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This website is under construction. Please send questions or comments to bjanttac@usdoj.gov.

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20180903-85052-29

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

Over the past several years, your co-presenters have instructed the BJA sponsored course "Crime Analysis for Chief Executives" assisting top commanders and analysts in identifying how to support actionable analysis within their own departments and use that analysis to drive operations. This session synopsizes key elements of the 2-day course to present alternate and innovative ways of using your agency’s analytical capacity to assist law enforcement managers in resolving both crime and administrative challenges faced on a daily basis.

20180903-84330-29

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

Over the past several years, your co-presenters have instructed the BJA sponsored course "Crime Analysis for Chief Executives" assisting top commanders in identifying how to support actionable analysis within their own departments and use that analysis to drive operations. This session synopsizes key elements of the 2-day course to present alternate and innovative ways of using your agency’s analytical capacity to assist law enforcement managers in resolving both crime and administrative challenges faced on a daily basis.

20180610-162824-86

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

2-day class for law enforcement executives and commanders on building a first-rate crime analysis capability, whether you’re just
getting started or making adjustments to an existing program.
Attend with supervisors, officers, analysts (if you have them) and prosecutors from your agency to build a customized action plan.
Learn…
 What to expect from crime analysts
 How to make effective use of crime analysis
 How to best support and manage a crime analysis
capability
 Methods to improve data quality, policy, and training

20180610-160859-56

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

"We spent a ton of money and time on our records management system...it has everything we need to do crime analysis." Right?...WRONG! Most records management systems are EXCELLENT deposits of information. Unfortunately, it takes patiently waiting for your ticket request to come to the top of the vendor pile, a lottery winning to pay for the data that your officers inputted, and lots of new grey hair to actually gain access to your quality information. Deployment strategies and evaluation of such strategies continues to be painful and expensive and so time consuming.
 

20180610-155812-44

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

Starting in 2012, the Wilmington North Carolina region experienced a wave of gang violence. Drive-by shootings became almost a common occurrence. Regional leaders including law enforcement needed to reconfigure their approach to reduce this violence. This course analyses the underlying causes of this violence and the factors that led up to this situation. It looks at the crime analysis principles and discusses the integration of intel led policing, to address gang violence in a medium sized city.

20180610-155208-59

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

This free, intensive two-day workshop is designed to support Chiefs, Sheriffs and other police executives in the development, utilization and enhancement of crime and public safety analysis intended to drive departmental operations.

20180522-75021-03

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

"We spent a ton of money and time on our records management system...it has everything we need to do crime analysis." Right?...WRONG! Most records management systems are EXCELLENT deposits of information. Unfortunately, it takes patiently waiting for your ticket request to come to the top of the vendor pile, a lottery winning to pay for the data that your officers inputted, and lots of new grey hair to actually gain access to your quality information. Deployment strategies and evaluation of such strategies continues to be painful and expensive and so time consuming.
 

20180522-53742-13

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

This motivating and instructional hands-on workshop will guide you in developing the tools that you need to effectively drive your workday. This is a step-by-step tutorial on getting organized with your daily modes of operations (DMO). What do we do each day? What results-producing activities do we do that helps us move our units forward? Instead of reading emails, listening to phone messages and just REACTING, be the igniter of a successful environment.

20180505-161356-34

Submitted by Yvonne Pfeifer on

This free, intensive one-day workshop is designed to support Chiefs, Sheriffs and other police executives in the development, utilization and enhancement of crime and public safety analysis intended to drive
departmental operations.

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