|
News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 28, 2003
Drug
Investigator School Scheduled In Salt Lake City, Utah
SALT
LAKE CITY - The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) in cooperation with
Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (H.I.D.T.A.) and the
Utah State Peace Officer Standards and Training Academy (P.O.S.T.) will
be conducting a Two Week Basic Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs Investigator
School. The school will take place April 28 - May 9, 2003, at the Utah
P.O.S.T. Academy, 4525 South, 2700 West, Salt Lake City, Utah.
This is an 80-hour
course, comprehensive in nature and covers many aspects of drug law enforcement
and investigation. Topics include: Drug Identification/Pharmacology, Asset
Forfeiture, Clandestine Labs, Informant Management., Surveillance, Law,
Testimony, Raid Planning and Execution, Search and Seizure, Raves and
Club Drugs, Conspiracy, Interview/Interrogation, Undercover Operations
and Drug Field Testing. The school's format involves classroom lectures,
discussion, and individual/group field exercises.
"We are proud
to be working with Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area
and the Utah State Police Officers Standards and Training. Law enforcement
combined with treatment and prevention efforts has proven to be an effective
tool to diminish the scourge of drug abuse in our communities," said
Special Agent In Charge Jeffrey D. Sweetin of the DEA Rocky Mountain Division.
DEA and H.I.D.T.A.
conducts four of these schools yearly at no cost for students in each
of the four states that make up the Rocky Mountain Division including
Utah, Montana, Wyoming and Colorado. These schools expand and reproduce
drug law enforcement efforts throughout the region and provide valuable
technical and practical expertise many agencies would not be able to provide
on limited training budgets.
"The basis
for these schools is partnering federal law enforcement with state and
local counterparts. To have lasting success in ridding drugs from our
neighborhoods, our law enforcement efforts need to be shared and carried
out together," said Special Agent In Charge Sweetin.
A wide range of
law enforcement personnel are attending the two-week seminar that can
count for as much as three credit hours of college education. Although
the DEA's role as a law enforcement agency is well known, it's role in
training and prevention activities is equally important in ridding our
communities of illegal drugs. These activities include education and training
for young people, parents, teachers, coaches, employers and community
leaders.
For additional information
contact Special Agent Daniel Reuter at the Rocky Mountain Field Division
Office at (303)705-7384 or Salt Lake City Assistant Special Agent In Charge
Barry Jamison at (801)524-4156 or visit DEA's website at www.dea.gov.
|