The Florida Law Enforcement Property Recovery Unit, more colloquially known as FLEPRU (FLEE-proo), is a non-profit entity that was started in the Tampa Bay area in 1987 by a group of detectives whose mission was to aid victims in the recovery of their stolen property and increase the effective prosecution of the perpetrators.
FLEPRU provides information, networking, and education not only for sworn law enforcement, but retail, commercial, and recycling industries as well. Additionally, FLEPRU works to enact legislation, and better the statutes already on the books, by lobbying in Tallahassee on behalf of crime victims and cops.
Toward that end, FLEPRU has directed much of its lobbying efforts at tightening Florida State Statutes 538 (Secondhand dealers and secondary metals recyclers) and 539 (Pawnbrokering). The experienced people at FLEPRU have been staunch gatekeepers, attempting to keep the pawn and secondhand dealers from becoming “state-sponsored fencing operations.”
Each year, FLEPRU holds a three day conference in Orlando which becomes and information clearing house and a training seminar for property crimes detectives from all over the state. Having recently settled back into our detective division, I attended this year’s conference along with two rookie detectives from my agency.
Topics for the 2013 FLEPRU convention included:
- Identity Theft Investigation
- Pawn Shop Inspection
- SunPass Operations
- Officer Survival and Interviewing
- EBT Card Fraud
- Smart Phones and Continue reading