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The question 'What is security' appears simple but answers will keep readers, academics, and reporters thinking throughout this 11-paged investigation. This non-fiction work's added 2-paged conclusion leads Politicians to realize terrorism is not new, that police only began getting paid by government in 1800 and 60 billion dollars is too great an amount to expend annually on the new U.S. Cabinet of Homeland Security which neither provides global security nor performs police work.
Indistinguishable, the U.S. Department of Justice boasts a broad array of national security, federal law enforcement, and criminal justice responsibilities while funding local law enforcement partners to bring counter-terrorism, counter-intelligence, and foreign intelligence surveillance operations under a single authority separate from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
"On Security and the 50 States' Departments of Corrections" also includes an additional 4-page insert detailing U.S. expenditure on prisons. That report may be noted by U.S. Department of Justice Officials, non-profits applying research to practice in criminal justice, and Congressional policy-makers controlling purse-strings.
In all this 41-page work contains over 225 in-text research citations with complete bibliographic material and links their sources of information. It also includes several images, tables, and charts on security including a Praetorian Guard statue plus a listing of federal agencies employing personnel with arrest and firearm authority.
Although undefined within, this research prompted submission of a Freedom of Information Act request to The U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Office of Intelligence and Analysis August 11, 2014 seeking definition of 'Pursuit Lead Cable' which arises as part of the paper's taxpayer cost-benefit review, cited in two DHS Secretaries' ' "Budget-in-Briefs" across fiscal years 2014-2015 as 'Pursuit Cables' and 'Pursuit Lead Cables.' Seventeen months later â–²Church has not received 187 pages of documents referencing cables purportedly disseminated to the Intelligence Community by a U.S. Department of Homeland Security after information was denied on the basis of protecting intelligence sources under the National Security Act of 1947. This company has not filed a complaint in U.S. District Court to order the release of documents pertaining to 'Pursuit Cable' since The Department of Homeland Security illegally tolled time provisions violating 5 U.S.C. 552 as amended by Public Law 110-175 and won't return email or telephone inquiries seeking determination of Church Publishing's appeal.
Reasonably valued 'On Security' includes key statistics about U.S. Security, COINTELPRO, and the history of public policing leading to 2008 when the number of full-time U.S. employees working in local law enforcement was 1,133,915, as well as research on 50 States' Departments of Corrections. The insert lists each state's annual expenditure on prisons then totals local spending with the Federal Bureau of Prisons' FY15 budget to estimate total cost of incarceration paid by Americans. Considering government now spends approximately $1.4 trillion annually keeping Americans free from fear and harm, investment in research making informed citizens is as easy as clicking 'Buy.' Purchase "On Security and the 50 States' Departments of Corrections" today!