Source: FBI
Kosovo…Rwanda…Srebrenica. These places will forever be associated with unspeakable, brutal acts of genocide and war crimes.
The global community has banded together
to help prevent crimes like these and to bring to justice the
perpetrators who commit them. The U.S. is part of this international
effort—most recently through the creation of an interagency Atrocities Prevention Board. And the FBI supports the government’s efforts through its own Genocide War Crimes Program.
Today, in an effort to raise awareness
about these crimes and the FBI’s part in helping to combat them, we’re
announcing the launch of our Genocide War Crimes Program website. In
addition to educating the public on our role, the website solicits
information from victims and others about acts of genocide, war crimes,
or related mass atrocities that can be submitted to us through tips.fbi.gov or by contacting an FBI field office or legal attaché office.
Why is the FBI involved, especially since these incidents primarily take place overseas? Take a look at the jurisdiction section of our new website, which explains the 1998 Presidential Executive Order 13107 and the four U.S. laws dealing with genocide, war crimes, torture, and recruitment or use of child soldiers.
According to Special Agent Jeffrey
VanNest, who heads up our Genocide War Crimes Unit (GWCU), our mission
is to “systematically and methodically help track down perpetrators of
genocide, war crimes, and other related atrocities—the worst of the
worst—and apprehend them.”
These types of investigations are among the most complex ones we work.
They typically involve piecing together fragmentary bits of
information, interviewing overseas witnesses in conflict zones,
collecting evidence in other countries, and accommodating language
barriers. And the key to successfully conducting them—according to
VanNest—is cooperation.
“The GWCU works shoulder-to-shoulder with
our U.S. federal partners—most often with the Department of Homeland
Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)—to determine if
there’s a violation of U.S law,” says VanNest. “If so, we envision
working many of these cases jointly with our partners in ICE’s Homeland
Security Investigations.”
Internationally—because the bulk of these
investigations occur overseas—we work through our network of legal
attachés who have established relationships in place with our
counterparts in foreign nations and who coordinate our work with
international criminal tribunals. We also cooperate with INTERPOL.
On the overview section of our new website, you can find out more about how we offer additional support to foreign authorities—such as crime
scene preservation, interviewing techniques, age-enhancing photos,
language services, and increasingly, victim/witness services—and who our primary domestic and international partners are.
Members of the GWCU, usually in
conjunction with our ICE counterparts, coordinate our genocide/war
crimes investigations. Collectively, GWCU agents and intelligence
analysts in the unit are carefully selected for what they can bring to
the table—subject matter expertise, interviewing skills, experience in
past critical incident response, foreign language ability, and
experience working with partner agencies in the U.S. and abroad.
“Our ultimate goal,” says VanNest, “is
to ensure that perpetrators of these heinous crimes find no safe haven
in the United States, or for that matter, no safe haven anywhere in the
world.”