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Federal Bureau of Investigation

    The FBI serves as the United States' domestic intelligence and security service, functioning concurrently as the nation's premier federal law enforcement agency. Operating under the Department of Justice, it is both a member of the U.S. Intelligence Community and accountable to the Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence. As a leading organization in counter-terrorism, counter-intelligence, and criminal investigations, the FBI holds jurisdiction over violations of over 200 categories of federal crimes.

    Ernest Hemingway: The FBI Files
    Handbook of Forensic Services
    Marilyn Monroe. The FBI Files
    • 2015

      Handbook of Forensic Services

      • 68 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      Focusing on the essential procedures for evidence handling, this guide outlines methods for collecting, preserving, packaging, and shipping evidence, crucial for crime investigations. It details the forensic examinations conducted by the FBI's Laboratory Division, emphasizing the importance of forensic analysis in determining guilt or innocence. The FBI's Laboratory is recognized as one of the largest and most comprehensive in the world and holds accreditation from the American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors/Laboratory Accreditation Board.

      Handbook of Forensic Services
    • 2007

      Marilyn Monroe: The FBI Files contains the actual original and declassified criminal investigation files related to Marilyn Monroe, aka Norma Jean Baker, contains published information concerning her alleged affairs and circumstances surrounding her death. This publication is being published and made available now for the first time in a paperback book edition for those interested in the history of the life of Marilyn Monroe and also for those who enjoy reading about this important American actress.

      Marilyn Monroe. The FBI Files
    • 2007

      Ernest Hemingway: The FBI Files contains the actual original and declassified criminal investigation files related to popular American author Ernest Hemingway. Born on July 21, 1898, in Oak Park, Illinois, he became an author after World War I, where he was an ambulance driver for the Italian Army. In 1937 and 1938, he covered the Spanish Civil War for the American Newspaper Alliance. Ernest Hemingway moved to Cuba in approximately 1940, and lived at San Francisco de Paula, about 14 miles east of Havana. Mrs. Ernest Hemingway, the former Martha Gelhorn, was invited to come to Washington, D.C. to visit the week of October 12, 1942, as a personal guest of Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt. In January 1961, Hemingway became ill and was a patient at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Mr. Hemingway committed suicide in 1961. This publication is being published and made available now for the first time in a paperback book edition for those interested in the history surrounding author Ernest Hemingway.

      Ernest Hemingway: The FBI Files