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"NEWSREEL: Follows twenty-seven year old law school graduate,
Tom Holliday, progress through thirteen week training course at
FBI Academy at
Quantico, Virginia. Trainees learn when, where, what, and how to investigate bank robberies, kidnappings, extortion and espionage crimes, and laws and federal statutes covering these crimes. Demonstrates how to photograph and read burned paper, how to identify fire arms, manual fingerprint search process, and different types of guns.
At Combat Village, ghost town used by
FBI to train agents, Tom demonstrated his ability to capture and arrest fugitive.
J. Edgar Hoover,
Director of FBI since 1924, comments on importance of FBI training for special agents."
Public domain film from the
National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/training/history
In the Beginning
...How'd we end up at
Quantico? It began with the so-called "
Kansas City massacre." In June 1933, three police officers and one
Bureau agent escorting a prisoner through a
Missouri train station were killed when "
Pretty Boy" Floyd and other criminals opened fire.
Following the public outcry,
FBI agents were given the authority to make arrests and to carry weapons for the first time
.
...But where to learn marksmanship and take target practice? We needed a safe, out of the way place.
...And we found one, thanks to the
Marine Corps, which in 1934 let us start using the firing ranges on its base in Quantico, Virginia, about 35 miles southwest of the nation's capital. We've been there ever since...
Training Takes Off
...Meanwhile, the Bureau was moving into the training business.
..
.In the early '20s we'd begun formal training for agents; our first organized agent school was launched in 1929 in
D.C. It included classroom training, practical exercises in fingerprinting and evidence collection, and even physical instruction on the rooftop of the
Justice Department building.
...In line with the recommendations of a national commission on the need for more standardized police training, in 1935 we launched a "
Police Training School," the forerunner of today's
National Academy program. The high-level police professionals learned investigative and scientific techniques, studied management principles, did practical exercises, and received firearms training at the gun range at Quantico. Many of the graduates opened training classes back home to share what they'd learned.
The Academy's
First Home
..."If you build it, they will come..." Precisely our thinking by the late
1930s. The gun ranges used by the
Marines weren't meeting our more specialized law enforcement needs. And we needed a central place to instruct and house all the police officers and special agents we were now training.
...
Result: the Marine Corps allowed us to construct our own firing range and, in
1940, our first classroom building on the main section of the base.
The FBI Academy was born.
...Over the next two decades, we added a new wing, a basement, more dining room and kitchen space, and an elevator to the original building. But it still wasn't enough. Eight people shared a single dorm room. The lack of classroom space limited the size of training classes. The firing range was a bumpy bus ride away. We needed the facilities to match our vision for world-class training.
...In
1965, we got approval to build a brand new complex at Quantico. Construction began in
1969. A new home was just around the corner...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FBI_Academy
The FBI Academy, located in Quantico, Virginia, is the training site for new
Special Agents of the
United States Federal Bureau of Investigation. It was first opened for use in
1972 on 385 acres (1.6 km²) of woodland. It is a relatively small government academy, housing three dormitory buildings and associated facilities.
Federal law enforcement officers from the FBI and
Drug Enforcement Administration undergo training courses here. FBI agents currently have a 21-week long training course...
- published: 11 Oct 2012
- views: 4757