FLETA Board Grants Reaccreditation to Two USAMPS Programs
The Federal Law Enforcement Training Accreditation (FLETA) Board is pleased to announce it granted reaccreditation status to the United States Army Military Police School (USAMPS), Special Victims Capability Course (SVCC) and the Staff and Faculty Development Course (SFDC) at the May 11, 2023, meeting.
The purpose of the SVCC is to provide advanced training to accredited agents, investigators, special victim prosecutors, and select DoD civilian criminal investigators in the investigation of sexual assault. The SVCC consists of 10 instructional days and 80 hours of instruction. The average number of students per iteration of the program is 30.
The purpose of the SFDC is to prepare newly appointed instructors for Military Police courses, to reinforce knowledge gleaned from an Army approved basic instructor course and narrow the focus to USAMPS specific material and information. The SFDC is two instructional days and consists of 16 hours of instruction. The average number of students per iteration of the program is 15.
The FLETA Board is the accrediting body for all federal law enforcement training and support programs. To achieve accreditation, training organizations submit to an independent review of their program and/or academy to ensure compliance with the FLETA Standards and Procedures in the areas of Administration, Training Staff, Training Development, and Training Delivery. Accreditation is a cyclical process occurring every five years. Each year, training organizations must submit annual reports in preparation for reaccreditation, which is a new and independent review of the program/academy.