Gaining
Invaluable Experience on the Reservation
It wasn’t long after his arrival in
Indian Country that Special Agent John Fortunato started carrying dog biscuits
in his FBI vehicle. Some of the wild dogs who roam the New Mexico reservations
are a lot easier to befriend or distract when they are offered food.
That’s just one small example of how
investigating crimes in Indian Country makes agents resourceful—and provides
them with an intensive professional experience they may not get anywhere else
in the FBI. “We like to say that six months as an investigator on the
reservation is like two years at any other Bureau office,” Fortunato said.
“That’s mainly because of the nature of the crimes here and our jurisdictional
responsibilities.”
Since 9/11, the FBI has become an
intelligence-based, threat-driven organization. Regarding terrorism, for
example, the mission is to prevent acts of terror rather than investigate them
after they occur. “But in Indian Country,” said Special Agent Lenny Johns, who
supervises our Santa Fe Resident Agency, “the majority of the crimes we have
jurisdiction over are still very reactive for us.”
That means when the FBI is called to the
reservation, usually a serious crime has already been committed. “Our agents,
and particularly new agents,” said Johns, “get a ton of experience in Indian
Country they can apply in other programs later in their careers. That
experience includes deploying—often by themselves—to a remote site within a pueblo
or reservation, dealing with folks that have a different cultural background
than they do, and successfully navigating that environment to conduct
interviews, follow up on leads, collect evidence from a crime scene, and build
a prosecutable case for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.”
“The sheer number of cases we’re
handling adds to the training experience,” said Fortunato, who worked in our
New York Field Office on counterintelligence matters before coming to Indian
Country several years ago. His counterintelligence cases spanned months and
even years. “Here,” he explained, “because we are reacting to crimes, we
investigate an assault or homicide with our tribal partners, and often within a
matter of days we are making an arrest.”
And where he had only a handful of cases
in New York, Fortunato—and most of the agents working in New Mexico’s Indian
Country—have anywhere from 30 to 50 cases to work at any given time. And they
are all major crimes such as murder and child sexual assault.
“It’s a 24-7 job,” noted Special Agent
Mike Harrigan, who supervises an Indian Country squad. “An agent is always on
call. If something happens, even in the middle of the night and the crime scene
is two hours away by car, the on-call agent responds from home. That’s how it works
in Indian Country.”
“The agents and professional staff
working here in Indian Country are as dedicated as any group I have served with
during my 25 years in the FBI,” said Carol K.O. Lee, special agent in charge of
our Albuquerque office. “They really care about the people on the reservations
and making those communities the best and safest places they can be.”
‘A Ton of Experience Right Away’
“Something that makes Indian Country a
unique assignment for our agents is it is a very reactive crime. I particularly
like it for our new agent force because they just get a ton of experience right
away that they can absolutely apply in other programs later in their careers.
That experience includes deploying—often by themselves—to a remote site within
a pueblo or reservation...”
— Special Agent Lenny Johns, Santa Fe
Resident Agency
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