Certified Law Enforcement Analyst (CLEA)

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Background

The IACA has developed criteria and an examination process that will allow applicants to become a Certified Law Enforcement Analyst (CLEA). A certification program provides the foundation on which a profession demarcates the knowledge, skills and abilities necessary for successfully meeting the job duties and responsibilities within its given field. Crime analysis, intelligence analysis, investigative analysis, geographic profiling, police research and planning units and personnel all share a common skill set. In many cases, individual staff members are expected to provide this divergent analytical support to public safety agencies across the globe without formal training or instruction. 

The IACA is committed to developing and administering a comprehensive training and credentialing program to provide analysts, as well as departments, both the framework for excellence and the mechanism for achieving it. The IACA encourages local associations, training programs, colleges and universities to build educational programs around this model, as well as encourages local, state, federal and provincial agencies to adopt these standards of excellence.

Program Outline

The Program Outline explains the genesis and evolution of the Certified Law Enforcement Analyst program.

Skill Sets

The Certified Law Enforcement Analyst program is based on a collection of core skills that analysts are expected to possess. The study guide describes each set in detail.

Becoming Certified

Any analyst wishing to become a Certified Law Enforcement Analyst must meet the following prerequisites:

  1. The applicant must have at least three years of full-time experience as an analyst in the field of law enforcement, intelligence, corrections, or related fields.
  2. The applicant must have earned a minimum of 100 points in combined work and educational experience.
  3. The applicant must be a current member of the International Association of Crime Analysts. 

The first step to becoming certified is to make sure you meet the criteria above. If you have been an analyst for at least three years, you can review the point system on pages 7-8 of the Program Outline to determine if you have accrued the minimum points needed to sit for the exam.

If you meet these requirements, you can begin to collect your supporting documentation and verifying that your IACA membership is active.

Study Guide

The Certification Committee has developed a Certified Law Enforcement Analyst Study Guide to assist you in your preparation to take the exam.

Study Guide (Portuguese)
Study Guide (Spanish)
Study Guide (Deutsche)

For all inquiries relating to Certification, please email [email protected].

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