Dominican Republic students graduate from elite US law enforcement program

PICHARDO

One Dominican at a time, please!
May 15, 2003
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Santiago de Los 30 Caballeros
Dominican Republic students graduate from elite US law enforcement program

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GLYNCO, Ga. ? A new cohort of police officers and prosecutors from the Dominican Republic is ready to take up the fight against transnational criminal organizations after their graduation Friday from the International Taskforce Agent Training (ITAT) program, hosted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI).


From Sept. 13 through Sept. 26, 23 Dominican Republic officials participated in the ITAT program, which is held at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC) in Glynco. The majority of students, 17, were Dominican National Police officers. Two students were prosecutors and the remaining four were from the Tourist Police, Border Force, Navy and the Ejercito de la Republica Dominica. Training assistance was also provided by the Dominican Attorney General's Office and the Customs Agency.


Students spent two weeks in classroom seminars and practical exercises as part of the ITAT program, which provides vetted foreign law enforcement officers with training very similar to that of HSI's special agents.
This is the second class of Dominican law enforcement officials to graduate from the program. The first class, comprised of 14 students, graduated in May 2010.


"The ITAT program has proven to be very successful in strengthening partnerships among law enforcement agencies in participating countries," said Alexis Torres, HSI operations chief for Central and South America and the Caribbean. "Transnational criminal organizations respect no nation's boundaries, so it is vitally important for law enforcement agencies to work together across borders to ensure these criminals have no place to hide."

"We have already seen the increased capabilities this training provides to our nation's law enforcement programs," said Major General Manuel Castro Castillo, chief of the National Police for the Dominican Republic. "This new class of graduates will have an immediate impact on our ability to counter the criminal organizations who threaten public safety in our communities."


HSI instructors delivered a tailored curriculum developed to strengthen the students' ability to conduct criminal investigations. Classes covered investigation and interview techniques, evidence processing and warrant execution. The graduates were also exposed to physical training, defensive tactics and weapons practice.


The graduates are now part of an international law enforcement community that facilitates information sharing and the bilateral investigation of transnational criminal organizations involved in a variety of crimes, including weapons and narcotic trafficking, human smuggling and trafficking, money laundering, cybercrimes and more.


FLETC serves as the largest law enforcement training organization in the United States, training a majority of the federal officers and agents in the country. In addition to providing training for more than 90 federal partner organizations, FLETC also provides training to local, state, tribal and international police in select advanced programs. Approximately 70,000 students graduate from FLETC each year.


Dominican Republic students graduate from elite US law enforcement program
 

Jumbo

Bronze
Jul 8, 2005
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17 students graduate from a US training school. I am sure their 1st question was " how much money do US police make ". Now the students know what they are worth and will find a way to earn it. Just another fluff article.
 

Luperon

Who empowered China's crime against humanity?
Jun 28, 2004
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17 politically connected Dominicans went for a 2 week vacation. This should be a game changer.
 

CristoRey

Welcome To Wonderland
Apr 1, 2014
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Heaven forbid they decide to come back down here and start a cartel.
 

suarezn

Gold
Feb 3, 2002
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Precisely. Are these highly trained guys gonna work for $300.00 USD a month?

You'd be surprised how far 300 USD stretch in The DR. For instance ex police chief and presidential candidate Candelier was able to buy a villa at Casa de Campo and has a house in Santo Domingo with it's own helicopter landing pad, among other things on a salary of 30,000 pesos a month. These guys shoudl at least be able to buy a nice apartment in a ritzy part of town on that salary :cheeky::cheeky::cheeky::cheeky:
 

Criss Colon

Platinum
Jan 2, 2002
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yahoomail.com
I just heard they all missed their flight back to ?Las Americas? and were on a ?HOUND? bound for ?Nueba Yol?!!!!!!
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Suarezn,...you mean the ?De Chancleta to Yepeta? crowd????????