Skip to main content

THE FIRST 24 HOURS

THE FIRST 24 HOURS: LAW ENFORCEMENT'S RESPONSE TO ABDUCTED, ENDANGERED AND MISSING CHILDREN

This is a FREE training event. 

Start: May 18, 2022 @ 8am

End: May 18, 2022 @ 4:00 pm

Location: San Luis Obispo, CA

If no event address is listed, it will be provided in the confirmation materials

Register Online Today

The California Child Abduction Task Force along with the Center for Innovation and Resources, Inc. has scheduled The First 24 Hours: Law Enforcement's Response to Abducted, Endangered, and Missing Children in San Luis Obispo, CA on Wednesday, May 18, 2022. 

Registration deadline: April 27, 2022

This training is specifically designed for Patrol Lieutenants, Watch Commanders, Field Sergeants, Detectives, and other Law Enforcement First Responders

Topics to be discussed include:

  • First Responder and Supervisor Responsibilities

  • Neighborhood Canvass

  • Victimology and Federal Resources

  • Command Post Considerations

  • California Missing Person Alerts (AMBER Alert)

  • California Missing Person Alert Case Studies

  • Tools and Resources

Presenters:

  • Brian Sullivan, Special Agent, Federal Bureau of Investigation

  • Captain Stephan Lagorio, San Jose Police Department

  • Sergeant Ed Bertola, California Highway Patrol

POST - 7 hours, Provider #1214

This training is FREE OF CHARGE. Participants are responsible for travel, lodging, and all meal expenses. Lunch is NOT provided.

For more information, questions, or grievances, please contact Ariana Ocegueda at cirassitant@cirinc.org or 805-876-0291.

The mission of the California Child Abduction Task Force is to reduce the risk and incidence of child abduction and to increase the effectiveness of multidisciplinary response by enhancing skills, knowledge, and awareness of child abduction.

Produced by the Child Abduction Training Project of the Center for Innovation and Resources, Inc. (CIR) in partnership with the California Child Abduction Task Force with funding from the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (CalOES), made possible through the United States Department of Justice, Victims of Crime Act.