![]() I was the 2nd and last of two Agents who supervised the Employee Assistance Program which I learned is now run by mental health professionals. When I left the Employee Assistance Program around 2000 we had instituted Post Critical Incident Seminars for the employee and spouse, as well as debriefings and trauma education for those working Innocent image cases ( reviewing sexual exploitation cases of children). Jeff and his wife were dramatically impacted by his case work and with the support of his peers sought the assistance he needed the most. Experiencing PTSD myself and having listened to others traumatic events I first did not know that you could also be traumatically stressed out ( vicarious traumatization). The non- support of management greatly exasperates any cumulative stress and promotes a toxic workplace. This podcast thoroughly discussed the reality of depression, PTSD, and suicide as they are present in police work as well as the peer support of fellow Agents and the non- support of management. Pre-arrest photo of Cary Stayner taken just before he confessed to Jeff Rinek regarding the murders. New York Times – : Suspect at Yosemite had Fantasy of Killing Womenĭeseret News – : Details of Yosemite killing given FBI missing persons flyer for the Yosemite tourists Carole Sund, Juli Sund, and Silvina Pelosso. The following are links to newspaper articles regarding the results of Jeff Rinek’s investigation of the Yosemite Park murders of Carole Sund, Juli Sund, Silvina Pelosso, and Joie Ruth Armstrong:ĬBS News – Photo Gallery of Victims and Family from Yosemite Park Murders Each chapter is dedicated to the victims of the cases he worked, including a chapter for his wife and sons. Jeff Rinek is the author of In the Name of the Children: An FBI Agent’s Relentless Pursuit of the Nation’s Worst Predators, his personal account of child predator and murder investigations. He has been featured on numerous TV documentary crime shows, including A&E’s American Justice, TruTV’s Crime Stories, and Investigation Discovery’s Real Detective. He was also a member of the SWAT team and, and a co-pilot in the Sacramento Office’s aviation squad. In 2003, he was named Investigator of the Year by the California Sexual Assault Investigators Association, and in 2006, received an Award for Excellence from the International Homicide Investigators Association. He also served as a certified profiler for the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime. ![]() While assigned to the Sacramento office of the FBI, Jeff Rinek assisted police and sheriffs departments’ throughout Northern California in active and cold-case investigations involving missing children, child kidnappings, and the abuse, exploitation, and murder of children. He also discusses the mental toll working child predator and murder cases had on him, and how his family helped him cope with case related PTSD and attempted suicide. In this episode of FBI Retired Case File Review, Jeff Rinek reviews how he obtained a confession from serial killer Cary Stayner, responsible for the Yosemite Park Murders, the brutal slayings of two women and two teenage girls. ![]() During his career, he primarily investigated cases of missing and murdered children. Retired agent Jeff Rinek served in the FBI for 30 years, two years as a support employee and 28 as a Special Agent.
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