January 19th 2008 Seminar

Inside the Mind
of a Stalker

Motivations and Threat

Assessment of Domestic and Stranger Stalkers

 

Date: January 19, 2008
Place: Fox Theatre,

308 W. Main St. Visalia, CA
Time: 9am to 5pm

 

Audience:

  • Law Enforcement
  • Mental Health Professionals
  • Attorneys

Continuing Education -
Pending for 6 Hours CE by:

  • POST (Peace Officers)
  • BRN (Nurses)
  • CLME (Attorneys)
  • APA (Psychologists)
  • BBS (MFTs & LCSWs)
  • NCC (Certified Counselors)

Sponsored By:

  • Gray Forensics and Consulting
  • Mobile Blood Draws
  • Alliant University
  • Tulare County Sheriff’s Office
  • American College of Forensic Examiners
  • Western Pacific Forensic Response Institute

 

Dr. Eric Hickey, Ph.D.

Dr. Hickey is the Director of the Center for ForDr. Eric Hickey, Ph.D.ensic Studies at Alliant International University. He also teaches criminal psychology at California State University, Fresno, CA. Dr. Hickey has taught many courses in criminal personalities, sex crimes, homicide, psychopathology and criminal psychology. Dr. Hickey has considerable field experience working with the criminally insane, psychopaths, sex offenders and other habitual criminals. He has also served as an adjunct instructor for the American Prosecutor's Research Institute at the National Advocacy Center in Columbia, South Carolina profiling stalkers, cyber-stalkers, criminal personalities and sexual predators. He publishes books, articles and lectures extensively on the etiology of violence and serial crime.

His expertise is regularly sought by the media including appearances on CNN, Catherine Crier Live, NPR, Larry King Live, 20/20, A&E Biography, Good Morning America, Court TV, Discovery and TLC. He consults with private agencies and testifies as an expert witness in both criminal and civil cases. A former consultant to the FBI's UNABOM Task Force, Dr. Hickey currently assists local, state, and federal law enforcement in training and investigations. His research involving hundreds of victims of stalking examines the psychology and classification of stalkers, victim-offender relationships, intervention, and threat assessment.