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For IAAR member pricing click here.
This on-demand training is also available on DVD.
Presenter: John Pyrik

The Internet, the most potent information and intelligence tool, is still underutilized and misunderstood by many investigators and analysts. Many treasures lie beneath the "surface Web" that can reveal information that opens the door to important assets and linkages. During this training session, you will receive fascinating and invaluable tools, tips and techniques using this amazing, virtually free 24/7 tool.
Would you like to see what the public records in a far-flung country reveal or what a website that is no longer active showed five years ago? In simple language, he shows you how - and much more. He also describes tools which better organize, visualize and analyze information.
The Internet offers many investigative tools to enhance your cases, many of which are free to use. Understanding the resources offered by the Internet can help you find hidden assets, locate targets, and improve your investigations.
By watching this session you will:
- Understand the difference between the "surface web" and the "deep web," and recognize what this means for your searches and investigations.
- Learn how to view historical web pages from last month or last year, to see information that may have been removed and to help you understand how things have changed for your targets.
- Improve your skills to find public records in foreign countries, and get hints to find aliases and hidden assets.
About the instructor:
With analytical and investigative expertise accumulated from 19 years of experience in the Canadian government, his diverse background includes service as an intelligence officer, securities investigator, and money laundering analyst. An Internet expert, he lectures frequently on exploiting the Internet for information and intelligence.
He is currently the chief instructor and coordinator of Canada's intelligence analyst training program and a consultant to the United Nations Office of Drug Control. He has served as an advisor to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the Canadian Financial Transactions Reports Analysis Centre (FINTRAC) and other agencies on the collection, exploitation and investigative uses of Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) on which he teaches courses. He is a visiting fellow at the Centre of Intelligence and Security Studies at Carleton University in Ottawa.
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