Post by Admin on Jun 15, 2015 17:53:39 GMT
FBI Reporting
www.fbi.gov/contact-us
The FBI has offices around the world and can be contacted around the clock, every day of the year.
See When to Contact the FBI for details on our areas of responsibility.
Emergencies:
If someone is in imminent danger, call 911 or your local police immediately. You can also provide information on the FBI’s electronic tip line, which we monitor 24/7. If you do so, please be specific and let us know up front that it is an emergency.
Here’s how to contact us:
To Reach a Specific FBI Office:
FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
FBI Field Offices in the U.S. and Puerto Rico
FBI Legal Attaché Offices in U.S. Embassies Worldwide
Reporting Crime:
You can report violations of U.S. federal law or submit information in a criminal or terrorism investigation as follows:
Use our online Tips and Public Leads form;
Contact your local FBI field office or closest international office;
To report suspicious activity involving chemical, biological, or radiological materials, call (toll-free): 855-TELL-FBI or 855-835-5324.
Report an online scam or e-mail hoax by filing a complaint online with our Internet Crime Complaint Center or by using our online Tips and Public Leads form;
To provide information on select major cases, call our Major Case Contact Center at 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324); and
Note: at this time we do not have a national e-mail address for sending or forwarding investigative information. Some of our local FBI offices, however, do have their own e-mail addresses.
Other Contacts:
Criminal History Checks - Request your identification record or rap sheet.
Business opportunities - Products/services purchased, forms, other resources.
FBI Records/FOIA - To request records or speak with a representative.
Jobs & Careers - Job openings, internships, recruiting events, etc.
National Press Office - For news media. Call (202) 324-3000.
Public Tours - The FBI Education Center is open by appointment.
When to Contact the FBI:
If you have an emergency that requires an immediate law enforcement response, please call 9-1-1 or contact your local Police Department or Sheriff’s Department first.
The FBI is a federal investigative and intelligence agency with jurisdiction in a wide range of federal crimes; national security matters such as terrorism and espionage; cyber/computer crimes and intrusions; and intelligence activities that relate to those missions.
Please contact your local FBI office or submit a tip electronically if you have information about:
Possible acts of terrorism, including violence, funding, or recruitment;
Persons sympathetic to terrorists or terrorist organizations;
Suspicious activities that you believe threaten national security, especially suspicious activities that involve foreign powers or foreign organizations;
Computer crimes or intrusions into computer networks, particularly those associated with national security;
Corrupt activities in state, local, or federal governments or in law enforcement;
Racial or hate crimes, human trafficking (involuntary servitude or slavery), or other civil rights crimes;
Organized crime activities;
Financial crimes that involve fraud, especially corporate fraud, mortgage fraud, or other investment fraud schemes where significant dollar losses have occurred, including those impacting you or your place of work;
Fraud in the health care industry;
Persons who have committed or are planning to commit bank robbery, kidnapping, extortion, or thefts of valuable art, large interstate shipments of goods, or monetary instruments; and activities of violent gangs.
See What We Investigate for more information on our areas of investigative responsibility.
What We Investigate:
Spies. Terrorists. Hackers. Pedophiles. Mobsters. Gang leaders and serial killers. We investigate them all, and many more besides.
The very heart of FBI operations lies in our investigations—which serve, as our mission states, “to protect and defend the United States against terrorist and foreign intelligence threats and to enforce the criminal laws of the United States.” We currently have jurisdiction over violations of more than 200 categories of federal law, and you can find the major ones below, grouped within our national security and criminal priorities. Also visit our Intelligence program site, which underpins and informs all our investigative programs.
In Depth:
Terrorism
- International Terrorism
- Domestic Terrorism
Counterintelligence
- Counterespionage
- Counterproliferation
- Economic Espionage
Cyber Crime
- Computer Intrusions
- Internet Fraud
- Identity Theft
Weapons of Mass Destruction
- Key Programs
Public Corruption
- Government Fraud
- Election Fraud
- Foreign Corrupt Practices
Civil Rights
- Hate Crime
- Human Trafficking
- Color of Law
- Freedom of Access to Clinics
Organized Crime
- Italian Mafia/LCN
- Eurasian
- Balkan
- Middle Eastern
- Asian
- African
- Sports Bribery
White-Collar Crime
- Antitrust
- Bankruptcy Fraud
- Corporate Fraud
- Financial Institution Fraud & Failures
- Health Care Fraud
- Insurance Fraud
- Mass Marketing Fraud
- Money Laundering
- Mortgage Fraud
- Piracy/Intellectual Property Theft
- Securities and Commodities Fraud
- More White-Collar Frauds
Violent Crime and Major Thefts
- Art Theft
- Bank Robbery
- Cargo Theft
- Gangs
- Indian Country Crime
- Jewelry and Gem Theft
- Online Predators
- Retail Theft
- Vehicle Theft
- Violent Crimes Against Children
- More
www.fbi.gov/contact-us
The FBI has offices around the world and can be contacted around the clock, every day of the year.
See When to Contact the FBI for details on our areas of responsibility.
Emergencies:
If someone is in imminent danger, call 911 or your local police immediately. You can also provide information on the FBI’s electronic tip line, which we monitor 24/7. If you do so, please be specific and let us know up front that it is an emergency.
Here’s how to contact us:
To Reach a Specific FBI Office:
FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
FBI Field Offices in the U.S. and Puerto Rico
FBI Legal Attaché Offices in U.S. Embassies Worldwide
Reporting Crime:
You can report violations of U.S. federal law or submit information in a criminal or terrorism investigation as follows:
Use our online Tips and Public Leads form;
Contact your local FBI field office or closest international office;
To report suspicious activity involving chemical, biological, or radiological materials, call (toll-free): 855-TELL-FBI or 855-835-5324.
Report an online scam or e-mail hoax by filing a complaint online with our Internet Crime Complaint Center or by using our online Tips and Public Leads form;
To provide information on select major cases, call our Major Case Contact Center at 1-800-CALL-FBI (225-5324); and
Note: at this time we do not have a national e-mail address for sending or forwarding investigative information. Some of our local FBI offices, however, do have their own e-mail addresses.
Other Contacts:
Criminal History Checks - Request your identification record or rap sheet.
Business opportunities - Products/services purchased, forms, other resources.
FBI Records/FOIA - To request records or speak with a representative.
Jobs & Careers - Job openings, internships, recruiting events, etc.
National Press Office - For news media. Call (202) 324-3000.
Public Tours - The FBI Education Center is open by appointment.
When to Contact the FBI:
If you have an emergency that requires an immediate law enforcement response, please call 9-1-1 or contact your local Police Department or Sheriff’s Department first.
The FBI is a federal investigative and intelligence agency with jurisdiction in a wide range of federal crimes; national security matters such as terrorism and espionage; cyber/computer crimes and intrusions; and intelligence activities that relate to those missions.
Please contact your local FBI office or submit a tip electronically if you have information about:
Possible acts of terrorism, including violence, funding, or recruitment;
Persons sympathetic to terrorists or terrorist organizations;
Suspicious activities that you believe threaten national security, especially suspicious activities that involve foreign powers or foreign organizations;
Computer crimes or intrusions into computer networks, particularly those associated with national security;
Corrupt activities in state, local, or federal governments or in law enforcement;
Racial or hate crimes, human trafficking (involuntary servitude or slavery), or other civil rights crimes;
Organized crime activities;
Financial crimes that involve fraud, especially corporate fraud, mortgage fraud, or other investment fraud schemes where significant dollar losses have occurred, including those impacting you or your place of work;
Fraud in the health care industry;
Persons who have committed or are planning to commit bank robbery, kidnapping, extortion, or thefts of valuable art, large interstate shipments of goods, or monetary instruments; and activities of violent gangs.
See What We Investigate for more information on our areas of investigative responsibility.
What We Investigate:
Spies. Terrorists. Hackers. Pedophiles. Mobsters. Gang leaders and serial killers. We investigate them all, and many more besides.
The very heart of FBI operations lies in our investigations—which serve, as our mission states, “to protect and defend the United States against terrorist and foreign intelligence threats and to enforce the criminal laws of the United States.” We currently have jurisdiction over violations of more than 200 categories of federal law, and you can find the major ones below, grouped within our national security and criminal priorities. Also visit our Intelligence program site, which underpins and informs all our investigative programs.
In Depth:
Terrorism
- International Terrorism
- Domestic Terrorism
Counterintelligence
- Counterespionage
- Counterproliferation
- Economic Espionage
Cyber Crime
- Computer Intrusions
- Internet Fraud
- Identity Theft
Weapons of Mass Destruction
- Key Programs
Public Corruption
- Government Fraud
- Election Fraud
- Foreign Corrupt Practices
Civil Rights
- Hate Crime
- Human Trafficking
- Color of Law
- Freedom of Access to Clinics
Organized Crime
- Italian Mafia/LCN
- Eurasian
- Balkan
- Middle Eastern
- Asian
- African
- Sports Bribery
White-Collar Crime
- Antitrust
- Bankruptcy Fraud
- Corporate Fraud
- Financial Institution Fraud & Failures
- Health Care Fraud
- Insurance Fraud
- Mass Marketing Fraud
- Money Laundering
- Mortgage Fraud
- Piracy/Intellectual Property Theft
- Securities and Commodities Fraud
- More White-Collar Frauds
Violent Crime and Major Thefts
- Art Theft
- Bank Robbery
- Cargo Theft
- Gangs
- Indian Country Crime
- Jewelry and Gem Theft
- Online Predators
- Retail Theft
- Vehicle Theft
- Violent Crimes Against Children
- More