Most of these stories do not end amicably. This year, a technology consultant from the Philadelphia area, who did not want his name used because he has a teenage son, strongly suspected his wife was having an affair. Instead of confronting her, the husband installed a $49 program called PC Pandora on her computer, a laptop he had purchased.
The program surreptitiously took snapshots of her screen every 15 seconds and e-mailed them to him. Soon he had a comprehensive overview of the sites she visited and the instant messages she was sending. Since the program captured her passwords, the husband was also able to get access to and print all the e-mail messages his wife had received and sent over the previous year.
What he discovered ended his marriage. For 11 months, he said, she had been seeing another man — the parent of one of their son’s classmates at a private school outside Philadelphia.
My partial story: Chick was acting strange. I got hold of the computer checked the cookies. She'd been using mapquest to go to Rutgers Campus in New Brunswick. Odd, we don't know anyone there and she's in school elsewhere. Checked the cell phone records. All numbers lined up except one. Did a US Search and got the name and addresss of the person. Person has the same last name as a person working at Rutgers.
Mapped out the time and days of calls with "known" activities. Turns out places she said she was going such as the hairdresser" was a front since you can't be calling the hair dresser from the hair dresser.
IMAP stored e-mail revealed a birthday meet up with "side piece" that was told to a girlfriend. I was asked, via e-mail for cash for "birthday hairdo" to occur same day.
Hope he was worth it.
1 comment:
Is this CURRENTLY happening to you, or was this a past situation?
Post a Comment