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       #Post#: 1070--------------------------------------------------
       FBI - Homepage
       By: Randy More Date: September 18, 2011, 6:44 pm
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       [SIZE=5][COLOR=#3333FF][B][I]Federal Bureau of
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       - About us:
       The mission of the FBI—as a national security and intelligence
       organization—is to protect and defend the United States against
       terrorist and foreign intelligence threats, to uphold and
       enforce the criminal laws of the United States, and to provide
       leadership and criminal justice services to federal, state,
       municipal, and international agencies and partners.
       We currently have jurisdiction over violations in more than 200
       categories of federal law. They generally fall under our three
       national security priorities and five criminal priorities as
       follows:
       National Security Priorities:
       1. Protect the United States from terrorist attack
       The FBI defines terrorism as “the unlawful use of force or
       violence against persons or property to intimidate or coerce a
       government, the civilian population, or any segment thereof in
       furtherance of political or social objectives.” The FBI further
       classifies terrorism as either domestic or international,
       depending on the origin, base, and objectives of the terrorist
       organization. We investigate terrorism-related matters without
       regard to race, religion, national origin, or gender. Reference
       to individual members of any political, ethnic, or religious
       group does not imply that all members of that group are
       terrorists. Terrorists represent a small minority in any large
       social context.
       In Albuquerque, our counterterrorism efforts are led by our
       Joint Terrorism Task Force, a group of highly trained
       individuals from various law enforcement and intelligence
       agencies who work with FBI case agents in gathering evidence,
       making arrests, sharing intelligence, and working to prevent
       attacks. There is a lot to protect: New Mexico is the fifth
       largest state in the nation in area, shares 180 miles of border
       with the Republic of Mexico, and has some of the nation's most
       attractive targets for terrorists, including numerous military
       bases and national research laboratories.
       Another key ingredient of our work to stop terrorists is the
       Albuquerque Field Intelligence Group (FIG), a hub for
       collecting, evaluating, analyzing, and reporting intelligence.
       The FIG provides useful and timely information to case agents,
       program managers, and the New Mexico intelligence and law
       enforcement communities to prevent, disrupt, and prosecute
       individuals associated with terrorist and criminal activities.
       2. Protect the United States against foreign intelligence
       operations and espionage
       Today, more foreign spies—not just traditional adversaries but
       also allies, hackers, and terrorists—are trying to steal more
       U.S. secrets from more places than ever before. They are after
       our country's most significant classified information—from
       military plans to national security vulnerabilities to our own
       intelligence activities. They also want our nation's trade
       secrets, innovations that give us a leg up in the global
       marketplace and technologies that could be used to develop or
       improve weapons of mass destruction.
       In Albuquerque, we have dedicated foreign counterintelligence
       personnel who, in line with the FBI’s National Strategy for
       Counterintelligence, work to keep weapons of mass destruction
       and other embargoed technologies from falling into wrong hands.
       Our foreign counterintelligence personnel also protect secrets
       of the U.S. government (including the intelligence community)
       and critical national assets and help to strengthen the national
       threat picture by proactively gathering information and
       intelligence. Our work includes knowing the key targets in our
       territory, developing strategic partnerships with area
       institutions, and disrupting the efforts of insiders and key
       nations.
       3. Protect the United States against cyber-based attacks and
       high-technology crimes
       The FBI leads the national effort to investigate high-tech
       crimes, including cyber-based terrorism, hostile intelligence
       operations carried out over the Internet, and more traditional
       cyber crime and fraud. Our work includes identifying and
       stopping: the individuals and enterprises behind the most
       serious computer intrusions and the spread of malicious code;
       online sexual predators who use the Internet to meet and exploit
       children and groups that use it to produce, possess, or share
       child pornography; operations that target U.S. intellectual
       property; and the most significant perpetrators of Internet
       fraud.
       In Albuquerque, our cyber squad works closely with federal,
       state, tribal, and local law enforcement partners, private
       organizations, corporations, and academia to counter the wide
       variety of computer-based threats. Together, we address issues
       ranging from individual fraud complaints to sexual exploitation
       of children…from corporate and economic attacks to espionage
       targeting the heart of our national security.
       Criminal Priorities
       4. Combat public corruption at all levels
       Corruption in government threatens our country's democracy and
       national security, impacting everything from how well our
       borders are secured and our neighborhoods protected...to
       verdicts handed down in courts...to the quality of our roads and
       schools. And it takes a significant toll on our pocketbooks,
       too, wasting billions of tax dollars every year.
       Our investigations in New Mexico focus on violations of federal
       law by public officials in local, state, and federal government,
       such as bribery, contract and procurement fraud, antitrust,
       environmental crimes, election fraud, and violations of the
       Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.
       See our public corruption questionnaires for contract
       corruption, economic stimulus, government fraud. If you answer
       yes to any of these questions, you are strongly encouraged to
       call or email the FBI.
       For more information on the FBI's national efforts, see our
       Public Corruption.
       5. Protect civil rights
       The FBI is the lead agency for investigating violations of
       federal civil rights laws…and we take that responsibility
       seriously. Specifically, we aggressively investigate and work to
       prevent hate crime, color of law abuses, human trafficking, and
       freedom of access to clinic entrances violations—the four top
       priorities of our civil rights program. We focus on all of these
       issues in Albuquerque.
       Hate crimes are a particularly insidious threat—they are often
       violent and serial in nature and breed fear and distrust in
       communities. We address hate crime in the FBI in three ways: 1)
       through our civil rights investigations, which focus on
       individuals or groups acting out hate violence and violating
       federal civil rights statutes; (2) through our domestic
       terrorism program, which focuses on crimes committed by
       organized groups for political or social reasons; and (3)
       through our Criminal Justice Information Services Division,
       which collects hate crime data each year as mandated by the Hate
       Crimes Statistic Act of 1990.
       6. Combat transnational/national criminal organizations and
       enterprises
       Gangs and other criminal organizations are an increasing concern
       for law enforcement in the U.S. and around the world. Their
       illegal activities have increased in scope and magnitude in
       recent years, with groups strengthening their networks and
       operations worldwide.
       The FBI’s strategy is to disrupt and dismantle the domestic
       cells (local, regional, national, and transnational) of the
       criminal enterprises that pose the greatest threats to the
       economic and national security of the United States. We do this
       through our Safe Streets and Violent Gang task forces; through
       increased involvement in the Organized Crime Drug Enforcement
       Task Force (OCDETF); and through support for and leadership in
       High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) initiatives.
       The Albuquerque Division works in concert with local, state, and
       federal law enforcement agencies through proactive, long-term
       relationships—addressing together significant gang and drug
       related violent activities on a domestic and international
       level.
       7. Combat major white-collar crime
       The FBI investigates a variety of white-collar crimes, such as
       money laundering, securities and commodities fraud, bank fraud
       and embezzlement, environmental crimes, fraud against the
       government, health care fraud, election law violations,
       copyright violations, and telemarketing fraud. We generally
       focus on organized crime activities that are international,
       national, or regional in scope and on threats and cases where we
       bring unique expertise or capabilities to the table.
       In Albuquerque, our white-collar crime program works to
       investigate and prevent public corruption (see above) and major
       corporate fraud and health care fraud. We also identify, target,
       disrupt, and dismantle the most egregious criminal organizations
       engaged in fraud schemes involving corporations, health care,
       and our nation’s financial institutions.
       8. Combat significant violent crime
       Violent crime continues to threaten our nation’s communities and
       citizens. Major violent crime incidents such as sniper murders,
       serial killings, and child abductions can paralyze whole
       communities and stretch state and local law enforcement
       resources to their limits. Significant cases of bank/armored car
       robberies, extortions, kidnappings, product tampering, and
       crimes against children can have a dramatic impact on the
       welfare of citizens and the economy of our country. Increased
       incidents of hostage taking have also occurred in Mexico and
       Haiti in recent years. The FBI is frequently called on to
       investigate and/or assist international law enforcement agencies
       when these and other violent acts are committed against U.S.
       citizens traveling or living outside our national borders.
       The Albuquerque Division focuses on collecting and analyzing
       information and intelligence that helps identify and prioritize
       threats and trends relating to violent crime. In addition, the
       division provides support to and works closely with local,
       state, and federal law enforcement partners to investigate and
       apprehend violent serial offenders that threaten the safety of
       our communities. See our Partnerships webpage for more details.
       - Contacting us:
       There is more than a way to contact the FBI, Firstly, You can
       simply head to our headquarters, Located at Rodeo, Los Santos,
       San Andreas, Also you can get a general help by calling the FBI
       using the emergncy number, 911,
       And finally, You can send us or e-mail us your letters, If you
       want.
       - Our Agents:
       The Bureau is a group of high-trained of the law enforcement
       officers, They know everything about the law, Force tactics, And
       how to communicate with the others, They are very professional
       to handle any situation they are in with the best ways, Although
       there might some corrupt agents in the agency, We are having a
       great Internal Affairs team, That will get them as soon as
       possible they have any actives.
       Joining us:
       The only way to join the FBI is by heading to our recruitment
       office in Wasington D.C, And apply with the applicant form that
       will be offered to you when you ask for it, FBI doesn't do any
       kind of live recruitment, Asking to become an agent with one of
       these ways will be useless.
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