Difference between revisions of "FBI - St. Louis Field Office"
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===Staffing and Capabilities=== | ===Staffing and Capabilities=== |
Latest revision as of 20:22, 15 February 2015
Contents
Staffing and Capabilities
Since crime scenes can be anywhere, the evidence teams are trained to reach tough places. The agents in Chicago possess a mix of talents and experience that enable them to help protect Chicago-ans and their families, from a full range of national security threats and major crime problems.
The staff are not only special agents, but also a variety of specialized professionals such as intelligence and financial analysts, investigative specialists, support services technicians, language specialists, paralegals, electronics technicians, and security experts.
The strength of the FBI lies in its investigations—the very heart of all operations— and in the collection, analysis, and sharing of intelligence that drives and supports those investigations both locally and nationally. In every case, the Bureau works to objectively gather the facts and to develop evidence that can stand up in a court of law. To do that, the Bureau interviews witnesses, runs undercover operations, analyzes financial records, maps and manages crime scenes, develops informants, makes arrests, conducts surveillance, and gathers information and intelligence from around the globe. The cases of today are often complex and multifaceted, involving a range of public and private sector partners and covering multiple jurisdictions.
St. Louis Field Office Specialized Capabilities
Evidence Recovery and Processing
In St. Louis there are two eight-member Evidence Response Teams made up of special agents who are sent to crime scenes to secure the area and exhaustively gather and process physical evidence. Each team member has been extensively trained. They can take photographs, diagram and survey scenes, gather fingerprints, determine bullet trajectories, recover DNA, gather and process the smallest of clues, and more. The teams coordinate with the FBI Laboratory and assist local law enforcement upon request.
- -- William Shepard -- Special Agent of the Chicago Bureau Office.
Computer Forensics
The FBI in St. Louis have a Computer Analysis and Response Team, or CART, that applies this same evidentiary concept to the digital world. These forensic examiners are experts at retrieving evidence from a vast array of digital devices, at processing that evidence in a way that maintains its integrity for use in court, and at presenting the results of their findings to investigators. We also provide examiners to the Chicago Regional Computer Forensics Laboratory—see the Partnerships webpage for details.
Tactical Support and Crisis Response
The St. Louis offices have an fourteen-member SWAT (Specialized Weapons and Tactics) team that can storm barricaded buildings and vehicles, breach locks and other structures, arrest armed and dangerous criminals, rescue hostages, patrol areas and provide security, navigate tough terrains by climbing and rappelling, use special techniques to stop fleeing cars, and conduct site surveys for special events. The team is highly trained and heavily equipped, with expertise in a variety of weapons, including pistols, assault and sniper rifles, and shotguns. The St. Louis FBI also have a Hostage Rescue Team designed specifically to locate and liberate victims in hostage situations.
Bomb Recovery and Analysis
St. Louis has one special agent bomb technician who can test and render safe a variety of explosive devices. He responds to calls of suspicious packages or objects and is deployed during bombing investigations, often working closely with our Joint Terrorism Task Forces. He gathers diagnostic information from the explosives that may be relayed as vital intelligence to local investigators and to the national Terrorist Explosive Device Analytical Center. Our bomb tech often works and trains with local first responders and law enforcement.
Hazardous materials
This field office has a HAZMAT expert who can respond to terrorist attacks and criminal incidents involving hazardous materials—including chemical, biological, and radiological—working in concert with local officials and with Weapons of Mass Destruction experts at FBI Headquarters.
Translation
Our group of language specialists can translate written documents and audio files in a variety of languages for terrorism, espionage, and criminal cases. They also join agents on cases, translating during live interviews and even during undercover operations.