
Keynotes, Case Studies, Conference Sessions
Joe is a returning featured speaker at homicide conferences, investigative symposia, and professional development events nationwide. His flagship four-hour Brandyn Foster Homicide case study is in active rotation at state homicide conferences across the Northeast. Every engagement is anchored in 24 years of New York State Police investigative work.
Built from the case file. Delivered by the investigator who closed it.
Keynotes·Case studies·Conference sessions
The Brandyn Foster Homicide is Joe's flagship four-hour case study presentation, built for homicide conferences and investigative symposia. Attendees walk through the advanced warrant tactics (swamping warrants, IMEI tracking, Title III eavesdropping, sneak-and-peek), the digital investigation strategy that rebuilt a timeline the suspect tried to destroy, and the case work that contributed to the development of the Google Tombstone Report. The case began as a missing-person investigation and closed with the recovery of Brandyn Foster's remains and the arrest of three people.
Attendees leave with five search warrant templates drawn directly from the case file, plus investigative guides and tools they can apply immediately to their own active cases. These are not generic forms; they are working documents from a closed homicide investigation, formatted for use by investigators in the room.
The catalog below covers Joe's active speaking topics. Each topic is delivered as a 60- to 90-minute keynote or conference session by default, with longer formats where the topic supports it. Topics are calibrated to your audience, your time slot, and your event theme.
Joe's flagship case study presentation. A 371-day investigation taught from the case file by the lead investigator. Advanced warrant tactics, digital evidence reconstruction, and the case work that contributed to the Google Tombstone Report. Featured at three named state homicide conferences.
Request this topic →The Teach to Talk® philosophy keynote. Why scripted methodology fails under real-world conversational pressure, what cognitive-psychology-based alternatives produce, and how agencies and organizations can move from script-driven training to strategy-driven competency. Built for any LE, legal, HR, or education audience.
Request this topic →Drawn from 1,500-plus search warrants authored across a 24-year investigative career. The seven recurring suppression patterns, the doctrine behind each one, and how disciplined affiants write around them. Companion to The Affiant's Standard, Joe's 50-state search warrant book series.
Request this topic →The neurobiology of memory under acute and chronic stress, the environmental and language choices that produce reliable disclosure, and the documentation standards that hold up at trial. Calibrated for investigators, prosecutors, victim advocates, and Title IX coordinators. The session goes beyond the conventional victim-and-witness application of trauma-informed practice to address an underdiscussed reality: suspects and persons of interest frequently present with their own trauma histories, including adverse childhood experiences, prior victimization, combat or first-responder exposure, and substance-use disorders, all of which influence encoding, retrieval, suggestibility, and the reliability of any statement obtained.
Research from the cognitive interviewing literature, the science on memory and stress, and the false-confession literature converges on a clear conclusion: trauma-responsive interviewing discipline is not a victim-services accommodation, it is a reliability practice that protects the integrity of every interview regardless of the subject's role in the matter. The Teach to Talk® methodology and the Adaptive Strategies Compass™ are explicitly built to accommodate this. The Compass treats trauma-responsiveness as one of its eight adaptive strategies, applicable in real time to victims, witnesses, and suspects alike, and Teach to Talk® replaces script-driven questioning with the kind of adaptive, rapport-anchored dialogue that the trauma literature identifies as most likely to produce reliable narrative recall. The 2-hour format covers the science and the operational shift; the 4-hour format adds applied scenario work across victim, witness, and suspect-interview contexts, with documentation standards calibrated to each.
Request this topic →Drawn from running the New York State Police Polygraph Unit's 1,200-plus applicant exam program and converting it to Directed Lie Comparison Test methodology. Built for police executives, polygraph examiners, and human-resources teams evaluating polygraph use in selection processes.
Request this topic →Joe is a returning featured speaker at the following conferences and symposia. Multi-year rotations indicate the engagement model: case-study presentations that get rebooked when programming committees want to bring back what worked.
Additional conference and symposium appearances available on request.
Event name, host organization, date, audience type, format, and topic of interest. Joe responds personally within 48 hours.
A 20- to 30-minute call covering audience, format, customization, AV requirements, and event logistics.
Written speaking agreement or rider issued. Travel and logistics finalized with the host team. Custom materials development begins after the agreement is countersigned.
Tell Joe about your event. He reads every inquiry personally and responds with either a scoping-call invitation or a direct booking confirmation, typically within one business day.
Your speaking inquiry has been sent to Joe directly. You will hear back within 48 hours, often the same day. Joe reads every inquiry personally. If your event timing is urgent, also call (914) 489-2330.
Tell Joe about your event. The more detail you can share, the faster he can scope a substantive response.
Send a brief inquiry. Joe responds personally within 48 hours, often the same day.