SVE PROGRAM.2021
VIRTUAL EVENT KEYNOTE PRESENTATIONS
INTERACTING WITH AUTOMATED DRIVING SYSTEM (ADS) EQUIPPED VEHICLES CAPTAIN RICK ARNOLD Michigan State Police; FBINA Graduate, Session 238
development, retention, recruitment and training as applied to leaders and employees at all levels.
CRISIS COMMUNICATIONS AND SOCIAL MEDIA JUDY PAL
ASSISTANT CHIEF DAVID JENKINS California Highway Patrol; FBINA Graduate, Session 261
Former Assistant Commissioner, New York Police Department (NY)
This presentation provides law enforcement leaders a high-level out- line about how both traditional and social media cover crises, and tactics agencies can use to frame narratives and manage their message. The ses- sion covers current media coverage methods including how traditional
media decontexualize events, the role social media factions play in escalating crises, and how social media is being weaponized. A broad outline of actions an agency should take before, during and after a crisis will be discussed. RESOLVING MEDIA AND DEPARTMENTAL MISINTERPRETATIONS: FORENSIC APPLICATIONS TO OFFICER-INVOLVED SHOOTINGS (OIS) CHIEF DEPUTY ROD ENGLERT (Ret)
BRIAN URSINO Director, Law Enforcement American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators; Assistant Chief (Ret), Washington State Patrol; FBINA Graduate, Session 196 An overview of the American Associ- ation of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA) law enforcement guidelines for the Safe Testing and Deploy- ment of Automated Driving System
Equipped Vehicles . Specific focus will be on criminal activity, es- tablishing operational responsibility, law enforcement protocols and interaction plans, data collection mechanisms, law enforce- ment safety and training, systemmisuse, and cybersecurity.
Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office (OR); FBINA Graduate, Session 159
Law enforcement is currently facing public scrutiny any time an officer is involved in a shooting, especially when a death occurs. So often, misguided information is premature, which opens the door to lawsuits resulting in complex litigation. It is
unfortunate that in many OIS cases, the officer was justified in a decision to stop the threat, but evidence was missed which deliv- ered a different outcome. This presentation will offer solutions to avoid misinterpretations that vilify the officer(s) without a proper analysis of the evidence.
FBINAA 2021 | REBUILDING COMMUNITIES
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