Contractor & Home Improvement Fraud Investigation Guide โ€“ Protecting Homeowners & Recovering Losses
๐Ÿ”จ

Contractor & Home Improvement Fraud Investigation โ€” Complete 2025 Guide

๐Ÿ” How to Investigate, Document & Recover Losses from Fraudulent Contractors

๐Ÿ“… Updated 2025
๐Ÿ”จ$6B+Annual losses to home improvement fraud in the U.S.
๐Ÿ“‹#1Home improvement fraud is the top consumer complaint category
๐Ÿ“‰1 in 4Homeowners report problems with a contractor during a project
โš–๏ธRecoverableMost losses can be pursued through civil and criminal channels

๐Ÿ”จ 1. What Is Contractor & Home Improvement Fraud?

Contractor fraud encompasses any deceptive, dishonest, or illegal practice by a contractor, handyman, or home improvement professional that results in financial harm to a homeowner, property owner, or client. It ranges from relatively minor deceptions โ€” inflated invoices and unnecessary change orders โ€” to outright criminal schemes like taking full payment and disappearing without performing any work, operating without a license while misrepresenting qualifications, performing dangerously substandard work that creates safety hazards, and filing fraudulent mechanic’s liens against homeowner property as leverage. ๐Ÿ 

For investigators, attorneys, and skip tracers, contractor fraud cases present unique challenges. Fraudulent contractors are often highly mobile โ€” they move between cities and states, operate under multiple business names, dissolve entities to avoid liability, and rely on the fact that most victims don’t know how to find or collect against them. When a contractor takes $30,000 from a homeowner and disappears, the homeowner may obtain a judgment but then face the daunting task of actually collecting it from a person who makes a living by staying one step ahead of their victims. This is where professional investigation and asset discovery become essential to recovery. ๐Ÿ”

Home improvement fraud also intersects with broader financial crimes. Contractors involved in insurance fraud submit inflated claims for storm damage or water restoration. Contractors targeting elderly homeowners may commit elder financial abuse โ€” a felony in most states with enhanced penalties. And contractors who collect payments through business entities they later dissolve may be subject to alter ego liability and veil-piercing claims that expose their personal assets to collection. Understanding the full scope of contractor fraud is the first step toward effective investigation and recovery. โš–๏ธ

๐Ÿ“Š 2. The Scope of the Problem โ€” How Big Is Contractor Fraud?

Contractor and home improvement fraud consistently ranks among the top consumer complaint categories nationwide. The numbers paint a stark picture of how widespread and financially devastating these schemes are: ๐Ÿ“ˆ

๐Ÿ“Š Contractor Fraud Losses by Scheme Type (Average per Victim)

๐Ÿš๏ธ Took Money, No Work
$15,000โ€“$50,000+
๐Ÿ”ง Substandard / Unsafe Work
$10,000โ€“$40,000
๐Ÿ’ฐ Inflated Costs / Overcharges
$5,000โ€“$25,000
๐Ÿ“‹ Unlicensed / Uninsured Work
$3,000โ€“$20,000
๐Ÿ“„ Permit / Inspection Fraud
$2,000โ€“$15,000
๐Ÿงพ Material Substitution
$1,500โ€“$12,000

The most financially devastating scheme is the classic “take the money and run” โ€” a contractor collects a large upfront deposit (often 50โ€“100% of the project cost), does little or no work, and then becomes unreachable. These cases account for the highest individual losses and are also the most likely to involve serial offenders who repeat the scheme across multiple states. For victims who obtain judgments against these contractors, the challenge shifts from proving fraud to actually collecting the judgment โ€” which requires locating the contractor and their assets, often across state lines. ๐Ÿ’ฐ

๐Ÿšจ 3. Types of Contractor Fraud Schemes

๐Ÿ“Š Types of Contractor Fraud by Frequency

Abandonment / Disappearance (30%)
Substandard / Dangerous Work (24%)
Overcharging / Inflated Bills (20%)
Unlicensed / Uninsured Operation (16%)
Permit, Lien & Insurance Fraud (10%)
๐Ÿš๏ธ

Abandonment Fraud

Contractor collects deposit or progress payments, performs partial or no work, then stops returning calls and disappears entirely.

โš ๏ธ

Substandard Work

Work is performed but fails to meet building codes, uses inferior materials, or creates safety hazards โ€” costing homeowners more to fix than the original project.

๐Ÿ’ฐ

Bid Manipulation & Overcharging

Deliberate lowball bids followed by excessive change orders, material markups, and scope creep that inflate the final price well beyond the original agreement.

๐Ÿ“‹

Licensing & Insurance Fraud

Contractor claims to be licensed, bonded, and insured when they’re not โ€” leaving homeowners with no protection if work goes wrong.

๐Ÿ 

Fraudulent Mechanic’s Liens

Contractor files a lien against the homeowner’s property for inflated amounts or work not performed, clouding title and blocking sale.

๐ŸŒช๏ธ

Storm Chaser Fraud

Contractors appear after natural disasters, collect insurance claim assignments, perform minimal repairs, and pocket the insurance proceeds.

Material substitution fraud is particularly insidious because it’s hard to detect without expert inspection. The contractor bills for premium materials (high-grade lumber, specific roofing underlayment, brand-name fixtures) but installs cheap substitutes. The difference in cost goes straight into the contractor’s pocket, and the homeowner may not discover the substitution until problems emerge months or years later. Investigators can document material substitution through expert inspection reports, material testing, and comparison of invoiced materials against what was actually installed. ๐Ÿ”ง

Insurance fraud schemes involve contractors who partner with homeowners (or act independently) to inflate insurance claims for storm damage, water damage, or fire restoration. The contractor may manufacture or exaggerate damage, submit inflated repair estimates, claim to have performed work they didn’t do, or use the homeowner’s insurance assignment to collect payment directly from the insurer. These schemes can result in both criminal charges and civil liability. ๐ŸŒช๏ธ

๐Ÿšฉ 4. Red Flags & Warning Signs

Recognizing contractor fraud red flags early can prevent victimization โ€” and for investigators documenting a fraud case, these red flags establish the pattern of deceptive conduct that supports civil and criminal claims: โš ๏ธ

  • Demands Large Upfront Payment: Legitimate contractors typically request 10โ€“20% deposits. Demanding 50% or more upfront โ€” especially before any materials are purchased or work begins โ€” is the strongest predictor of abandonment fraud. ๐Ÿ’ฐ
  • No Written Contract: Refusal to provide a detailed written contract with scope, timeline, materials, payment schedule, and warranty terms. Verbal agreements leave the homeowner with virtually no legal protection.
  • Refuses to Pull Permits: Claims permits aren’t needed when they clearly are, or asks the homeowner to pull the permit as “owner-builder.” This avoids the inspection process that would reveal substandard work. ๐Ÿ“‹
  • Cannot Provide License or Insurance: Gives a license number that doesn’t check out, says their insurance paperwork is “at the office,” or becomes evasive when asked for proof of licensing, bonding, and insurance. ๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ
  • Door-to-Door Solicitation: Shows up uninvited claiming to have noticed damage, offering special deals for working in the neighborhood, or showing up immediately after a storm. Legitimate contractors have enough work that they rarely solicit door-to-door. ๐Ÿšช
  • Only Accepts Cash or Personal Checks: Refuses credit cards or electronic payments that create traceable records. Cash-only operations leave no paper trail for the victim to use in proving payment. ๐Ÿ’ต
  • Pressures for Immediate Decisions: “This price is only good today” or “I have another job starting Monday so I need your deposit now.” High-pressure tactics prevent the homeowner from researching the contractor or getting competing bids.
  • No Physical Business Address: Operates out of a residential address, P.O. box, or provides no address at all. Legitimate contractors typically have an office, warehouse, or shop that can be verified.
  • Multiple Business Names / Recent Incorporation: A business that was just formed or a contractor who has operated under several different business names is a significant red flag suggesting previous problems they’re running from. ๐Ÿข

๐Ÿ” 5. The Contractor Fraud Investigation Process

1

๐Ÿ“‹ Gather All Documentation

Collect every contract, estimate, invoice, receipt, check, text message, email, photo, and communication with the contractor. Bank and credit card statements showing payments are critical. Before-and-after photos of the property document the work (or lack thereof) performed.

2

๐Ÿ” Verify Contractor Identity & Licensing

Run the contractor’s name, business name, and license number through state licensing databases, Better Business Bureau, and court records. Search for complaints, disciplinary actions, lawsuits, and criminal history. Verify that the identity they provided matches a real, licensed contractor.

3

๐Ÿ“ฑ Locate the Contractor

If the contractor has disappeared, professional skip tracing identifies their current location using database searches, social media investigation, vehicle registration records, and other investigative tools. Many fraudulent contractors continue operating in the same area under a different business name.

4

๐Ÿ’ฐ Financial Investigation

Trace payments to identify where the money went. Investigate the contractor’s assets โ€” vehicles, equipment, property, business accounts โ€” to assess whether a judgment can actually be collected. Determine if the contractor is operating through a business entity or personally.

5

๐Ÿ‘ฅ Identify Pattern & Other Victims

Search court records, consumer complaint databases, and online reviews for other victims. A pattern of similar complaints strengthens the case for intentional fraud (versus simple incompetence) and may support criminal prosecution and class action remedies.

6

๐Ÿ“‚ Compile Evidence & Pursue Recovery

Assemble the investigation findings into a comprehensive report supporting civil litigation, criminal referral, licensing board complaints, and judgment enforcement. Multiple recovery paths should be pursued simultaneously.

๐Ÿ“‹ 6. License Verification & Background Investigation

Verifying a contractor’s license, insurance, and background is the foundation of every contractor fraud investigation โ€” and it’s the step that exposes the majority of fraudulent operators immediately: ๐Ÿ”

๐Ÿ“‹ What to VerifyWhere to Check๐Ÿšฉ Red Flags
Contractor LicenseState licensing board website (e.g., CSLB in California, DPOR in Virginia)No license, expired, suspended, or different name than who you’re dealing with
Business EntitySecretary of State business search; county fictitious name filingsRecently formed entity, dissolved prior entities, multiple name changes
Insurance & BondingRequest certificate directly from insurer; verify with carrierCannot provide certificate; insurance company has no record; policy expired
Court RecordsCounty civil court records; federal PACER; statewide searchesMultiple lawsuits from homeowners; pattern of default judgments; bankruptcy filings
Consumer ComplaintsBBB, state attorney general, consumer protection office, CSLB complaintsMultiple unresolved complaints; pattern of similar allegations
Criminal HistoryCounty criminal records; statewide repositories; nationwide databasesFraud, theft, or embezzlement convictions; contractor licensing violations

In states like California, the Contractors State License Board (CSLB) maintains a public database with license status, complaint history, disciplinary actions, and bond information โ€” all searchable online. In Nevada, the State Contractors Board serves a similar function. Every state has its own licensing authority, and checking these databases is always the first investigation step. A contractor who cannot produce a valid, active license in the state where they’re working is almost certainly operating illegally โ€” and that alone provides grounds for both criminal complaints and civil claims. ๐Ÿ“Š

Beyond licensing, a thorough background investigation includes searching for prior lawsuits, judgments, and judgment liens against the contractor, checking for bankruptcy filings (which may indicate a pattern of collecting money and then discharging debts), verifying the contractor’s personal identity through professional databases to ensure they are who they claim to be, and investigating whether the contractor has operated under other business names or in other states. Serial contractor fraudsters frequently move between states and create new business entities to stay ahead of complaints and judgments. ๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ

๐Ÿ” Need to Investigate or Locate a Fraudulent Contractor?

Our professional skip tracing and investigation services locate missing contractors, verify identities, discover hidden assets, and provide the intelligence you need to pursue recovery. Serving attorneys and homeowners nationwide since 2004. Results in 24 hours or less. ๐Ÿ“ž

๐Ÿš€ Get Professional Investigation Help Now

๐Ÿ’ฐ 7. Following the Money โ€” Financial Investigation

Financial investigation is critical for two reasons: it proves the fraud (showing what the contractor did with your money) and it identifies assets available for judgment recovery. Professional financial investigation in contractor fraud cases includes: ๐Ÿ“Š

Payment Tracing: Document every payment made to the contractor โ€” dates, amounts, methods (check, credit card, wire, cash), and recipient (personal name vs. business entity). Credit card payments can sometimes be reversed through chargebacks. Bank records show where checks were deposited and whether the contractor’s account still exists. Payment records also establish the total amount of the homeowner’s loss โ€” critical for calculating damages in litigation. ๐Ÿ’ณ

Contractor Asset Investigation: Once you have a judgment against a fraudulent contractor, professional asset investigation identifies vehicles and equipment (trucks, trailers, tools โ€” often the contractor’s most valuable assets), real property owned by the contractor personally or through entities, business accounts and equipment financing, and other judgments and debts that may compete for the same assets. Fraudulent contractors often operate with significant equipment โ€” work trucks, trailers, power tools, and specialized machinery โ€” that represents substantial recoverable value. Locating these assets through vehicle registration searches and equipment financing records is a key part of the investigation. ๐Ÿš›

Entity Structure Analysis: Fraudulent contractors frequently operate through LLCs or corporations specifically to shield personal assets from liability. When a contractor takes $40,000 through an LLC and then dissolves that LLC, alter ego liability and veil-piercing arguments can expose the contractor’s personal assets to collection. This requires demonstrating that the contractor treated the business as a personal piggy bank โ€” commingling funds, failing to maintain corporate formalities, and using the entity as a mere shell to commit fraud. Professional investigation into the contractor’s business practices and financial records builds this case. โš–๏ธ

๐Ÿ“‚ 8. Building Your Case โ€” Evidence & Documentation

  • Written Contract & Change Orders: The original contract (if one exists), all amendments, change orders, and written communications about scope changes. If there’s no written contract, document what was verbally agreed to and when.
  • Payment Records: Every check (front and back copies), credit card statement, wire transfer confirmation, and receipt. Even cash payments should be documented through contemporaneous notes, text messages referencing payment, or bank withdrawal records.
  • Photographic Evidence: Before, during, and after photos of the project. Photograph substandard work, incomplete work, material substitutions, code violations, and property damage. Date-stamped photos are best โ€” use your phone’s native camera which embeds timestamps and GPS data.
  • Communication Records: All text messages, emails, voicemails, and social media messages with the contractor. These often contain admissions, excuses, promises to finish work, and evidence of the contractor’s awareness that they were failing to perform.
  • Expert Inspection Reports: Hire a licensed building inspector or engineer to document code violations, substandard work, safety hazards, and the estimated cost to complete or repair the work. Expert reports are essential for establishing damages in litigation.
  • Permit & Inspection Records: Request permit records from the local building department. If the contractor claimed to have pulled permits but didn’t, or if inspections were never completed, this documents additional fraud and code violations.
  • Contractor Representations: Document any claims the contractor made about their license, insurance, experience, qualifications, or the quality of materials โ€” particularly if those claims were false. Screenshots of their website, advertising, and online profiles preserve these representations.

Victims of contractor fraud have multiple legal avenues for recovery โ€” and pursuing several simultaneously maximizes the chance of getting your money back: ๐Ÿ’ช

โš–๏ธ Recovery PathHow It Works๐Ÿ“Œ Typical Recovery Potential
Civil Lawsuit โ€” Breach of ContractSue for damages equal to cost to complete/repair work plus consequential damagesHigh โ€” full compensatory damages plus attorney fees if contract provides
Civil Lawsuit โ€” FraudProve intentional deception; may allow punitive damages and treble damages in some statesVery High โ€” compensatory + punitive damages possible
Contractor Bond ClaimFile claim against contractor’s surety bond (if bonded)Moderate โ€” limited to bond amount (often $15,000โ€“$25,000)
CSLB / Licensing BoardFile complaint; board may order restitution, revoke license, or pursue criminal actionModerate โ€” some boards have restitution funds
Small Claims CourtFor smaller losses (limits vary by state, typically $5,000โ€“$10,000)Good for smaller claims โ€” fast, no attorney needed
Criminal ComplaintReport to police and DA; criminal prosecution may result in restitution orderVariable โ€” court-ordered restitution possible if convicted
Credit Card ChargebackDispute charges with credit card company for services not renderedGood โ€” if paid by credit card, chargebacks can recover full payment
Attorney General / Consumer ProtectionState AG may pursue enforcement action; consumer protection statutes may provide damagesVariable โ€” some states allow private action with statutory damages
๐Ÿ’ก Pro Tip โ€” Consumer Protection Statutes: Many states have consumer protection laws that provide enhanced remedies for contractor fraud โ€” including treble (3x) damages, automatic attorney fee awards, and statutory minimum damages. In California, Business & Professions Code ยง 7160 makes certain contractor fraud a crime. In many states, violation of home improvement statutes is a per se violation of the consumer protection act. An attorney experienced in your state’s consumer protection laws can dramatically increase the recovery amount beyond simple contract damages.

๐Ÿ’ฐ 10. Collecting a Judgment Against a Fraudulent Contractor

Winning a judgment is only half the battle โ€” the real challenge with contractor fraud is collecting. Fraudulent contractors are expert at making themselves difficult to collect against: operating through entities, moving assets, and continuing to scam new victims while ignoring old judgments. Here’s how to pursue collection effectively: ๐ŸŽฏ

๐Ÿ”„ Contractor Fraud Judgment Enforcement Flow

โš–๏ธ Win Judgment
โžก๏ธ
๐Ÿ” Investigate Assets
โžก๏ธ
๐Ÿ“‹ Debtor Exam
๐Ÿš› Levy Equipment
โžก๏ธ
๐Ÿ  Lien Property
โžก๏ธ
๐Ÿ’ฐ Garnish Income

The most productive enforcement targets against fraudulent contractors are vehicles and equipment โ€” work trucks, trailers, generators, power tools, and specialized machinery that the contractor needs to continue operating. A writ of execution and asset levy against the contractor’s truck and trailer can be devastating because it removes the tools of their trade and creates immediate pressure to settle. Real property is another target โ€” a judgment lien on any property owned by the contractor prevents them from selling or refinancing until your judgment is satisfied. ๐Ÿ 

For contractors who operate through business entities, pierce the corporate veil using alter ego liability. Contractor fraud cases are among the strongest candidates for veil-piercing because the entity was often created specifically to commit fraud, funds are almost always commingled between personal and business accounts, corporate formalities are rarely maintained, and the entity is undercapitalized (no assets in the LLC while the contractor personally enjoys the profits). A successful veil-piercing motion exposes the contractor’s personal assets โ€” home, personal vehicles, personal bank accounts โ€” to your judgment. โš–๏ธ

If the contractor has moved to another state, you can domesticate your judgment in the new state and pursue enforcement there. Our judgment collection by state guides explain the specific enforcement tools available in each jurisdiction. Professional skip tracing is usually required to locate contractors who have relocated โ€” they rarely leave forwarding addresses. ๐Ÿ“

๐Ÿ”— 11. Mechanic’s Liens, Bond Claims & Surety Recovery

The mechanic’s lien and contractor bond system is designed to protect both contractors and homeowners, but fraudulent contractors exploit these mechanisms in several ways: ๐Ÿ“‹

Fraudulent Mechanic’s Liens: Some contractors file mechanic’s liens against the homeowner’s property for amounts far exceeding the work actually performed โ€” or for work not performed at all. A fraudulent mechanic’s lien clouds the homeowner’s title, blocks property sales, prevents refinancing, and creates leverage the contractor uses to extract settlement payments. Homeowners facing fraudulent liens should pursue lien release through the courts, and in many states, the contractor who files a fraudulent lien faces penalties including damages and attorney fees. For more on how property liens work, see our lis pendens guide. ๐Ÿ 

Surety Bond Claims: Licensed contractors in most states are required to carry a surety bond (typically $15,000โ€“$25,000 depending on the state). If a contractor commits fraud or fails to perform, the homeowner can file a claim against this bond. The bond amount often won’t cover the full loss, but it provides a guaranteed recovery source that doesn’t depend on finding and collecting from the contractor personally. Bond claims typically must be filed within a specific timeframe, so act quickly. ๐Ÿ“…

Subcontractor & Supplier Liens: In some cases, a fraudulent general contractor collects payment from the homeowner but fails to pay subcontractors and material suppliers. Those unpaid subcontractors may then file mechanic’s liens against the homeowner’s property โ€” even though the homeowner already paid the general contractor. This creates a double-payment situation where the homeowner may need to pay twice for the same work. Understanding preliminary notice requirements and joint check arrangements can help prevent this scenario. โš ๏ธ

๐Ÿ”„ 12. Serial Offenders & Entity Hopping

The most dangerous contractor fraudsters are serial offenders who repeat the same scam across multiple victims, cities, and states โ€” dissolving business entities and creating new ones to stay ahead of complaints, lawsuits, and licensing actions: ๐Ÿ•ต๏ธ

๐Ÿšจ The Entity-Hopping Pattern: A serial contractor fraudster typically operates “ABC Home Improvement LLC” until complaints accumulate and lawsuits are filed. They then dissolve ABC, create “XYZ Construction Services LLC” with a clean record, and continue the same fraud under the new name. Some fraudsters cycle through dozens of entities over their career, leaving a trail of dissolved LLCs and unpaid judgments. Professional investigation that traces the contractor’s personal identity โ€” not just the business name โ€” across all their entities is essential for exposing this pattern and pursuing recovery.

Investigating serial offenders requires searching for all business entities associated with the contractor’s personal name and address, all entities registered to their known associates (spouse, family, business partners), dissolved or forfeited entities in every state where the contractor has operated, and patterns of complaints and lawsuits filed against different entity names but describing the same person and the same fraudulent behavior. When you can document that the same individual has committed the same fraud across multiple entities, the case for alter ego liability becomes overwhelming โ€” and the possibility of criminal prosecution increases significantly. Professional OSINT investigation and social media research can connect these dots across multiple states and entities. ๐Ÿ”—

๐Ÿ‘ด 13. Elder Abuse & Vulnerable Population Targeting

Contractor fraud disproportionately targets elderly homeowners and other vulnerable populations โ€” and when it does, the legal consequences escalate dramatically: โš–๏ธ

Elderly homeowners are targeted because they own their homes outright (providing equity for contractor liens), they may be less technologically savvy and less likely to research the contractor online, they may be more trusting of people who present themselves as helpful, they may have cognitive decline that makes them more susceptible to high-pressure sales tactics, and they may be isolated with fewer people to consult before making decisions. ๐Ÿ‘ด

When contractor fraud targets elderly victims, it often constitutes elder financial abuse โ€” a felony in most states that carries enhanced criminal penalties (additional prison time, enhanced fines), mandatory restitution orders, civil causes of action with treble or punitive damages in many states, and potential action by adult protective services and the state attorney general. Investigating contractor fraud against elderly victims should always include an assessment of whether the conduct meets the state’s definition of elder financial abuse, because this opens additional legal avenues and significantly increases the potential recovery through enhanced civil damages. The fraud investigation process should document the victim’s age, vulnerability, and the contractor’s knowledge of these factors. ๐Ÿ“‹

Common elder-targeting tactics include unsolicited door-knocking where the contractor claims to notice roof damage or foundation problems that don’t actually exist, “free inspections” that manufacture urgency for expensive repairs, repeated visits that escalate pressure on the homeowner, and creating a personal relationship with the elderly homeowner to build trust before requesting large payments. Investigators should document these tactics carefully, as they demonstrate the intentional targeting of a vulnerable person โ€” which elevates the fraud from a civil dispute to a potential criminal elder abuse case. Family members and neighbors of elderly homeowners should be alert to unfamiliar contractors spending unusual amounts of time at an elderly person’s home. ๐Ÿ‘ด

๐Ÿ”Ž 14. The Role of Professional Skip Tracing

๐Ÿ”Ž How Our Investigation Services Support Contractor Fraud Cases: At PeopleLocatorSkipTracing.com, we help victims and their attorneys locate missing contractors who have disappeared after collecting payment, verify contractor identity and confirm they are who they claim to be through professional identity verification, discover the contractor’s assets โ€” vehicles, equipment, property, business interests โ€” to support judgment enforcement, trace entity histories to identify serial offenders operating under multiple business names, locate the contractor’s current employment for wage garnishment purposes, and provide the intelligence foundation for both civil litigation and criminal prosecution. Results in 24 hours or less.

Professional skip tracing is particularly valuable in contractor fraud cases because these subjects are highly mobile, experienced at avoiding detection, and deeply motivated to stay hidden from the trail of victims they leave behind. A contractor who makes a living by defrauding homeowners knows how to create distance between themselves and their victims. They change phone numbers, use multiple addresses, operate through different entities, and may even use alias identities. Standard DIY investigation โ€” searching Google and White Pages โ€” is rarely sufficient. Professional investigation using comprehensive databases, social media analysis, vehicle registration searches, and cross-referencing tools is what actually finds these people and their assets. For homeowners weighing whether to invest in professional investigation, consider our analysis of the cost of not collecting your judgment versus the relatively modest investment in professional skip tracing. ๐Ÿ†

โ“ 15. Frequently Asked Questions

๐Ÿค” How do I find a contractor who took my money and disappeared?

Professional skip tracing is the most effective approach. We use database searches, vehicle registration records, social media investigation, and cross-referencing tools to locate people who are actively avoiding being found. Many “disappeared” contractors are still operating in the same area under a different business name โ€” making social media and business entity research particularly productive. Our turnaround is 24 hours or less for most locate investigations. ๐Ÿ”

๐Ÿค” Can I collect a judgment against a contractor’s LLC if the LLC is dissolved?

Potentially, yes. If the contractor used the LLC to commit fraud, commingled personal and business funds, or failed to maintain corporate formalities, alter ego liability allows you to pierce the corporate veil and collect against the contractor personally. Contractor fraud cases are among the strongest candidates for veil-piercing because the entities are typically created for the purpose of committing fraud. โš–๏ธ

๐Ÿค” Should I file a criminal complaint or a civil lawsuit first?

File both simultaneously. Criminal complaints go to the police department and district attorney. Civil lawsuits are filed by your attorney. A criminal conviction can result in court-ordered restitution (the contractor is ordered to pay you back as a condition of their sentence). A civil judgment gives you access to all the enforcement tools โ€” wage garnishment, asset levies, property liens. Pursuing both maximizes your chances of recovery. ๐Ÿ’ช

๐Ÿค” What if the contractor did some work but didn’t finish?

Your damages are the cost to complete the remaining work (using another contractor) plus the cost to repair any substandard work already performed, minus any remaining contract balance you haven’t yet paid. An expert inspection report documenting what was done, what wasn’t done, and what needs to be fixed is essential for calculating damages. ๐Ÿ”ง

๐Ÿค” Can I go after the contractor’s personal assets if they operated as a sole proprietor?

Yes โ€” if the contractor operated as a sole proprietor (no LLC or corporation), their personal assets are directly exposed to your judgment. This means you can levy their personal bank accounts, garnish their wages if they work for someone else, lien their real property, and seize their vehicles and equipment. Sole proprietors have no corporate shield. ๐Ÿ’ฐ

๐Ÿค” How do I prevent contractor fraud in the first place?

Always verify the contractor’s license with the state licensing board, check for complaints and lawsuits, get multiple written bids, never pay more than 10โ€“20% upfront, pay by credit card when possible (for chargeback protection), require a detailed written contract, verify insurance directly with the carrier, and check references by actually calling previous clients. A small investment in due diligence prevents thousands in potential losses. โœ…

๐Ÿš€ 16. Get Professional Investigation Help

At PeopleLocatorSkipTracing.com, we’ve been helping homeowners, attorneys, and investigators locate fraudulent contractors, verify identities, discover hidden assets, and build the evidence foundation for successful recovery since 2004. Whether you need to find a contractor who has disappeared with your money, investigate a contractor’s background before hiring, or collect a judgment against a fraudulent operator, our professional-grade investigation services deliver the comprehensive intelligence you need for effective and successful recovery โ€” with results in 24 hours or less. โšก

๐Ÿ†20+Years of professional investigation experience
โšก24 HrsOr less โ€” our standard results turnaround
๐ŸŒŽ50 StatesNationwide coverage coast to coast
๐Ÿ”’100%Legally compliant, professional-grade results

๐Ÿ”จ Find Fraudulent Contractors & Recover Your Money

Don’t let a fraudulent contractor get away with your hard-earned money. Our professional skip tracing and investigation services locate missing contractors, discover their assets, and provide the intelligence you need for effective recovery. Contact us today! ๐Ÿ’ช

๐Ÿ“ž Contact Us Now โ€” Results in 24 Hours or Less