Christian Botha, Private Investigator
Christian Botha is honest, trustworthy and confidential. His methods are both conventional and original as the case demands.
References | More than meets the Eye
Private Investigator Christian Botha will find whatever it is you
are hiding.
By Matt Ramsden
How does an Umtata High School matriculant end up as the area's most
talked about private investigator just six months after first hitting
the headlines?
CIGARETTE smoke swirling towards the ceiling, Botha leans back easily
in his office chair and smiles as he recalls how he became a private
investigator. Unlike scores of disenfranchised policemen looking for
new avenues after leaving the service, Botha's interest was sparked at
home as a youngster in Transkei watching Mike Hammer, the American
television series in which a PI scours the mean streets on behalf of
mysterious clients. After matriculating from Umtata High School in
1986, Botha said the army requested his presence for two years, during
which he became a dog handler.
After leaving the army, he landed a job working for the security
division of Sun International and worked at casinos like Fish River,
Amatola and Mdantsane. After rising through the ranks and uncovering a
R35000 fraud at the Amatola Sun, Botha left for England in 1994 where
his interest in private investigating was re-kindled. "I was reading a
newspaper when I noticed a small advert for a private investigating
training course being run by three former PIs," he tells, almost as
excited now as he was at the time.
Working by night and studying during the day, Botha found the course,
which was based on the tutors' own experiences, fascinating. As a guard
at the plush Dolphin Square complex on London's Embankment he came into
contact with members of Her Majesty's Protection Service who were
keeping a keen eye on Princess Anne. Besides learning how to act in the
presence of royalty, he managed to pick up tricks of the trade from
bodyguards who are surveillance experts. A year later and £900 poorer,
Botha graduated from the course to return to South Africa and put his
newly gained skills to use.
For over two years he worked for a well-known Port Elizabeth private
investigator on different cases, including trying to uncover insurance
fraud where people had claimed cash for fictional illnesses or damages.
Recalling the decision that eventually put him on the map, Botha adds:
"I really learnt a lot, but it was time to try and make it on my own in
East London." After receiving a loan from a prominent businessman, he
was up and running.
In February this year he contacted the Daily Dispatch with new
information about a notorious killing that has remained unsolved
despite strong evidence. A sworn affidavit was handed over and remains
securely locked in a Daily Dispatch safe. It was not long before Botha
hit the headlines when he tracked down and exposed a Liberian national
who had duped East Londoners into buying fake American dollars. Even
well-educated businessmen had been tricked into parting with cash in
exchange for blank pieces of paper and mysterious chemicals. However
glamorous it may sound, Botha says a lot of the work is painstakingly
boring as he tries to glean information for clients. Not unlike the
clichéd clients of movies who believe their spouses are being
unfaithful, real-life PIs also have to tail errant husbands and
unfaithful wives.
Sitting in a car, waiting, watching and recording details of the lives
of people oblivious of the fact they are being watched is a day-to-day
duty. Contacts are another essential for private investigators like
Botha: someone within the legal system to find out details, someone in
a hospital to make medical checks ... the list is endless. Street-wise
common sense is as vital a tool as any, as private investigators have
to be able to get under the skin of people at all levels of society --
from the beggar in the street who needs a few bucks for cigarettes to
the businessman who has his own reasons for helping you. Botha was
contacted last month by a European bank which needed his expertise in
finding whether a Zambian businessman was legitimate.
For the father of two it was a step into the big time, an opportunity
not be missed. He quickly put together a proposed itinerary, including
costs, and sent it off. Before he could book his ticket, the bank told
him they had received the information they needed about the
businessman. Disappointed, Botha wrote it off to experience. "To think
that a bank like that could get in touch and want me to travel to a
foreign country is great. Although it didn't work out, I am sure that
they were impressed with the itinerary I sent them," he says. Botha's
interest in the treatment and safety of children has led him to take on
the cases of several runaways. He has scoured East London and Port
Elizabeth trying to find Quigney teenager Shaun de Wet who ran away
last year. Although he has not been able to locate him, he did come
close two months ago when he arrived in a street where the youngster
had been sleeping. "I will find Shaun and will bring him back to his
parents.
"I have many people looking for him in Port Elizabeth and when I do get
him, I'll handcuff him so he can't run away." Clasping his hands, he
smiles mysteriously when asked for details about the notorious case
that he brought to the Daily Dispatch in February. "Well, I suppose
you'll have to watch the press," he says with a wry grin.
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