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Informant Management & Control
This training course will provide proven techniques and strategies to cultivate, maintain and control informants.
Course Overview
Course Overview
Course Overview
Course Overview
Course Overview
Course Overview
Course Overview
Confidential informants are critical tools for all levels of narcotic investigations. From street-level narcotic buys to complex conspiracy investigations, informant information can make or break the case. Narcotic officers must learn to properly cultivate and develop informants to have success in arresting drug violators and seizing large quantities of drugs, firearms, and U.S. currency. Historically, police agencies provide very little training to officers that manage informants.
This practice often leads to highly publicized scandals, which could include officers being disciplined, fired, or sent to prison for the way they handled their informant. One of the primary causes of informant scandals is the lack of written policies and procedures. To adequately maintain control over informants, law enforcement agencies must clearly define what activities informants are permitted to participate in as well as prohibited activities. Written policies will also add accountability for officers responsible for managing an informant. This two-day training course will provide proven techniques and strategies to cultivate, maintain and control informants.
Sample policies, procedures, and informant agreements developed by Professional Law Enforcement Training (PLET) will be presented to officers to better prepare the officers to deal with informant scandals. Officers will participate in case studies where informants were murdered under the watchful eye of law enforcement. In many instances, the controlling detective and the police agency were held accountable for improper informant procedures. Techniques will be presented to assist officers in minimizing the risks associated with informant operations.
This practice often leads to highly publicized scandals, which could include officers being disciplined, fired, or sent to prison for the way they handled their informant. One of the primary causes of informant scandals is the lack of written policies and procedures. To adequately maintain control over informants, law enforcement agencies must clearly define what activities informants are permitted to participate in as well as prohibited activities. Written policies will also add accountability for officers responsible for managing an informant. This two-day training course will provide proven techniques and strategies to cultivate, maintain and control informants.
Sample policies, procedures, and informant agreements developed by Professional Law Enforcement Training (PLET) will be presented to officers to better prepare the officers to deal with informant scandals. Officers will participate in case studies where informants were murdered under the watchful eye of law enforcement. In many instances, the controlling detective and the police agency were held accountable for improper informant procedures. Techniques will be presented to assist officers in minimizing the risks associated with informant operations.
What's included?
To adequately maintain control over informants, law enforcement agencies must clearly define what activities informants are permitted to participate in as well as prohibited activities. Written policies will also add accountability for officers responsible for managing an informant.
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Understanding the 4th Amendment
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Understand an Informants True Motivation
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Managing Informants
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Techniques & Methods to Control Informants
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Informant Contracts & Agreements to Cooperate
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Policies & Procedures for Informants
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Protecting the Identity of Informants
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Corroboration of Informant Information
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Informant Rescue Techniques
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Ethical Decisions When Managing Informants
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Case Studies of Informants Murdered
Course Curriculum
Meet the instructor
Brian Grammas
Brian Grammas is a retired Police Officer with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, where he has worked for the past 25 years. He spent the last 14 years as a Detective assigned to the Narcotics Section before transferring to the Police Protective Association to fight for officers’ rights. During his 14 years in the Narcotics Section, Brian was assigned to the Clandestine Lab / Street Level Narcotics Team and was a Training Officer for the Narcotics Section. Brian ran hundreds of drug cases while managing several confidential informants. He has dismantled more than 100 meth labs and over 200 hydroponic marijuana grows. Brian is highly trained in tactical search warrant training as well as undercover officer rescue tactics. Not only did he carry out these tactics in live missions, but his expertise led to him training all detectives in these tactics.
Patrick Jones - Course author