Stalking is not confusion. It is not romance. It is not coincidence repeated ten times.
It is a pattern of unwanted attention, surveillance, contact, or presence that causes fear, distress, disruption, or control. And by the time many people realize they are being stalked, they have already spent weeks or months trying to convince themselves it is probably nothing.
That hesitation is exactly what stalkers count on.
At Cascadia Risk Management, we help clients document stalking behavior early, preserve evidence, identify patterns, and support the next step—before the conduct is rewritten as paranoia, exaggeration, or “just bad luck.”
What stalking can look like
Stalking is not always someone hiding behind a tree.
It can include:
- repeated appearances at home, work, school, or routine locations,
- following by vehicle or on foot,
- repeated drive-bys,
- waiting nearby without legitimate reason,
- unwanted contact across multiple channels,
- showing knowledge of someone’s routine or whereabouts,
- contacting friends, family, or coworkers,
- unwanted gifts or notes,
- fixation on a relationship or perceived grievance,
- and escalating conduct that creates fear or instability.
The behavior may be overt or subtle. The point is often the same: to let the target know they are being watched, reached, or accessed.
What Cascadia Risk Management can do in stalking cases
A private investigator may be able to help:
- build a timeline of appearances, contacts, and incidents,
- identify patterns tied to places, times, or routines,
- document vehicles, recurring locations, or repeated presence,
- help distinguish coincidence from a course of conduct,
- preserve photos, messages, logs, and witness information,
- and organize the facts for attorneys, law enforcement, or protective-order proceedings.
These cases often live and die on pattern evidence. One strange appearance may be brushed off. Repeated conduct, documented carefully, tells a different story.
Why outside documentation matters
Victims are often told to “write everything down,” but they are rarely told how to do that in a way that is actually useful later.
A private investigator can help structure the documentation so it shows:
- repetition,
- escalation,
- geographic or timing patterns,
- corroboration,
- and whether the conduct appears targeted rather than accidental.
That can make a major difference when someone later asks, “What proof do you have this was stalking?”
Closing
At Cascadia Risk Management, we treat stalking as the serious pattern-based conduct it often is—not as gossip, drama, or something that should be ignored until it becomes catastrophic.
Because when someone says, “maybe it’s just coincidence,” what they often mean is: no one has laid out the pattern clearly enough yet.