Family members are routinely the easier target than the executive themselves: their schedules are more predictable, their security awareness is lower, and their exposure on social media and at school or club venues creates known points of vulnerability. This report sets out how family-security risk manifests in your chosen jurisdiction and industry: the documented threat patterns against family members of senior executives, the legal framework around protective measures (especially around minors), the early indicators of family-targeting, the operational mitigations that materially reduce exposure (school liaison, partner protocols, child digital-discipline, household-staff vetting, social-media controls), and the trigger points at which to engage an executive-protection firm or family-security specialist for a household-wide assessment.
Reference material for informed readers, not advice.