Think you've got issues in Records? Want to know how your department compares to best-practice?
After you take the assessment, you'll receive an instant findings report with a grade and pointage based on your answers. And, you will be able to download our Law Enforcement Records Management and Technology Governance Guide, free.
If you have a passion for the law enforcement industry and have a desire to share your knowledge, perspective, and showcase your expertise, the PRI newsletter is the ideal platform!
If you are interested in participating as a guest writer, or perhaps interested in becoming a regular contributor we want to hear from you! Contact Kristina Boyd.
NIBRS Report Writing Manual
How would you like to improve the quality of your reporting and ensure compliance with NIBRS? Having this instructive manual is the first step.
Available for purchase and download (customizable MS Word doc) on our site for only $479. Also available for only $195 when you register for one of our seminars.
PRI is a highly specialized consulting firm that provides public safety agencies records management, IT and crime data consulting, training, and project management services. With core competencies in public records compliance, UCR/NIBRS, CJIS, RMS/CAD systems, and digital transformation, PRI has proudly served agencies throughout the U.S. since 2008.
Constantly changing technology. A profession always seeking ways to adapt to the changes. That is law enforcement in 2023.
In recent years, a particularly challenging issue has been the proliferation of digital evidence management systems (DEMS) and the myriad of companies who promise a complete solution. With the rise in the use of body-worn cameras (BWC), in car cameras, and the almost ubiquitous use of video footage in every case from trespassing to homicide, the need for a practical, efficient, and affordable response has become a pressing concern. This, coupled with the call for budget cuts and ever-diminishing resources, has administrators struggling to adapt while trying to establish a viable digital evidence process for their agencies.
Good digital evidence management begins with retention.
Problem:Data is everywhere, likely stored in several places or several formats, with growing storage fees.
Solution: Implement good policies and retention schedules. Cost-benefit analysis to find the right system that meets your needs. Procedures and business processes rooted in best-practice methodology.
In this class, you will learn how to determine how long records must be kept, in what format, when they can be destroyed, and what the legal requirements are for releasing or withholding records from the public. You will also learn a modernized approach to managing agency files both electronically and those which are still on paper.
Intro to Law Enforcement Records Management - $259per person
New to Records? In this informative course, you will learn records management procedures in law enforcement, including retention, review, and disposition of paper and electronic records. This training is specifically designed to orient you to basic procedures and best practices and can be attended by personnel from any state.
Legacy approaches for managing records and the prevalence of manual, paper-driven business processes are indications of a real need for digital transformation… modernizing how you create, share, store, and access information and how you provide service to both employees and external stakeholders.
CAD/RMS Procurement and Project Management - $359per person
Your technology project’s success or failure will have a lasting impact on your agency and career. Make sure it goes right by attending this high-impact learning and networking event, and leave with the tools you need to fast-track getting the right system. This executive-level course is a money-back guaranteed program that will lower the risk of project failure and help ensure a successful procurement process.
Attendees will participate in strategic risk analysis and prevention and learn how to implement the approaches needed to protect the agency. You’ll receive various resources/tools for the agency- and self-assessment risk analysis, measuring key performance indicators, and keeping track of productivity.
Intro to Sealing and Expunging Records - $159 per person
In this 2-hour state-specific course, learn what the law says about sealing and expunging records, as well as best practices for processing these court orders. Topics Include:
Overview of state law
Processing court orders
Understanding the difference between a sealed and expunged record
Criminal Law for Records Personnel - $259per person
This highly educational program will provide the legal training your Records personnel need to correctly decipher the events described in your agency's police reports. In order to reconcile what a police officer writes in a narrative with the classification of the reports and how it should be counted for NIBRS purposes, understanding criminal statutes is imperative.
Records as Evidence: Management, Retention, and Disposition - $259 per person
Learn what the law requires regarding the maintenance, retention, and disposition of public records held as evidence. How long should digital evidence be kept? What about other records associated with the case? When a court disposition has been received authorizing the disposition of evidence, is it okay to destroy it? Are there additional retention requirements? This class will address the confusion between what evidence is a public record and what public records are considered evidence.
Florida Sunshine Law for Law Enforcement - $259 per person
A one-day course covering the application of Florida Chapter 119 to law enforcement records. This seminar focuses on public records held specifically by law enforcement agencies and understanding what should or should not be released to the public according to Florida law and corresponding legal opinions.
A one-day in-depth course covering the California Public Records Act and how to respond to subpoenas. Taught by California's resident expert, Joseph Surges, learn the ins and outs of public records requests from a practitioner's perspective.
Redacting Records: What Can and Cannot Be Released - $159 per person
Learn how to identify and redact information from police reports, audio, video, juvenile, and traffic records following state law. You will also learn which exemptions may apply beyond the closure of the case.
Crime Stats and NIBRS for the Police Executive - $259 per person
NIBRS is here, so learn all about it in this one-day, extraordinarily informative course about your crime stats. This course is for those who need to understand the changes and how the numbers work, how to keep them accurate, and how they will change.
Whether you are transitioning to NIBRS or already there, this practical and informative course will help your officers, FTO's, supervisors, and records personnel better understand crime reporting. In addition to learning about NIBRS and crime reporting under this program, personnel will understand their respective roles in the report writing, reviewing, and coding process.
This presentation will include a 4-step guide to ensuring your agency successfully transitions to NIBRS. There’s a lot more involved than just updating your system.
This presentation will include guidance on the requirements for reporting hate crimes, cargo theft, and LEOKA. NIBRS requires specific reporting criteria for these types of crimes. Learn how to document and report them correctly.
Case Management: Status and Disposition of Cases- $159 per person
Learn what case management is and how it affects your NIBRS data, clearance rates, record retention periods, and the procedures needed to keep case status and dispositions correct throughout the course of an investigation and prosecution.
Report Writing 102: What the Academy Doesn't Teach - $259per person
Every report must contain the information needed to correctly document a crime, aid detectives in follow-up investigations, ensure a conviction, and lessen the burden placed on reviewing supervisors and records personnel.
Reviewing and Approving Reports: Who should do it and how - $259per person
Learn how to bring clarity, consistency, and buy-in to the importance of rejecting and correcting errors through a two-tiered review process that ensures transparency, prevents risk in court testimony and resolves the challenge of getting everyone on the same page. Learn how to review reports, correct errors, and document changes to reports the right way.
Building a successful records unit begins with leadership. The PRI Leadership in Records course is a one-day program designed to enhance leadership awareness and competencies. The course focuses on the mindset and skills required to successfully lead and work as part of a records team.
You will learn how to contribute to the motivation of staff and develop effective teams to meet your agency’s objectives. Learn about the different personality types, how to better manage conflict, increase communication, and help others embrace change more effectively.
Staffing Analysis- Calculating How Many Personnel You Need in Records - $99 per person
Learn how to correctly calculate how many personnel are needed in your Records Unit. Using a detailed staffing model based on quantity and time measurements of work tasks, this data-driven approach reveals true staffing needs.
These web-based, self-paced courses can be purchased for anyone in your agency to complete. Upon registering, you’ll receive a link to join the webinar with instructions. Check your junk mail folder in case you don’t see it.
Case Management
Duration: about 1.5 hours.
This self-paced online accessible course takes the student through an immersive learning experience beyond the live seminar version and can be completed by anyone in your department. Duration: about 1.5 hours.
We see many departments keeping closed cases forever, over-and under-reporting crime data, and misreporting their clearance rates, all due to issues in the world of case management. From too many status options in the RMS to gaps in case management procedure, learn the procedures needed to maintain the proper status and disposition of cases throughout the course of an investigation and the judicial process.
Improving employee performance and resolving “issues” comes down to having quantifiable accountability measures. Learn how to develop and implement an employee performance improvement plan (PIP) in this interactive, self-paced course.
The course includes downloadable sample PIP’s and forms for tracking performance.