CJIS Security Policy: Compliance for Law Enforcement and Their Vendors

What the FBI CJIS Security Policy requires, who it applies to, and how to prepare for a CJIS audit, whether you are an agency, a municipality, or a vendor with access to criminal justice information.

The FBI Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) Security Policy governs how Criminal Justice Information (CJI) is accessed, transmitted, stored, and protected by every agency and contractor connected to CJIS systems such as NCIC and III. Unlike many federal frameworks, CJIS compliance reaches far beyond federal agencies: state and local police departments, sheriff's offices, courts, IT vendors, cloud providers, and even janitorial staff with unescorted access to a server room can fall within its scope. This course explains how the CJIS Security Policy is organized, what the 13 policy areas require, how the CJIS Security Addendum extends obligations to private contractors, and what a CJIS audit actually examines. Whether you support a local police department's network or you are the police department, this course gives you a working understanding of the policy and a practical path toward demonstrable compliance.

What's Covered

  1. What CJIS Is and Why the Policy Exists
  2. Criminal Justice Information: What It Is and Who Touches It
  3. The 13 Policy Areas: Access, Identification, and Auditing
  4. Advanced Authentication and Encryption Requirements
  5. Personnel Security and Fingerprint-Based Background Checks
  6. The CJIS Security Addendum and Vendor Obligations
  7. Preparing for a CJIS Audit
  8. Building a Sustainable CJIS Compliance Program
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