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Criminal Intelligence Coordinating Council

NCISP

The GIWG supported the development of the National Criminal Intelligence Sharing Plan (NCISP) as a blueprint to assist law enforcement personnel in their crime-fighting, public safety, and anti-terrorism efforts. The Plan acknowledged that officers, investigators, and analysts working throughout our nation are the first line of prevention and defense against terrorism and crime. The NCISP recognized the importance of local, state, and tribal law enforcement agencies as a key ingredient in the nation’s intelligence process and called for the creation of the Criminal Intelligence Coordinating Council (CICC or “Council”) to establish the linkage needed to improve intelligence and information sharing among all levels of government. Composed of members from law enforcement agencies at all levels of government, the CICC was formally established in May 2004 to provide advice in connection with the implementation and refinement of the NCISP. Members of the CICC serve as advocates for local law enforcement and support their efforts to develop and share criminal intelligence for the purpose of promoting public safety and securing our nation. These goals are attainable and necessary for the continued safety of our country’s citizens and visitors.

Because of the indispensable part that state and local law enforcement play in homeland security, they must also have a voice in the development of policies and systems that facilitate information and intelligence sharing. The CICC is in the unique position, because of the makeup of its membership and its function within the nation’s intelligence landscape, to serve as that voice for all levels of law enforcement agencies, which it does by advising the U.S. Attorney General on the best use of criminal intelligence to keep our country safe. The Council will work to ensure that every chief, sheriff, and law enforcement executive has a stake in this effort so that all law enforcement and homeland security agencies gain an understanding of their role in the development and sharing of information and intelligence. The advice of members of the CICC has also been sought by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS), members of Congress, and representatives of state government. The CICC members include:

Chairman

  • Russell Porter
    Director, Intelligence Fusion Center, Iowa Department of Public Safety
    Law Enforcement Intelligence Unit (LEIU) 

Vice Chair

  • Ronald E. Brooks
    Director, Northern California High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA)
    National Narcotic Officers’ Associations’ Coalition

Additional CICC Members

  • William Berger
    Chief, Palm Bay, Florida, Police Department
    International Association of Chiefs of Police
  • Matthew Bettenhausen
    Director, Executive Office, California Office of Homeland Security
    National Governors Association
  • Mike Bouchard
    Sheriff, Oakland County, Michigan, Sheriff’s Office
    Major County Sheriffs’ Association
  • William Bratton
    Chief, Los Angeles, California, Police Department
    Major Cities Chiefs Association
  • Arthur Cummings
    Deputy Assistant Director, National Security Branch
    Federal Bureau of Investigation
  • Joseph “Rick” Fuentes
    Colonel, New Jersey State Police
  • Ted G. Kamatchus
    Sheriff, Marshall County, Iowa, Sheriff’s Office
    National Sheriffs’ Association
  • Vernon Keenan
    Director, Georgia Bureau of Investigation
    Association of State Criminal Investigative Agencies
  • Donald Kennedy
    Executive Director, New England State Police Information Network Regional Information
    Regional Information Sharing Systems Program
  • Mark Marshall
    Chief, Smithfield, Virginia, Police Department
    International Association of Chiefs of Police
  • James McDermond
    Assistant Director, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives
  • Peter Modafferi
    Chief of Detectives, Rockland County, New York, District Attorney’s Office
    International Association of Chiefs of Police
  • Daniel Oates
    Chief, Aurora, Colorado, Police Department
  • Lisa Palmieri
    President, International Association of Law Enforcement Intelligence Analysts
  • Joseph M. Polisar
    Chief, Garden Grove, California, Police Department
    International Association of Chiefs of Police
  • Richard Randall
    Sheriff, Kendall County, Illinois, Sheriff’s Office
    National Sheriffs’ Association
  • Kurt Schmid
    Executive Director, Chicago, Illinois, HIDTA
  • Richard W. Stanek
    Sheriff, Hennepin County, Minnesota, Sheriff's Department
    Major County Sheriffs’ Association
  • Kenneth Tucker
    Assistant Commissioner, Florida Department of Law Enforcement
    National Governors Association

The CICC also recognizes the following individuals as active partners in the Council’s missions and objectives.

  • Bart Johnson
    Principal Deputy Under Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis, Office of Intelligence and Analysis, U.S. Department of Homeland Security 
  • Robert Riegle
    State and Local Program Office, Office of Intelligence and Analysis, U.S. Department of Homeland Security