FBI Handbook Contents1.
Rank Structure2.
Divisions3.
Pursuits4.
Miranda Rights5.
Radio Codes6.
Vehicle and Weapons InformationI.
Ranking StructureIntern(R0)Staff(R1)Agent(R2)Senior Agent(R3)Special Agent(R4)Assistant Director(R5)Director(R6)- Intern: Interns are the very new hired FBI personnel. They will be trained well before making a case.
They will have to make one good case before getting promoted to Interns, just to make sure they've learned the ropes.
They will also be undercover all the time, unless stated otherwise by an Assistant Director or above.
[1] Staff: Staffs are the FBI's newcommers. They've been trained enough as Agents.
They will still be working undercover for making casefiles, etc. Pretty much what Agents do but soon these will be promoted to Senior Agent if enough good job is shown.
[2] Agent: Agents are the core of the bureau. They are well trained and know what they're doing.
Agents will be mainly expected to make cases then report to the Special Agent in Charge in order to execute an arrest warrant.
They will be also the FBI's tactical breaching team. Most of them will be public agents patrolling around to make sure everything's in order.
[3] Senior Agent: Senior Agents are agents who have shown enough loyality and good job to be trusted on something bigger.
They will be only three special agents, each of them will be the head agent in charge of either "Criminal Investigative Division", "Counter-terrorism Division" or "Critical Incident Response".
[4] Special Agent: Special Agent is as the title says, he's in charge of the whole bureau.
He approves casefiles, excutes warrants. All agents should report to him if anything goes wrong, he's your portal to the Director and his Assistants.
[5] Assistant Director: The Area Assistant Director is doing a lot of stuff behind the screen. The job of the Assistant Director is to help the Director with leading the Bureau.
He will be doing almost everything the Director does such as interviews, feedback on cases, and having conversations with the members about how they are doing and such.
[6] Director: The Area Director is the head of the Bureau. He will be doing a lot of paperwork, writing guidelines, talking with other
faction leaders, and give his feedback to the FBI personnel in their cases and/or activities.
[R0]:
- You are prohibited from joining a division
- You are not allowed to use the department radio without permission
- You must always listen to your supervisors (Senior Agents and above)
[R1]:
- You are allowed to use the department radio with a valid reason..
- You work more freely than the Intern.
- You must always listen to your supervisors.
- You must produce casefiles or do operations.
- You may join a division.
[R2]:
- You are not allowed to use the department radio without a valid reason.
- You are expected to show a professional attitude at all times.
- You must produce casefiles or do operations.
- You may instruct/guide Interns.
[R3]:
- You are allowed to use the department radio.
- You are expected to be trustable in the most diary missions.
- You may be in charge of operations.
- You are allowed to recommend other Agents for promotion.
- You may launch training and interview sessions with Interns who are in the FBI Academy.
[R4]:
- You are allowed to use the department radio.
- You may give permissions and issue orders to [Intern (R0) - Special Agent (R3)]
- You are required to supervise and maintain activity
- You may be in charge of operations
- You are allowed to recommend other Agents for promotion
- You are required to process casefiles (accept/deny)
- You are considered a Field Commander (perform duties of Director/Assistant Director in their absence)
Reminder for Rank 4:Do not be bossy if the Director/Assistant Director is in their absence.
[R5-R6]:
-Complete Acess
II.
DivisionsCID-(Critical Incident Division), the muscle of the FBI is comprised of Agents that are almost always in uniform, or in a suit. They carry out any of raids or arrests that are needed from casefiles derived from GU or FAN. There Agents are known for their professionalism and skillsets that make them versatile Agents.
FAN-(Firearms and Narcotics) is comprised of most of the FBI's undercover Agents. Their jobs are to investigate criminals that operate within the area of operations. These Agents may work together with Critical Incident Division Agents from time to time to complete operations, but they are completely undercover. These agents are required to know how to make case-files and are expected to keep their cover.
GU-(Gang Unit) is the most elite division of undercover agents. they are responsible for investigating gangs with in the whole State of San Andreas, they must keep in their cover, not to blow it up in any term to save lives. as a GU Agent, You are expected to implement new systems with the Gangs, to start working your way within the Gangs, pushing up to raids with clear evidence in Casefiles.
IA-(Internal Affairs) is responsible for investigating law enforcement agencies and other government personnel. IA evaluates the performance of FBI agents each week, and tabs on them. However, the IA Department of FBI is completely different from another IA Agencies, since it investigates all the government personnel, and matters. the FBI is authorized to give-away punishments to other staff personnel of Law Enforcements with a clear evidence provided in Casefiles and Operations.
III.
PursuitsPursuit Tactics
This is some information that can be extremely useful in vehicle pursuits. These tips won't make you a pursuit god, but they will provide useful information that can hopefully be used and applied to the real world. Communicate is key in pursuits, probably more-so than the actual driving, which is why it will be explained thoroughly in this section.
Introducing the Pursuit
The introduction to the pursuit is the most important part of communication. You must be sure that you have all of the necessary information, else you will "um", "ar", and stutter. That can possibly confuse responding units. Information sent over the radio should be as clear as possible.
Necessary Details
1. Vehicle Model (ie. Sultan, Esperanto, Rancher)
2. Passengers (Total & ethnicity if known, status of any if they are personally known. ie Wanted.)
3. Vehicle Color
4. Direction of Pursuit (ie. Westbound.)
5. Units required. (ie. Two units.)
6. Reason for pursuit. (ie. Attempted murder and fleeing the scene.)
7. Vehicle Speed (Approximated. ie. 60MPH.)
8. Next landmark (ie. "St Lawrence Boulevard North toward Vinewood 24/7.)
An example of how this would be announced in a broadcast is as follows.
Agent Smith to Central, Vehicle Pursuit (10-80), Northbound on St Lawrence Boulevard toward Vinewood 24/7 (10-20). Vehicle is a Red Sultan, 2 black male occupants, one white male, I require aerial assistance, this is a most wanted suspect on charges of First Degree Murder, Vehicle is continuing north at approximately 90 Mph.
There is a reason why the details are given in that order. You start with notifying a vehicle pursuit, this is a sign for all other transmissions to stop as yours takes priority, you then give a location so that all units are able to re-route. What they are going there for is unimportant at that point, a location is more important. Vehicle is then given so that upon arrival the units know what to go for along with the people inside. You then declare the vehicles you request on the pursuit, any units who are not needed will simply drop their siren and return to patrol.
The option is also then there that the units that stand off to patrol can concentrate patrol to that area. If the pursuit passes by them then obviously they will join. The crime of the suspect is then given so that caution can be applied as necessary followed by a reiteration of direction and speed.
Update of Location
The Lead Vehicle should have constant sporadic transmissions, not one giant one that runs on forever. It becomes very tedious for any assisting units to listen to one person gargling on for several minutes and they will begin to lose concentration. Your transmissions should be brief and direct. No unnecessary speaking should be in there.
When you change directions, instead of stating the compass direction, instead state left, right or straight forward. Compass direction updates should be issued every 30 seconds to minute so that any units approaching know which direction to head in.
Contact with the Vehicle
Contact with the vehicle is one way of stopping it, another is just chasing it until it get's bored and eventually stops. Be very careful with contact because it can go disastrously wrong and end up in you losing the vehicle or putting yourself in a lot of danger. Look at how many units you have available and the speeds that they are traveling at.
PIT Maneuver
PIT maneuver is always the first option given. It is done when the pursuit vehicle comes up behind the target vehicle and smashes in the back half of the vehicle. If the vehicle is not extremely tall, it should work most the time. The PIT will send the vehicle spinning out of control and into a complete stop. If traveling at high speeds, or if the vehicle is top-heavy, it could possibly flip and injure the suspect inside.
Box Maneuver
The box maneuver is also an effective way to stop a vehicle while minimizing casualties. If two pursuit vehicles are present, it can be performed by one pursuit vehicle going in front of the target vehicle. The front pursuit vehicle then needs to stop abruptly, preferably facing perpendicular to the direction that the target vehicle is traveling. That way, if the target vehicle turns, the front target vehicle either goes forward or backwards to stay in front of the vehicle. Meanwhile, the back target vehicle needs to tail-gate the target vehicle so it cannot backup anymore. If done correctly, the target vehicle will have nowhere to go. This severely minimizes casualties as it doesn't run the risk of flipping cars like the PIT maneuver does.
IV.
Miranda RightsMiranda Rights are used when you have cuffed/arrested a suspect.
You should memorize this,if not you'll get demoted/kicked out of the department.
Why are you gonna get kicked if you don't memorize the rights?:Because the Miranda Rights are important when you are arresting a suspect.
(There are other importance about it,but I can't remember it.)
The rights can be spotted below:
“You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say/do can and will be used against you in a court of law. You have a right to call your personal/private attorney. If you cannot afford an attorney, one will be appointed for you.”
V.
Radio Codes** 10 Codes **
10-1: All units meet at _ _ _ _
10-3: Stop transmitting / Clear the radio
10-4: Roger that, received and understood
10-5: Please repeat
10-6: Disregard
10-7: Busy
10-14: Requesting pickup at _ _ _ _
10-20: Location
10-21: Report your status
10-22: Report to _ _ _ _
10-56: Computer check
10-61: Suspect description
10-70: Assistance required
10-70 ECHO: Emergency assistance required
10-70 TANGO: Tactical Team required immediately
10-71: Ambulance required
10-98: No further assistance required
10-99: Situation concluded
** Status Codes **
Status 1: Off duty
Status 2: On duty
Status 3: Going on break
Status 4: Patrolling
Status 6: Currently on the scene
** Identity Codes **
IC1: White
IC2: Black
IC3: Latino
IC4: Middle Eastern
IC5: Asian
IC6: Unknown ethnicity
Vehicle Use
The Turismo:
The turismo may only be used by Senior Agents or above.This is a fast vehicle,so it can just be used for hot pursuits or there is a situation that you should be there quickly like in 5 minutes.But,if you get caught ****/driving around with the vehicle for no reason.You will get punished or demoted.Also,you can only use this vehicle when you are on-duty.

The Rancher:
The rancher is great for raids or when you are driving around. Any ranks are allowed to use this vehicle but you can only use it if you are on-duty.
If you use this vehicle when you're off duty you will be punished. This vehicle is also great for transports of arrested suspects.
((Just ask permission from the Director about the vehicles,it's so longgg =D ))
That's all.
Signed by,
FBI Director:Unknown.