et cetera, which

France wasn't too. Wasn't to your liking. What about

Italy? What about other countries that you've been to?

Have you identified particular

jurisdictions as places, particularly with your linguistic

talents that you think you Know what? I can create a niche

there because of who I am and the language I speak. For

example, Italian, I think you said you were working in Italy.

Are you well received, selling your. Your

services in Italy? Yes,

the places that I find quite exciting actually

are Italy and then also Spain, because particularly the

links that Spain has to. To Latin America.

What I went to pitch years ago, an Italian, not Italian, sorry,

Spanish law firm in, in London and

they had also video conferenced in or their litigation

disputes colleagues in Madrid and in Barcelon, they

hadn't met. Investigators of the scale

that we do investigations in London, the kind of investigations we do that international

asset recovery London leads. It really does.

More than America, you think? Yes. Yeah, absolutely. Why?

Why? Tell me why. America is like 20 times the size of the

UK or England. You've got

a hundred, maybe a thousand times a number of lawyers.

Tell me why. Because

England, one of England's biggest export is

kind of intellectual, you know, intellectual services.

And within that, most importantly is

our legal system. And so

cases London brings in really

expansive, complicated

litigation to it because of how

our legal system, it's so

organic, you can try new things in front of the

judge here and we work on

precedent and that allows for consideration of new

things, of new arguments. And that has

made London such a hub for asset recovery. It's not something that is

generated. It's not necessarily cases that are generated by British businesses or

Brits and you're operating here bring in stuff from all over the world.

So where asset recovery investigations and the investigation

sector has grown hand in hand with the

legal sector in London, we have all become so

international and so used to dealing with really complex work.

What I find with America is that it's not that. It is that

the cases, you know, going for trial, New

Southern District in New York are less complex.

But America in itself is such an enormous market that even

investigations firms operating in the states operate within the

states. And I think

that's really the difference is

how we've developed and how the markets operate differently.

So are you saying because in a funny sense, because we

are compact and everything happens in a city and

in a set of courts, you get

more, you get a

better developed sense, a better developed course

of cases and expertise. Whereas in the US you've got

52, whatever it states and you might have an asset

recoverer there and there and there. And it's not brought together as

a body of experience. If you go to the state. Sorry,

do you think that's it? Is that what you're saying to Me or have I

got the wrong end of the stick? No, I think it's more that because America

is so vast, there are enormous cases

going on in America, but sit within America or the investigations.

So we're talking about domestic versus international. So it's

about more of an. An introverted market

because of the size of the scale of it. Whereas

London always looks outward for work.

Looks outward. That's the difference that I've found

when I've worked with lawyers in the U.S.

it is for the international network

that I bring to a case. Whereas

if you're an American, investigators on the PI side, they

have to be licensed by state. They will know they're one state

inside, inside out. And you have to look at America

operating as 50 small countries

rather than one big one. And what's

your favorite

way of. What's your preferred way of

selecting other investigators to work with? Because

although I know it's entirely.

You're entirely able to get on an airplane and go and investigate

somewhere else. However, a lot of people would feel that

they need to buddy up with an investigator in Rome

or in, in Florida or whatever. How do you go about

selecting which investigator you use to buddy up with?

There are. It depends on what I need first off. So if

it is somebody in a jurisdiction, because they can

go to the corporate registry and photocopy every single file that there is

and, and send it to me, that's that side

of things. Or I need a site visit done somewhere because

I just, I need a quick check on whether a company exists or what a

property looks like or whatever it will be.

Do I know the best person in that jurisdiction? Because I've worked with them previously.

After you develop your own black book of contacts

as you go over time and you're introduced to new people.

But the best way is

recommendation. So there are investigators that I

know well, where I say, oh, do you know a good contact in

Sweden? And they'll say, yeah, actually work with this person. And then somewhere down the

line someone will say to me, oh, do you know. Do you know the best

person in Portugal? I go, oh, yes, actually, this is this person that I work

with. So our names get banded around each other

really, really quite a lot. But it's that personal recommendation from people

that I know and trust and have worked with to then put

forward somebody else that they know and that they have worked with. And that's

the best way of

finding people. Random question, what would

you have been if you hadn't been an investigator? If I had

the talent, I Would have been an opera singer. Right.

I don't have the talent, so I wanted to be

an actress for a while. I wanted to be an actress, so maybe if I'd

put myself down that route, it would have been that.

So do you sometimes do

your own acting in terms

of going out and meeting people and

the classic sort of human intelligence, sitting there, going

in a bar, going in a restaurant and asking people for

information. Do you often sort of take on

different personalities to do that or not?

Not often, but I have done it, particularly when I was a junior,

I wanted to do all of that stuff. As you

progress in the industry, it is a little bit more

difficult to do because there's probably more photos of you or you've

got more of a. More of a public presence, depending on how

you do it. And you can get away with more things when you're younger.

But certainly, yeah, I've done undercover investigations.

I've been done my fair share of

undercover work. I think it's necessary,

I ascribe to. You

can't ask people who are working for you to do

something that you haven't done or wouldn't be willing to do yourself,

particularly if it's your juniors.

Because how are you supposed to guide somebody through something that can be sort of.

Can feel scary or intimidating or

uncomfortable or be higher risk? Not

necessarily to themselves, hopefully not to themselves, but also to the case

delegate for the case you're working on if you have never done it

yourself. So undercover is a really

interesting place

for most of film watchers and TV watchers. Anything

to do with an undercover operation, sting operation.

Can you think of a particular sting

or undercover where you were there as things came to,

as it were, fruition and, you know, either

your identity was blown or as you see in the

films, you get taken away or go off in a

situation so that it doesn't show that you were, as it were, the

informant. Have you ever. Can you explain one? Give me an example of one

of those. No, sadly, that's not happened. If only my life would say it

was so exciting. Exciting. Okay. And

in terms of the way the

investigation industry is developing, can you

see any

strategic changes that are happening that you

need to, as it were, take on board now as an owner of a

business, not as an employee leaving it

in somebody else's job? You are the boss. I don't know how

many co bosses there are. Maybe it's just you, but what is

it that you look at the investigation industry and say, you know, we've really got

to Change to take into account this, which

I anticipate happening over the next 10 years. I

think there are. So there are a couple of things. One

is when it comes to the work that we do is

obviously rapidly changing and

evolving tech. So there's a quote

in an interview with Sam Altman the other day talking about the changing

of what fraud will look like

when AI can

copy. At the moment, AI can copy a person's voice. So you have these

fraud cases where people ring up somebody pretending to be their

child saying mom, Dad, I need help, please help me. And

this, it's just sickeningly

abusive and that. But then when you, when

AI will be able to be

mimic a person. So you wouldn't know if you are on zoom

with me or if you are zoom on zoom with AI pretending

to be me. That's a good question. Am I really interviewing or

confident conversation with Jess or are you an AI generated

version of Jess? I think an AI, I would like to

think an AI generated version of me would give better answers.

Maybe, but I don't think yet maybe I'm wrong. I don't think yet they could

have that sense of humor that you clearly have. So it's

tech. Anything else? What about people? Is recruitment an

issue? Do you have to look at what's going forward and say how on earth

am I going to compete with the larger

companies on the block? Yeah. So when it comes

to on the people front, it

is shifting

mindset amongst generations of what

the notion of a good or bad client. When I hear about

I don't have and I build my team so I don't have employees, I'm

not working with Gen Z as they are called,

but more a generation that

is just so much more vociferous and so much more willing to call out, call

out behavior that they don't, that they don't agree with or

corporations they don't, they don't agree with. So

what will, what does investigations look like?

If there are industries that you have employees and they don't, they

don't want to work with them because they don't, they don't agree with them. And

so I think that's one thing that I think

about what the industry will look like or

who it will attract. Also,

we are not diverse as an industry and I'm not sure if

firms out there, the bigger ones have more active policies about how

to increase their diversity. But as

the work becomes more. It already is very international.

But as wealth shifts, clients

change. Work will only

ever, I think really only ever be international from this point because of the way

the world is.

You need to look more like your

clients. You need to be more reflective of the world that you are in, not

just reflective of a tiny little piece of

one cities society, which is a bit

how investigations looks at the moment. I think that's going

to have to change. Did you just say that you don't have any.

Sorry to interrupt you. Did you say you don't have any employees? The people you

work are sort of services

or you work together with other people who are also independent

service providers. So I build my teams according

to what I need for a client mandate. So once I, I've, once I've scoped

it and I still, I do an enormous amount of investigation myself but once I've

got the kind of the lay of the land then I bring in the

expertise that I need. Be that in I

know forensic tech or I need an investigator in a

particular jurisdiction to go and get things that I can't do remotely and

bring in, bring in the experts that I need to get the job done.

Do you see yourself growing into a gpw,

Jess, and having a group of employees and as it were

putting a flag in the sand as a corporate

body with employees or that's for the next five years. That's not

you? The answer is I don't know. I'd

need business partners to be able to do that and I always generally

keep an eye out because it gets

stressful and lonely when you are trying to figure out case

on your own or running a big asset recovery and all of the responsibility kind

of is and the, the dynamism and the ideas are just you

generating all of this stuff. And

one person can do maybe one and a half person's work. Two people can do

the work of like five people or six.

So there is, there's a lot to be

to be gained from having somebody else to work with. So I'm always, I was,

I'm always on the lookout for potential partners to come into

strela. So. And wouldn't it be cool if, if, if

people, when this podcast goes out, people

think that it would be cool to combine with Jess and in

more cool for a women's only

investigative agency to be

created. That would be super cool, wouldn't it?

I don't know. I mean notionally yes it would be

but I don't, I don't want

within investigations women only things. I just want more

women. It's like I don't.

If you have an all women's investigations Agency. Yeah.

What it shows is that it has to exist because there's no space for

women elsewhere. What I want is when I, if I

look at an investigation, spell them and they don't have any

senior women or they don't have any women on their

advisory board, what you are perpetuating is the idea

that women, women can't do this at any level

or that the people that you take advice from

or should go to advice for are

older men. And that doesn't help. It doesn't help younger

female investigators are coming in. Certainly doesn't, you know,

doesn't help me. So what I

would like is just space for women across

the board. So in other words, it could be that a women's

only investigation agency will actually

militate against what you would like to see, which is many, many, many more

women who might be in one business spread throughout the

industry. Yeah, yeah, I think, I think having to

say we're going to, we're going to do this and it's, you know, only women.

Their concept is like, well, is there not, is there not space for us

elsewhere then that we need to. There's more stuff about

if there's not a seat at the table, go and create your own table, blah,

blah, blah. No, I want, I want to seat at the table with everybody else.

Move. I love it. Last

question, because I have over

spilled into your day,

Jess, for which I apologize. In light

of everything you're talking about in terms of diversity,

what difference can you make and are

going to make in terms of improving

diversity in the investigation industry? As Jess Miller,

the first one, honestly is existing and very

openly and I am a big user of social

media, LinkedIn, particularly to talk about what I do and

do you share my opinions on things and to talk about why

more women should, should come into investigations, why we are good

investigators. So I think there is the adage

of you can't be what you can't see. I think is very true.

And that's not just an investigation thing. That's across all industries. If you look up

and you see the C suite and the board are all men and you're a

woman, you think, oh, well, that's going to be fun.

So I think by continuing to

show up, that is the,

it's an easy thing to do, but it's also a really important thing to do.

I get introduced to other people if they know women that are interested in getting

into investigations. I'm really always open to have conversations

with people that are just graduating from university, women particularly who

who want to get into, into the industry about what

it's like and giving them any assistance that I can

possibly do in terms of introductions or

guidance on kind of on how to do it. So making, you know, making myself

a bit of a, like a bit of a sort of,

I don't know, pinpoint putting my, putting my flag in the sand as a woman

in investigations in that way. So who

knows? Watch this space and there may be an association,

I know there's association of Corporate Investigators. There might be an association

of Women Investigators. There needs to be something

that I think, according to you, and indeed according to

me, needs to spread the word. Boys and girls at

university need to know that this is

an industry and a vocation as well, that

anyone can do it, regardless of and indeed that

as many people will say, that women have an excellent investigative

instinct and they need to

think more about it as a career. Yeah, 100%.

It's a fascinating, fast paced, thrilling,

intellectually

challenging, captivating, challenging industry

industry to be in and I really enjoy it.

So, yeah, more people need to know about it.

Well, we've come to the end of this lollipop and

I've really enjoyed it. Jess. One of the things I really get out of

these podcasts is,

unsurprisingly, perhaps unless I happen to be interviewing somebody or

talking to somebody that I have known for years, I get to

know people and I get to know what they think and how they, how they

think and what makes them tick. So I've really enjoyed it.

I hope it wasn't as painful as maybe you thought it would be.

And I just want to thank you for your time and sharing what you

have. Well, thank you. Thank you very much.

Bye bye now. Bye. Thank you for

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