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NYPD Books
February 20, 2008 (San Dimas, CA)
Police-Writers.com is a website that lists state and local
police officers who have written books.
The website added three
NYPD police officers who have written
books.
Richard Brittson is a retired Detective
with the New York City Police Departments
Computer Crime Squad. He has been a
panelist at several conferences including Gartner 2004 and RSA 2005. He is a
board member of Northeast Chapter of the High
Technology Crime Investigation Association,
and was a co-recipient of the 2004 HTCIA Case of the Year.
Anthony Reyes is a retired Detective with the New York Police
Departments
Computer Crime Squad. During his assignment
with the Computer Crimes Squad, he investigated computer intrusion, fraud,
identity theft, child exploitation, and software piracy. Detective Reyes
previously sat as an alternate member of New York Governor George E. Pataki's
Cyber-Security Task Force. Mr. Reyes is a member of the New York State Internet
Crimes Against Children Taskforce. He is also a member of the National Institute
of Justice Electronic Crime Partnership Initiative (ECPI). Additionally, he is a
member of the High
Technology Crime Investigation Association
(HTCIA), and served as the President in 2005 of the Associations Northeast
Chapter. Anthony Reyes and Richard Brittson are the co- authors of
Cyber Crime Investigations: Bridging the
Gaps Between Security Professionals,
Law Enforcement, and Prosecutors.
According to the book description
of
Cyber Crime Investigations: Bridging the
Gaps Between Security Professionals,
Law Enforcement, and Prosecutors,
The book begins with the chapter What is Cyber Crime? This introductory chapter
describes the most common challenges faced by cyber investigators today. The
following chapters discuss the methodologies behind cyber investigations; and
frequently encountered pitfalls.
Lou Savelli, who has spent all of his 23
years in
law enforcement in the streets, is one of
the most decorated officers in
NYPD history and has received over 100
medals for bravery, outstanding police work, life saving rescues, and record
setting investigations. He retired in 2004 as the Detective Squad Commander of
the
NYPD's
Terrorism Interdiction Unit, which he
co-founded after 9-11-01 as a proactive counter-terrorism investigative unit
responsible to aggressively seek out and investigate terrorist cells in New
York.
Lou Savelli was chosen as one of the top 10
of
NYPD's most effective
leaders of all ranks (out of nearly 20,000
qualified supervisors) and the first supervisor featured in NYPD's
Leadership Training School newsletter
because of his innovation and success in the field of
leadership. He created NYPD's first
citywide gang unit called CAGE (Citywide Anti Gang Enforcement) which was
awarded the National Gang Crime Research Center's award for The Most Effective
Gang Unit in the US. Lou Savelli is the author of eight books in the Pocket
Guide Series: Guide to Basic Crime Scene Investigation; Gangs Across
American and the Symbols; Graffiti Pocket Guide; Street Drugs Pocket Guide;
Practical Spanish for Law Enforcement; Identity Theft; Cop Jokes; and A
Proactive
Law Enforcement Guide for the
War on Terror.
According to the description of
A Proactive
Law Enforcement Guide for the
War on Terror, Topics include:
suggestions for enforcement counter-terror tools officers should carry; tips for
spotting out-of-the-ordinary people and situations that can indicate trouble;
insight into identifying fake documentation; terrorist investigation strategies;
domestic terrorist groups; and, exploration of the killer terrorist mind-set.
It includes a helpful glossary of terrorism-related terms and phrases.
Police-Writers.com now hosts 844
police officers (representing 382 police
departments) and their 1786 police books in 32 categories, there are also
listings of United States federal
law enforcement employees turned authors,
international
police officers who have written books and
civilian police personnel who have written books.
Contact Information:
Lieutenant Raymond E. Foster,
LAPD (ret.), MPA
editor@police-writers.com
909.599.7530
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