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My name is Eric Vand. I'm a superintendent at the Danish National Police. I'm responsible
for the development of all advanced training programs here at the Danish National Police.
I've been in law enforcement for the last 20 years; the first 10 I was working on the
streets of Copenhagen, and for the last 10 years I've been working for with the communication
and training.
I was fortunate enough to be invited to the National Academy program in 2006. It's like
the idea that if you don't look outside your own organization it's pretty hard to get smarter.
I was very impressed about my American colleagues and I was very impressed about the instructors
at the Academy—how they were able to counter-perform. And I mean that in every way positive.
They did deliver. The content was high level, I think. But the way that they did it. I took
a lot of that back with me. I was trying to ... I was instantly trying to implement it
in the way I do things—if I do teaching, if I do leadership.
The other thing was the network. I use that network today. I use the 33,000 members of
the National Academy and I use that not every day but almost every week.
If not every week then every month, somebody from the Danish Police—and they could be
anywhere—asks me, Do you know if the Bureau has a course on analysis or something like
that. Something else. And they will call me. They won't call the organization, they will
call me because they know I went through that program.
I get many requests of, Eric, can you help me get to the National Academy? Can you help?
Because they want to be part of that network. And they want to get to know the Bureau and
how you guys are doing things.