Five Tennessee Law Enforcement Officers Graduate From the FBI National Academy
The FBI National Academy in Quantico, Virginia, graduated 238 law enforcement officers, including five from Tennessee:
- Deputy Chief Michael Mullins, Mount Juliet Police Department
- Lieutenant Vikki Shabazz, Memphis Police Department
- Lieutenant Amber Webb, Memphis Police Department
- Lieutenant Nicholas Reece, Jonesborough Police Department
- Special Agent Phillip Carney, Tennessee Department of Revenue
The FBI Memphis Field Office and the FBI Knoxville Field Office congratulate the five members of the law enforcement community in Tennessee for completing this comprehensive training.
These officers were among the men and women from 47 states and the District of Columbia who completed the 10 weeks of training and became the 286th class to graduate. The class also included members of law enforcement agencies from 25 countries, five military organizations, and six federal civilian organizations.
The FBI National Academy is a professional course of study for U.S. and international law enforcement managers nominated by their agency heads because of demonstrated leadership qualities. The 10-week program—which provides coursework in intelligence theory, terrorism and terrorist mindsets, management science, law, behavioral science, law enforcement communication, and forensic science—serves to improve the administration of justice in police departments and agencies at home and abroad and to raise law enforcement standards, knowledge, and cooperation worldwide.
A total of 54,366 graduates have completed the FBI National Academy since it began in 1935. The National Academy is held at the FBI Training Academy in Quantico, the same facility where the FBI trains its new special agents and intelligence analysts.