
In December 2024, the new Private Investigations Act came into force. The Act replaced the Private Detectives Act of 1991 and was long overdue, considering how much has changed in the world of private investigations. The 1991 law focused on detectives as sole practitioners, think Columbo or Magnum P.I., a world of uncertain ethics, periodic violence and grubby raincoats, most of which no longer exists outside the small screen. The new Act aims to modernise the applicable legal framework in light of new investigation methods and bring it into line with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), though sadly not to address the traditional private detective issues of implausible dialogue and unhappy dress choices.
The Act imposes a number of obligations on employers instructing investigations on their employees, and we will discuss these changes at length in future blogs, but there is a more pressing issue we need to deal with first, and that regards your internal investigations service. The Act extends its scope from solo private detectives to all types of investigations companies but more importantly, also to internal investigations services. An internal investigations service is defined by the Act as ‘any service organised by a natural or legal person for its own purposes for the systematic performance of private investigation activities’. This definition is very wide and has prompted the legislator to exclude a number of roles and functions, such as lawyers, bailiffs and auditors.