Craig Schwartz posting on Santa Rosa Police FB page:
FBI National Academy Update 10-29-12
About 100 members of Session 251 went to New York City last weekend on the class trip that is arranged for each session by the students from NYPD. We loaded the buses on Friday afternoon and drove up to our Hotel a few blocks from Times Square. The 5 hour bus ride went relatively quickly, and we were able to explore Times Square late Friday night. This was my first time there, and it was an incredible place. I kept thinking of the song lyrics about the city that never sleeps. That is absolutely correct. The place was packed late into the night. The big screens all over the place lit up the streets and many were in costume, hopefully for Halloween.
Real Time Crime Center

The group got tours of the NYPD Museum, NYPD Headquarters at One Police Plaza, and the NYPD Special Operations Division at Floyd Bennett Field. One of the NYPD students in our class is a Sergeant assigned to the Real Time Crime Center at headquarters and the other was just accepted into the NYPD Aviation Unit to be trained as a helicopter pilot. The Real Time Crime Center is a great concept. It is staffed 24/7 and has giant screens along one wall with numerous feeds available, from NYPD and private surveillance cameras to cable tv. Their detectives and analysts provide real-time data to officers and detectives working cases on the street. For example, when a major crime occurs, the RTCC can instantly access the 911 call and push it out to the officers on the scene. They can run records checks from numerous sources on names, license plates, etc., find links and get that information out right away to help the cop on the street. It is a great capability. We also saw the Joint Operations Center at headquarters. This is an even bigger operation with screens along all four walls, seats and computers for people from numerous departments. The JOC serves as New York’s EOC, and is manned right now for Hurricane Sandy. The amount of information available in the RTC and JOC is incredible, with much of it focused on NYPD’s mission of counter terrorism.

Special Operations Division
The Special Operations Division put on an air-sea rescue demonstration. They co-locate their aviation and scuba assets, so that they are able to rapidly respond to emergencies in the waters around New York. They also have an impressive boat capability. For the demonstration, they dropped two divers from one of their Bell helicopters (looks like an updated Huey) into the water to rescue a “victim”, and then picked them all up with a Zodiac. The NYPD helicopters, and many of the officers, carry radiation detection devices that are so sensitive they have alarmed for people who recently underwent radiation treatment for cancer.
