Criminal Justice Update
Media > Newsletters > On the Job: Criminal Justice Update > Summer 2016

On the Job RSS feeds

Criminal Justice Update

Trace evidence: When small clues add up

Mud is enough to sink some criminals. 

8/23/2016

Toys, books donated to advocacy centers

Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine and a group of volunteers filled boxes with stuffed animals, books, and journals to be given to abused children who seek services from the Ohio Network of Children's Advocacy Centers. 

8/23/2016

Safety stressed for National Missing Children’s Day

Families gathered May 21 in Reynoldsburg to observe National Missing Children’s Day at an event sponsored by the Ohio Attorney General’s Office and the Reynoldsburg Youth Human Trafficking Coalition.

8/23/2016

Q&A: Valoria Hoover, chief of the Ohio Attorney General’s Environmental Enforcement Section

The section investigates and prosecutes those who violate Ohio's environmental laws and represents state agencies that protect Ohioans and their environment and natural resources.

8/23/2016

OHLEG updated to better serve needs of law enforcement

User feedback has been positive on the May upgrade of the Ohio Law Enforcement Gateway (OHLEG) system, and, according to support specialists, calls to the help desk have decreased dramatically. 

8/23/2016

Group working on model vehicle pursuit policy

Troubled by the deaths that have resulted from law enforcement vehicle pursuits, particularly one in Huber Heights, Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine formed an advisory group in April to examine the issue and create a model pursuit policy that can be used by agencies throughout the state.

8/23/2016

Fire marshal’s forensic lab finds answers in the ashes

Crime scenes often unite investigators from different agencies, for example the Ohio Attorney General’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) and the State Fire Marshal’s Office.

8/23/2016

Ceremony honors Ohio’s fallen officers

At the 2016 Ohio Peace Officers’ Memorial Ceremony, Christine Harvey found solace being among the family and friends of her fiancé — Deputy Michael Brandle of the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, who died last year during a training exercise — and being with others who understand her heartache.

8/23/2016

BCI yesterday and today

The Ohio Attorney General’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) will celebrate its 95th anniversary in September. The bureau started in 1921 as a record-keeping facility operated by the Department of Public Welfare. By 1924, a superintendent, one assistant, and a corps of inmates from the Ohio State Penitentiary had become the caretakers of criminal identification and fingerprint records, which they would make available to law enforcement agencies. The bureau moved to the Department of Mental Hygiene and Corrections and then to the Department of Corrections. In 1963, it became part of the Attorney General’s Office.

8/23/2016

BCI, Battelle partnership to usher in new DNA technology

Revolutionary DNA technology will soon be used at the Ohio Attorney General’s Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI) thanks to an innovative partnership.

8/23/2016
Displaying results 1-10 (of 14)
 |<  < 1 - 2  >  >|