Somehow or another, David Currier seems like a guy whoโd run a spy shop.
When he describes the various and sundry surveillance products his family sells at Scotland Yard on Virginia Street, the former copโs eyebrows get near theatrical, and his voice drops to a throaty whisper. Heโs grinning, which he does a lot.
โItโs the mystique,โ Currier says, that draws in the curious. Many customers act sheepish at first, and donโt want to be seen on the premises. Thatโs how Currier was, too, before he bought the place.
โA spy shop,โ he breathes, with a tingly, edge-of-your-seat effect thatโd be great for narrating a book on tape, or maybe prompting a grandkid to hop into his lap for a story. โPeople walk in, and they cover half their face.โ
He chuckles.
Those who muster the guts to explore Scotland Yard find a dazzling and bizarre array of gadgets, gifts and pranks, from incognito stash boxes and high-pitched โsonic assaultโ devices to flesh-staining powder, fake blood, and little vials of potion thatโll give you horrific diarrhea. Fun. Decorative suits of armor look on, holding court with photos of Londonโs actual police force and a few pictures from Currierโs days as a marital-arts instructor (heโs a third-degree black belt, for the record, and also loves dancing).
His wife and business partner, Debbie, has claimed a corner of the store for a boutique of her own, Currierโs Kustom Creationsโa charmingly incongruous area with silk flowers and delicate gifts.
The big kahuna, however, is the camera collection.
Sophisticated, discreet and a rather stunning to behold, the lot includes lenses built into stuffed animals, sunglasses, jump drives, AC adapters and even a coffee pot. Theyโre wholly indetectable without a camera locator, which is yet another device you can buy on site. In effect, David says, this makes Scotland Yard a counter-spy shop.
Think on that.
Surveillance is illegal anywhere one could reasonably expect privacy, such as in a bathroom or dressing room, but the onus is obviously on buyers to use equipment properly.
As to who those buyers are, โWe donโt appeal to an across-the-board-type customer,โ Debbie says. โYou just never know.โ
When reality-show producers approached them a few years ago, the family didnโt exactly balk, but soon had second thoughts. Their clients are understandably fixated on privacy, and apt to vent and worry aloud about serious personal troubles. Itโd never work.
Some are corporate folk, out to quietly buy recording equipment so they can monitor employees they suspect of theft. Others are watching their nannies, or theyโre jilted lovers who crave enough evidence to leave. A few, like a woman who comes in wearing real tinfoil under her beanie, may be battling their own demons. Currier wonโt identify her or anyone else, howeverโeven for a quick comment in this articleโand he refuses to see their problems as sensational or trite.
โThis is the most interesting line of work we could have possibly gotten into,โ he says solemnly. โWeโve got the craziest stories, and we meet the finest and the craziest people on earth, from all types of life. That about right, Robert?โ
He cocks his head toward his son, whoโs doing paperwork at a desk, sitting upright in a pressed white shirt. The younger Currier seems a little milder-mannered.
โThereโs all types who come through here,โ he answers with a polite nod. โYes.โ
Being a good listener is paramount, he explains.
โSometimes weโre just selling them comfort,โ Robert figures, โor an ear to listen to [them].โ In any case, โweโre not here to judge.โ
I, spy
Back in the ’90s, when Scotland Yard was under different ownership in a small, understated storefront on Wells Avenue, it was all David could do to make himself go inside. The Fernley resident was a newly retired police officer then, and trying his chops as a private investigator.
Thatโs not a glamorous job, mind you.
โItโs not really about flying through the streets of Reno with the top down and the guns blazing, chasing the bad guys; Itโs more about sitting in a cold, dark car, peeing in a milk carton while youโre surveilling a possible cheating wife or husband,โ he admits, cracking himself up again.
Anyway.
David (left) and Robert currier, have to overcome the sheepishness of customers at the spy shop.

โSo here I am, becoming a private investigator,โ he continues, drawing out the word as if it comes with air quotes and an eye roll. โAnd I see the spy shop, and Iโm thinking, โWhat the hell is that?โ
โIโm not very sophisticated,โ he adds. โI live out in Fernley. I donโt know whatโs going on in town. Iโm intimidated, but I know Iโve go to go in there.โ
He didnโt go through with it that day. The next time he approached the place, he circled around a few times, finally parking in the most remote spot he could find.
โOnce I get over the shock of walking in, the awkwardness, the off-balanced [nature of it all], the โWhat the hell am I doing here, I donโt need to spy on anybodyโโ โDavid is speaking in italics at this point, almost like Chris Farley in one of his dramatic crescendosโโwell, then I start looking around.โ

He studied cameras hidden in common household appliances, cameras hidden in pens, cameras hidden in eyeglassesโcameras everywhere.
โAnd Iโm going, โWow, this is some really cool stuff. โโ
Debbie sees it as a way to help small businesses monitor theft. And above all, sheโs humbled by the fact that her work might indirectly protect abused children.
โI just think thereโs nothing worse in the whole world than a crime against a child,โ she says gently, recalling a customer who drove in from California in 2005. The womanโs boyfriend was a police officer, and she suspected him of molesting her daughter. The local cops were his colleagues, however, and dismissed her pleas for help.
Debbie prizes a thank-you note from that heartbroken mother.
โThe nanny cam I bought from you saved my babies [sic] life,โ she wrote on plain stationary. โYou should feel really good, because I couldnโt have done it without you.โ
Sadly, thatโs not the only such case that comes to Debbieโs mind.
โIf we can protect one child, she says, โor save one child โฆ. .โ
Debbieโs own background is in management. She was โvery apprehensive,โ she says, when her husband broached the subject of running Scotland Yard. But heโd turned passions into livelihoods before โthe taekwondo stint, for oneโโand I learned through the years that when he wants to do something, he makes it work.โ
Robert, 38, attended college in Iowa for baseball, and later mastered in fine arts. The talented watercolorist was working three unrelated jobs, including one in a warehouse, when David and Debbie talked him into joining the family business a decade ago. The rest is history.
โI never saw it coming,โ he says in earnest.
โItโs funny,โ his dad interjects, โhow one chapter in your life will close, and another will open up.โ
It can bloom, at that.
โYou come see my mom,โ Robert says of Debbieโs in-house boutique, โand sheโll make you a silk flower arrangement. You come see us, and weโll put a camera in it.โ
