Justice Information Sharing

How to Hunt Criminals and Terrorists: The Actionable Intelligence Workshop

This webinar is designed to instruct law enforcement commanders, their police officers assigned to both patrol and investigative functions, and their analysts on how to aggressively collect and use actionable intelligence. The same intelligence techniques can also be used against both criminal and terrorist targets. The intelligence training taught in the webinar is designed to supplement the existing operational professionalism, skills, and experience within the audience.

Webinar - Cyber Crime Resources for the Justice Professional

IT administration and cybercrime investigations are hard work, but the right resources can make them easier by connecting you with people who have been there and done that, explaining why certain things are important, and helping you accomplish them in the best and most effective way possible. This fast-paced presentation by the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis Center (MS-ISAC) will introduce a variety of resources from job aids and free downloads, to training and checklists and working groups you can join.

"How To Hunt" Criminals and Terrorists: The Actionable Intelligence Workshop (Sep 2017)

This one-day workshop is designed to instruct police department commanders, their police officers assigned to both patrol and investigative functions, and their analysts on how to aggressively collect and use actionable intelligence. The same intelligence techniques can also be used against both criminal and terrorist targets. The intelligence training taught in this workshop is designed to supplement the existing operational professionalism, skills, and experience within the audience.

Key Modules:

National Forum on Criminal Justice (July - Aug 2017)

Sponsored by the National Criminal Justice Association, the Justice Research and Statistics Association, and the IJIS Institute, the National Forum on Criminal Justice showcases programs, research, and technologies that help justice practitioners and decisionmakers in states, local communities, and tribal nations address pressing public safety issues. It is the only criminal justice conference that brings together leaders from federal, state, local, and tribal government and the public and private sector to share real world strategies and solutions from around the country.

The Center for Evidence-based Crime Policy (CEBCP) at George Mason University released the spring 2017 issue of the Translational Criminology magazine to share examples of how research is converted into criminal justice practice. This biannual magazine serves to advance CEBCP’s mission of providing an informational link between practitioners and the policy community and advancing research-practice collaborations.

"How To Hunt" Criminals and Terrorists: The Actionable Intelligence Workshop (June 2017)

This 1-day workshop is designed to instruct police department commanders, their police officers assigned to both patrol and investigative functions, and their analysts on how to aggressively collect and use actionable intelligence. The same intelligence techniques can also be used against both criminal and terrorist targets. The intelligence training taught in this workshop is designed to supplement the existing operational professionalism, skills, and experience within the audience.

"How To Hunt" Criminals and Terrorist: The Actionable Intelligence Workshop

This 1-day workshop is designed to instruct police department commanders, their police officers assigned to both patrol and investigative functions, and their analysts on how to aggressively collect and use actionable intelligence. The same intelligence techniques can also be used against both criminal and terrorist targets. The intelligence training taught in this workshop is designed to supplement the existing operational professionalism, skills, and experience within the audience.

Cybercrime: From Crime to Courtroom (Oct 2017)

The objective of this 2-day course is to focus on how Internet/cyber/computer technology-based criminal cases - as well as criminal cases reliant upon digital evidence - unfold in a courtroom and why it is vital for investigators, prosecutors, and computer forensic technicians to comprehend these elements throughout the entirety of their investigations and prosecutions. The format is interactive.
Key Learning Points:
* Comprehend the ever-changing online environments where crimes occur and the locations of evidential repositories.

Cybercrime: From Crime to Courtroom (Sep 2017)

The objective of this 2-day course is to focus on how Internet/cyber/computer technology-based criminal cases - as well as criminal cases reliant upon digital evidence - unfold in a courtroom and why it is vital for investigators, prosecutors, and computer forensic technicians to comprehend these elements throughout the entirety of their investigations and prosecutions. The format is interactive.
Key Learning Points:
* Comprehend the ever-changing online environments where crimes occur and the locations of evidential repositories.

Pages