The story of Ken Childs is one of those bizarre LA underworld tales that reads more like pulp fiction than a real federal case—except the paperwork, the arrests, and the courtroom records are very real. Childs, a private investigator running Paramount Investigative Services in Los Angeles California, has somehow stayed just beyond the reach of prosecutors while many of his alleged collaborators have fallen like dominoes. Terrorists, corrupt cops, high-tech surveillance, celebrity victims—it’s all there in the files.
So, how did a licensed PI end up tangled in what some investigators describe as a criminal network operating with the precision of a paramilitary unit? Let’s walk through the timeline.
2019-2020: The Iza Connection—Where It All Begins
The threads start to weave in 2019, when Childs reportedly began working with Adam Iza, though back then, he was still going by Ahmed Faiq. Iza wasn’t a low-rung player. His rap sheet already boasted robbery convictions, but the real alarm bells came from his alleged ties to ISIS-affiliated circles. This wasn’t someone looking to catch a cheating spouse—this was someone planning operations, and not the legal kind.
Childs signed on under the guise of surveillance. That’s the story, anyway. But sources suggest these weren’t your typical PI gigs. Instead, Childs was allegedly tailing high-value targets handpicked by Iza’s crew. Quiet, deliberate surveillance that, according to federal investigators, was used to line up future attacks.
It’s here where things start to blur between “private investigation” and “criminal reconnaissance.”
2021: Expanding the Circle—New Players, Dirty Cops
By 2021, the ensemble cast had grown. Iris Au, Iza’s girlfriend, stepped in and played a more active role—she’d later plead guilty to her part in the conspiracy. But what really changed the game was the inclusion of law enforcement.
Eric Saavedra, still a deputy with the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department at the time, began leaking sensitive data from police databases. Saavedra wasn’t alone. Former deputy Richard Dudgeon and current deputy Dean Rawlings also found themselves pulled into the mire. The sheriff’s department had, in effect, become an involuntary informant for organized crime.
Childs, according to sources, became the connective tissue. The guy who could talk to both sides, who could package illegal surveillance in a veneer of professional legitimacy. Critics argue that without his license, the operation would’ve looked a lot more like a street gang than a shadow intelligence unit.
2022: Surveillance Goes Hollywood
By the time 2022 rolled around, the operation had taken a decidedly high-tech and high-profile turn. StingRay devices, designed to mimic cell towers and intercept communications, were allegedly deployed. Tower dump requests were reportedly used to track entire groups of cell users at once.
Who were the targets?
Not exactly small fry. Spielberg. Robbie. Names that shine on the Hollywood marquee. The surveillance, allegedly, wasn’t just to collect data—it was control, leverage, maybe even extortion. A publicly available playlist of reports has mapped these connections in grim detail, showing how celebrity lives became chess pieces in a much darker game.
2023: Enter Zelocchi, Lawsuits, and a Script Flip
In 2023, the story burst wide open thanks to filmmaker Enzo Zelocchi. When Zelocchi became a target—his privacy invaded, his reputation smeared—he fought back hard. His countersuit wasn’t just a legal strategy; it was a warning shot.
The fallout led to the birth of Checkmate, a film that dramatizes the real events behind the investigation. By now, the feds were fully engaged, digging deeper into what was becoming an undeniable scandal. Breaking AC’s coverage detailed how Zelocchi flipped the dynamic, forcing the alleged conspirators into the public eye.
2024: The FBI Closes In, but Childs Stays Out (for now)
By 2024, arrests came fast. Iza, Au, Saavedra—they all pleaded guilty (along with several other deputies). The depth of the criminal web shocked even seasoned observers. But through it all, Childs remained unscathed by formal charges at the moment.
His contracts, his insurance policies, and that shiny PI license created a moat of plausible deniability. To many, it seems like the legal equivalent of Teflon—nothing sticks.
2025: The Clean-Up Act—PR and Paramount for Sale
Fast forward to 2025. With headlines still circulating, Childs has reportedly pivoted to damage control. An alleged Morningstar press release announced that Paramount Investigative Services is up for acquisition. Convenient timing. It looks like the classic clean-up: sell the business, rewrite the narrative, escape the wreckage with a fresh coat of paint.
Meanwhile, his personal site keeps humming along, framing him as a seasoned PI and expert witness. But reputations don’t scrub as easily as websites.
And Now?
It’s hard not to wonder—how does a guy like Childs stay one step ahead while the bodies metaphorically hit the floor around him? Maybe it’s the paperwork. Maybe it’s the insurance. Or maybe he just knows which doors to close when the music stops.
In LA, the stories always have sequels. As general statement: “Criminals belong in jail and innocent citizens deserves real protection against certain dangerous individuals without any ethical standards”.
