Word: quantico
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Police called in an FBI profiler from Quantico, Va., to help them narrow their search. His profile suggested the killer felt humiliated by women, was an outdoorsman who knew the local countryside well and may have had some religious motives. Reichert and his men thought the profile was too broad to be very useful. And there wasn't much help coming from the county coffers. For 18 months, the cops could not get special funding for a full-scale investigation of the murders. Many people in Seattle felt the problem was not so much the killer but rather the proliferation...
...uncommon. Former HUPD Chief Robert Tonis spent 27 years with the FBI before coming to Cambridge. The Kennedy School of Government and Harvard Law School have a number of faculty ties to the FBI. Law School Professor William J. Stuntz, a criminal law expert, sometimes lectures at the legendary Quantico Academy in Virginia, where special agents train. Alan A. Stone, Touroff-Glueck Professor of Law and Psychiatry at the Law School, has been a consultant for the FBI during crises like the stand-off between law enforcement officials and the Branch Davidians in Waco, Texas...
...application to be an intern isn't much less intense. Nevertheless, many of us have dreamed of heading to Quantico for 16 weeks of intense training in pursuit of the biggest bad-ass title of all: Special Agent...
...Most of the Harvard friends who told me of their interest in the FBI will never head to Quantico either. We'll go to law school, or medical school, or Wall Street. We'll become artists, accountants, reporters, bankers--but despite the number of us who have at one time considered the Bureau, we probably won't become special agents. At night, we'll come home to our safe houses, have dinner with our families, and watch bad television shows with glamorous FBI-like characters in them. And maybe that's better, because after all, being in the Bureau takes...
...briefing late last week, FBI officials insisted the only thing Carnivore has bloodied is the bureau's reputation. They blame the politically incorrect name on a couple of FBI computer engineers who toil deep in the bowels of a classified facility on the tightly secured FBI Academy campus in Quantico, Va., and who were trying to convey that they had refined an older, less discriminating e-mail search program called Omnivore. The moniker was never run past Washington-based officials devoted to burnishing the bureau's image - and ducking trouble. "Yeah," one FBI official said glumly. "We're looking...