THE
FBI'S LAW ENFORCEMENT BULLETIN:
November 2004 Issue Now Online
12/07/04
Interested in
how to stop stalkers before they turn to violence ... and how
the FBI's National Center for the Analysis
of Violent Crime can help?
Want the skinny
on managing a Joint Terrorism Task Force—everything you
need to know about staffing, potential conflicts, security clearances,
and other issues?
Then check out the latest
issue of the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, which covers these topics
and more.
The Law Enforcement
Bulletin is mailed to some 250,000 U.S. law enforcement professionals
every month. We also make it available free of charge on this
web site to anyone and everyone: from community leaders to criminologists
... from our colleagues around the world to those considering a career
in U.S. law enforcement.
This issue,
in fact, includes three articles on topics that might interest managers
and human resource professionals of all kinds:
... Page 7: The
latest interviewing techniques and concepts, including how to
understand nonverbal clues—a review of a recently updated publication.
... Pages 18-24: Cutting
edge approaches to training and education that can help create
critical thinkers.
... Pages 25-32: Strategies
for dealing with difficult employees: how to recognize them,
understand them, and respond to them.
We also call
your attention to this month's law enforcement heroes: Officer
Peter Beninger of the Mountain View, California, Police Department, who
saved a woman's life by freeing her from her car just before it burst
into flames; and Officers Jeffrey Winn, Rudy Blum, and Michael Leake
of the Lincoln City, Oregon, Police Department, who quickly resuscitated
an injured driver with no pulse. Our thanks and congratulations to these
four individuals.
Links: The
Law Enforcement Bulletin Index | The
National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime