NW3C and the International Association of Directors of Law Enforcement Standards
and Training (IADLEST) have worked together over the last 18 months to obtain accreditation for 15 NW3C courses
and instructors, with the goal of having all courses and instructors certified in the next two years. IADLEST
has a rigorous national certification process for both training courses and instructors. Each accredited NW3C
course proudly carries the IADLEST seal.
Richmond, VA, February 16, 2022 - State, local, tribal, and territorial police agencies, ranging from those
responsible for urban areas addressing violent crime to rural and underserved agencies, need access to training
from trustworthy and credible sources. Unfortunately, those agencies are often facing reductions in training
budgets. As a result, when police leaders work to identify training sources, they are often faced with the
challenge of ensuring that it is consistent, high-quality, accepted by the State POST for police training
standards, and affordable.
NW3C and the International Association of Directors of Law Enforcement Standards
and Training (IADLEST) have worked together over the last 18 months to obtain accreditation for 15 NW3C courses
and instructors, with the goal of having all courses and instructors certified in the next two years. IADLEST
has a rigorous national certification process for both training courses and instructors. Each accredited NW3C
course proudly carries the IADLEST seal.
Thanks to funding from the Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice
Assistance (BJA), police investigators, analysts, and patrol officers now have access to high-quality
investigative and forensic training available at no cost. In addition, they can be confident training
carrying the IADLEST national certification is accepted for officer in-service credit in all participating
states.
BJA Principal Deputy Director Kristen Mahoney appreciates the collaborative partnership between
NW3C and IADLEST that ensures nationally certified technical investigative and forensic training is
available to law enforcement. She said, "Both organizations receive funding from BJA that allows them
to offer their services to law enforcement at no cost. This enables advanced training opportunities
for law enforcement as they build trust, improve public safety, support victims and do so with a deep
respect for civil rights and civil liberties."
NW3C President and CEO Glen Gainer said, "Last year, NW3C was able to bring
live online training to over 11,000 practitioners and delivered an additional 23,000 online
on-demand classes. Working with IADLEST as an independent certification authority makes us a
better training provider and ensures that we deliver training designed with the highest possible
standards. We are proud to bring this training to both urban departments battling high levels of
violent crime and rural underserved agencies working to deliver professional police services to
the communities they serve—all at no cost to the agency, thanks to funding provided by BJA."
IADLEST Executive Director Michael Becar said, "We commend NW3C for achieving National Certification
on their training courses that have met rigorous standards, incorporate best practices and have been
reviewed by outside subject matter experts. NW3C is committed to providing best-in-class training which
engages the students and requires their participation throughout the training."
IADLEST’s mission is to support the innovative development of professional standards in public safety
through research, development, collaboration, and sharing of information, to assist states and
international partners with establishing effective and defensible standards for the employment
and training of public safety personnel. Learn more at www.iadlest.org.
NW3C, headquartered in Richmond, Virginia, has been a nationwide support system for law enforcement and
regulatory agencies tasked with preventing, investigating, and prosecuting economic and high-tech crime
for over 40 years. NW3C develops and delivers economic crime investigation, high-tech crime investigation,
digital forensics, criminal intelligence, and other criminal justice training and technical assistance.
Funding from BJA and other sources allows it to provide training and other services at no cost to state,
local, tribal, and territorial criminal justice practitioners throughout the United States. Learn more at
www.nw3c.org.
Media inquiries and interview requests for NW3C can be directed to Michelle Kreps at
media@nw3c.org.