Tune in to the Docusign Law Enforcement & Public Safety podcast series and discover how agencies deliver timely justice by leveraging a secure digital document management system. Explore how the Docusign platform modernizes e-signature, eWarrant and subpoena processes to protect your organization’s sensitive information and optimize document workflows.
Anthony Jimenez
Welcome to the DocuSign law enforcement podcast, where we'll explore the latest innovations transforming public sector operations. In today's episode, we dive into a game changer for law enforcement e-warrants. E-warrants are reshaping how agencies handle critical processes, driving efficiency, accuracy and faster justice. You'll hear from experts who break down how this technology streamlines workflows, reduces errors and ensures officers spend more time in the field and less time on paperwork. Whether you're in law enforcement policy or it, this episode offers valuable insights into the future of digital warrants. Let's get started.
Jeff McKinley
Today, we're going to cover a broad variety of topics. I'll introduce some of the folks that will be participating today, so you'll be familiar with the speakers, and then we'll get into some details, presenting to you some of the challenges that we hear when we're talking to folks in the field about the e-warrants process, we'll talk about the solution that DocuSign presents to some of those challenges, and we'll hear it directly from somebody who's very familiar with those challenges. Our distinguished speaker today, Chief Greg Gorek from Hane City, Florida. We'll also get a chance to see the DocuSign solution in action first. Who's presenting today? As I mentioned, my name is Jeff McKinley. I'm a lead solution consultant with DocuSign, and I've been here for about three years serving the public sector team for the East region. Along the way, you also get a chance to hear from Jeremy Cooper Smith, our consulting manager for the East Coast for public sector, who has a wide variety of experiences with all sorts of use cases, including being one of the innovators that helped come up with the E war solution that you'll hear about today from Chief Gorek. So, what exactly is it that we're all here today to solve, and why would so many people be interested in this? Well, the first thing that I have to point out is, in my experience, over my many years in software and technology, the most common thing that people are trying to do is make things more efficient so that they can improve processes, collect data or save time, and interestingly enough, all of those things can be achieved when we digitize processes. So, no matter if we're talking to a customer in our private sector that's a commercial type of business, or the folks we talk to in the public sector, those challenges persist and can often be overcome with digitizing a process. It's not often expected, though, that that digitization is what's driving law enforcement outcomes, but it very much does, providing time back to individuals, giving them the time they need in the field to support the community. It also improves user experience for those working with the various solutions to allow them to do their job more expeditiously and through the data elements and the workflow process is being streamlined, improves compliance. Those are outcomes that we expect to share with you throughout the presentation today, and you might be wondering, how is it that we know we can achieve those things? Let me tell you a little bit about the challenges we hear in the field when we're talking to folks in positions probably much like your own. The word process itself can often have many delays, and those delays in the process result in lost time, which of course, leads to potential loss of sensitive resources or evidence. The delayed actions when completing a warrant also get interrupted by communication delays in just general geography of where people reside, where they are at any given moment or any given time of day, and those continuous delays can increase the risk or impact how justice is actually served, and when that occurs, it diminishes community trust in our public safety. None of us want that. I'll note here as well that there are very few times that I speak to an audience that time is as critical as it is for all of you in the processes and the roles that you play in our daily lives, the only other place that's even close when I speak to them is in health care, those that are doctors and nurses on the front lines of saving lives in an emergency room, for instance, and in The field, that's what you're doing every day, saving lives, protecting lives, making sure that justice can be served. And these are the challenges that get in the way of you doing that. We appreciate that, and we want to help you overcome those challenges as well. So, DocuSign solution gives you an ability to overcome those challenges with a digital solution that's. Highly secure, digitizing the word and experience so that details data can get into a system in a very user-friendly way and give you the ability to ensure that the process moves smoothly end to end in the most efficient way possible for speed of expediting that warrant. So how do we solve those challenges? What is it that we're doing that allows you to do this? I'm sure a lot of you know what DocuSign is. Our name is synonymous with the industry that we helped create in the E signature realm. But we do a whole lot more than that, too. The process behind getting to those signatures is really what drives a lot of how we help our customers. So when we talk about lost time, communication delays, or increased risk of missing out on how a process in a warrant is served, we can help you create, manage and send warrant anytime, anywhere, and make sure that that process gets to the right people to allow the appropriate not only distribution, but collaboration along the way between those multiple parties to access and review the documents simultaneously. This helps ensure that everything is done with the appropriate data, the appropriate information necessary to complete a successful war, gets them signed anywhere at any time, all in a secure, legally binding way to make them compliant with legal standards. Now, what does that mean for you? Well, reducing the issuance time, increasing consistency and visibility and improving compliance, which leads to safer communities. There's a lot that goes into that, and along the way, with those, we help organizations save an average of 2.2 hours per war at reducing the risk of errors or rework. You don't have to do things over when it's done digitally and they're required fields along the way, by automating the routing and tracking, there's a huge time savings with that, and those hours saved on providing the warrant leads to time serving the public. Expediting the form processing requires less staff, meaning more time in the field, and standardizing the processes to gain efficiency as well as consistency, what it means is a 40% reduction in document processing times, reducing manual tasks, those tasks that we have to do where we print, scan and send documents, allowing us to eliminate back logs and focus on what we need to do right now, in the immediacy and urgency of a particular situation that improves our turnaround times and improves our ability to serve the public. Let's move forward. I'm going to turn our meeting over to Jeremy Cooper Smith, as I mentioned, public sectors East solution consulting manager for DocuSign, who will tell us more about our distinguished guest today.
Jeremy Cooper Smith
Jeff, thank you so much, and thank you to everyone for attending today, I have the distinguished pleasure of introducing our feature speaker for today, who I've known for little over eight years now, Chief Greg Gork of Hane City, Florida. He's been working in law enforcement full time for over 28 years. I know the chief Gore comes from law enforcement heavy family, if you will. He is president of the Polk County Police Chiefs Association. He has been since 2023 as well as serving on the highway safety committee for Florida Police Chiefs Association, he is also the award winner of the distinguished Kremler Leadership Award chief gore. We have three items that we'd love to hear from you today, being that you are one of our experts in the E-warrants field, we'd like you to discuss, if you would please, some of the pain points that you were trying to work through when you looked to digitize your process, not only that, but also discuss, what are the success stories? What are some of those great things that you got out of utilizing a digitized process for E-warrants. And then also, of course, what led you to choose DocuSign as your partner to do this. It really is an exciting opportunity for everyone on the call to hear this. And Greg, allow me to turn it over to you.
Greg Gorek
All right. Jeremy, thank you very much. I appreciate you. Let me start off by saying is that I'm a cop, just like everybody else that's on this webinar, I'm not here as any type of paid endorser. I'm not here because I have stock in the company. I'm here because, if there's something in our job that can make our job easier, safer for our folks, create an avenue or a medium to make our jobs more efficient than I'm going to speak from the top of the mountains to tell all my peers in law enforcement about it, and right now, Doc. Sign, and the ability to use that in an e-warrant process, as well as in other processes, is one of those things that anytime I have the opportunity, or the ability to speak to my peers in law enforcement, I want to make them aware of it in case they're not using it if they are, for them to at least compare and see if what they're using has the same abilities as DocuSign. So that's I like to put that out first, because I don't want anybody thinking I'm a hired gun. I'm a hired gun or a paid gun. I receive no benefits from this, other than being able to see other agencies benefit from it. So I'll go ahead and get started and kind of tell you where we came from and how we became involved with DocuSign, as far as my agency I was previously at, which was the Polk County Sheriff's office here in Florida, as well as the current agency I met, which is the Hane City Police Department and every other law enforcement agency in our Judicial Circuit, which prizes 27 municipal, county and state agencies that use the DocuSign system for our electronic warrants. So, at the time, I was a Jeremy. Jeremy and I argue about this sometimes, I guess I was a lieutenant, maybe a sergeant, in our traffic Homicide Unit at the chair at the sheriff's office, and we would be out, of course, the farthest distance you could, the very edge of your jurisdiction. We would get a DUI, manslaughter, or some type of traffic homicide, and we would need a search warrant, and we were still doing paper documents. And as you all know, if you grew up in this business and you were still doing paper documents, very tedious, very time consuming, especially if you had to go find a judge, and the judge was on the other side of the jurisdiction. So, we develop probable cause, we go find some place to sit down with our laptop, we type our warrants. We'd have to go find a printer, print it out, and then hope everything was correct, find the judge that's on call, drive sometimes to another county, because our judicial circuits made up of three counties, and a judge can live anywhere in this county, so it would always be the farthest county away that we'd have to go to, and we'd have to go there and present to the judge, and hopefully, if there was no errors, and then the judge would sign it, then we'd have to drive it back and we'd have to execute it. Execute it. This equated to hours from the point of conception to the point of driving it, getting it signed and bringing it back. And if you're talking about a DUI case, most of the time the folks are sobering up at that point. They got adrenaline flowing and everything else. And you know, they're getting sober. So, it was really starting to hurt our cases, and I'm a guy who doesn't just sit back and take things as it is. So, I got with our State Attorney's Office, and I was like, listen there, there's gotta be a better way to do this. We have technology, we have laptops, we have cellular modems. There's gotta be a way that we can do this electronically. The statutes in our area, in our state, had been changed to allow for the elect the use of electronic search warrants, electronic arrest warrants, and the ability to send them electronically to accept e signatures. So, I said the laws in place. That's always your hardest obstacle is getting the law in place. So, let's use technology to our advantage. I'm a pretty persistent person, so I think my pestering paid off, because they wanted to do it internally, and they finally could not get the process up and running. So, I think the comment at the time was, well, if you're so smart, figure it out, go ahead. You've got our blessing. So, I took that as a challenge, and I started on my end with the blessing of my agency at the time and my Sheriff, Sheriff Jud to go forth with this project and see what I could do. So, I looked at a variety of companies that offer different ways to send electronic documents. Some of them said they were actually designed for E warrants and for sending the products. And none of them was the whole shebang. None of them could take me from the beginning of the process to where I wanted to go, which was the end. I wanted a process that was seamless. I didn't want it to stop in the middle, and then we reverted back to a paper process. We started electronically. I wanted to end electronically. Anybody that touched it did so electronically. So, there was always a footprint. There was no, no ability for the document to get lost, changed or whatever. So probably about an eight, eight month vetting process of going through. And I finally, just by happenstance, during a real estate transaction used DocuSign, and I seeing what DocuSign could do just in that real estate transaction, I said, I think this has the ability to be modified to use it in the in the private sector, or, sorry for the public sector, just like it's being used in the private sector. So reached out, contacted some folks, and I finally got hooked up with Jeremy Cooper Smith, who you met earlier, and we were able to start spit balling and, you know, networking and, you know, brainstorming, basically, how can we make this work for a law enforcement agency? And we were able to finally, going back and forth, come up with a process that enabled us to initiate a search warrant from the officer perspective, get it to the State Attorney's Office, let the State Attorney's Office view it, then send it to a judge. The judge can review it and sign it comes back to the officer, the officer can print the copy, because, as most of us know, you still have to print out a copy of the search warrant and leave it for the person, place or thing that's being searched, and then once it's done, send it back through the clerk's office, send it back through the State Attorney's Office, until it's finally resolved and concluded in the process. And it took some trials and tribulations. They didn't all happen perfectly, but we were able to come up with a free a flow format, as far as how the process would work, and we got it out on paper, and that enabled us to create a demo of the process that we could then take to our shareholders. Now that's the big thing. I've looked on your survey here, and I can see that your two top things are legal concerns and technical limitations. You know the legal concerns, as long as you have your you know your statutes in place, or your local ordinances that allow you to do this, that's the biggest hurdle. Policies are easy to change. You can change your policy in a day, so if it's something that's going on with, well, we've always done paper warrants. We've always done it this way. You know you can change your policies. The biggest hurdle is going to be with your state, and it's ours, or with if it's federal agencies we're talking to, you know your codes to allow you to be able to use electronic process, but most of the states I've talked to allow for it, so I don't think that's gonna be as big a hurdle as many agencies think. So. The other hurdle you that's probably not on here, and probably wasn't on the poll here, is, how do we get buy in from all those parties that are involved, your shareholders? And the first thing we want to do is we want to get everybody on board that's going to be in the process. So, we had a process in place. We had a demo set up. Now, how do we get the shareholders in place? And so, we formed a committee. We formed what we called a special projects team between law enforcement, State Attorney's Office, the judiciary, the clerk's office, anybody that would be involved in a process. And we all came together, and we stayed on this little committee, and we iron things out in the process. And we said, what would you like to see if you didn't have to be bothered by somebody knocking on your door at three o'clock in the morning, or barging in your office, or barging in your courtroom, coming into your office when you're already trying to take care of daily business the clerk's office or the state attorney's office. How would you like to see this process worked? And by coming together a collaboration, we learned one thing right off the bat, we had 27 different agencies that are doing business in our Judicial Circuit, and we had 27 different versions of a search warrant. Every agent see through time in Word or whatever they were using, had modified their search warrants so that almost none of them were identical, and they were making it through the State Attorney's Office. They were making to the judiciary. And each one had good, solid points. Some had some very weak points on them. So, the first thing we did was be able to create a unified template that everybody used for all 27 agencies, all three counties within the Judicial Circuit. And once we did that, we got buy in from the State Attorney's Office. We got buy in from the judges, because everything was uniform. We got rid of redundant processes that we've been doing for years that nobody could explain why. Why were we providing a copy of this warrant to this person here? Well, we don't know. Well, when we send it over here to the clerk's office, what happens? Well, it goes in a box. What does it do? It sits in a box. Well, how long does it sit in a box? Well, until the retention is over. Then we shred it. Well, do you need a paper copy? No, we've taken an electronic copy. So, all these things, we were able to eliminate and streamline the process. So, we did some sample warrants. We did it in what we called our sandbox, or our demo mode, and we got buy in from the judges the state and the clerk's office. Everybody was happy. They said they liked it. So now we had to get buy in from law enforcement. The easiest way we did that was to bring in all representatives from all 27 agencies. We sat in one room, and we showed them what we were trying to accomplish. We showed them that we had buy in from the State Attorney's Office, we had buy in from the judiciary, the clerk's office, that they wanted to move forward. So not only do we have the power of this technology, we were trying to show that we were going to save them money, we're going to save them man hours, we're going to save them gas. We're saving them time. But then we also had the judges, the State Attorney's Office and the clerk's office also kind of blowing those windows on our sails of trying to push this ship along, saying we're going to move forward this process. Help us make this happen. And I will say that my Sheriff, at the time, Sheriff Jud, took a big leap, and he said, I tell you what, we're going to make absolutely no burden on your agencies. And he actually picked up the tab for the first year, offer to for the first year, to pick up that tab and say we're going to take care of any expenses that's associated with the cost of DocuSign, as far as what we call envelopes, and to understand the terminology from the beginning of a document to the end of a document, DocuSign refers to those as envelopes, and you pay for the service by the number of envelopes. And you know, so when you start your warrant as it moves all the way through the process until it's done, it's considered one envelope. So, he paid for the cost of the envelopes for all 27 agencies, and said, Let's move forward with this. You're not out anything other than your time and trying to do this. All the agencies thought about it, and before they left the room that day, they said, Yeah, let's do this. We. The benefit in let's do it so we were able to create that process and move forward. And we again, we just started with search warrants. I can tell you why. Six weeks in that, the judges had called me to their meeting that they have either quarterly or monthly, and they were saying, we need to expand this. We love it. We love how the search warrants are being done electronically. Let's move it to arrest warrants. In fact, let's move it to any document that we have that we can do electronically. So, we're doing arrest warrant, search warrants, JV, pickup orders, forfeiture orders, confidentiality orders, anything that we could send through that they were allowing it. They would simply follow the statute, and then they would change their judicial, judicial codes or judicial orders that they had to allow for it to happen. The judges were loving the fact of again, they might get called in the middle of the night saying a warrant was coming, but they didn't have to get dressed. They didn't have to get out of bed. They pulled up their, you know, either smartphone, tablet, whatever it may be, and they got the document on there, and they're able to sign it. So, we took care of all of our stakeholders. Everybody's on board, everybody's happy with it, and we're moving forward. So, some of our pain points that we've learned about is, you know, we have a lot of judges in our Judicial Circuit. They like to change being on call. So how do we keep up to date on what judges are on call? Well, we use something, what's called a signing group, and we have all, basically all the judges have the ability to sign a warrant, but we've been able to create our process in our templates so that only the judges on call and has the what we call the on call device, whether it be a smartphone or a tablet, that's the only device that gets alerted to the fact it is a warrant ready to be signed. So now, only the judge who's on call has an on-call devices being bothered or being notified in a wee hours of morning that there's a warrant to be signed or to be to be acted upon. If it's during a business hours and they happen to be on a on the bench and they have to be hearing a case, either they're ja or them have the device and when it alerts, then they simply can either hopefully on recess, hopefully not during the trial, but maybe during the trial, if it's a boring one, they're able to go through, read the warrant, approve it, deny it, whatever it is, without missing a beat. There's no more having to stop court, have the detectives come up, get them to sign the warrant, and then resume court. It is. It's really been a hit to all the parties involved. The state attorneys out love it all. Their attorneys were issued departmental smartphones, and we've literally had attorneys who approved warrants while their kids baseball games. They've been there watching the baseball games. They don't have to stop; they don't have to leave. They can check it on their phones. They can sign it, they can reject it, they can make notes, whatever the case may be, and they can move the documents down the line. One of the things that we did to help ease our pain of getting people trained is that I created what was called Power Point tutorials, and I would painstakingly go through step by step processes and created, basically, for those of you who, who remember, in our youth, we had those books of you know, like Excel for Dummies and, you know, all those, those books you could buy it when we had books stores, I created a tutorial and walking people through step by step on this is how you start a search warrant, from creating your account to each line, What does it mean? And it's been a great hit. The only time that I've had now, I mean, we've been doing this since, like, 2016 the only time I've had to modify those documents were, is something's changed in the forms, and those documents have been passed down from trainers to trainers to trainers. Now that we're, you know, here in 2024 coming up on 10 years, nine years, actually. And these things are still being used, and we haven't had to make many modifications. We all started with, I went around to every agency, and we held Train the Trainer sessions. I only held one or two per agency at the beginning. Had these documents, we passed them out. We certified these trainers, as far as, like, a four-hour class of how to use the system. And it has just perpetuated. The trainers trained additional trainers. Who trained additional trainers were probably, you know, 12 or 14 generations down the line. I've never had to go back and teach another class, because that information was passed down through and that goes to, I'm not going to say the materials, but just the simplicity of the system and being able to use it once you have created your initial workflow and your templates. Now, I keep referring to the term templates, and what I'm referring to is, you know, if you've ever used DocuSign, you know that you can just take a simple document, scan it in, or a Word document, and use it, and you can bring over tags and be able to put a signature here and there. And if you're very computer savvy, then that's great. You can use that. But let's face it, everybody in our profession is not computer savvy. We're a profession made up of multiple generations, multiple skill sets, and not all of them have to deal with computers. So, I had to think about it. And when I created these, I made it what I called cop proof. I made it to a process where I said, you know, if I'm a cop with no skill set when it comes to computers, and I need to use this, how can I do it where I'm not going to break the machine, how am I going to be able to put move it through? And we decided to go with templates. So basically, what we did was we locked down all the all the paperwork, and we created tags and lines and signature blocks with instructions, and basically made a cop proof so that you work through a step-by-step process of saying, this is what goes here. Type this information here, you know, attach a picture here, attach your arrest document here, whatever it needed to be. And again, it's worked out great. I really thought, because as cops, we hate two things. One, we hate the way things are, and two, we hate change, but we are really the feedback over the years, and especially initially, I thought I was going to get a lot of pushback. Of, you know, well, this is not how we how we've done it before it really caught on and people loved it. And you know, I still get thanks today from people saying, Man, I really appreciate you creating that program. I remember what it's like to have paper documents, having to drive everywhere, Chase, not a judge. They were upset because we woke him up and have this process go on. I really think it is a game changer to be able to do your war process electronically, especially from beginning to end. DocuSign has always been a good company to work with, because as we bring them feedback and say, hey, can we try this? Quinn, are we able to modify this? Some things can be done instantly. Other things take time, but they do have the ability to do that. The other advantage to using a company that's in the private sector as well as the public sector, and not doing something in house is that let's face it, they are driven by profit. They do sell product. There is money that exchanges hands, and as such, if they're ever down, then you know, they're not making money, and they're not in it for money. But what the reason I say that is, is, as I was looking at it from somebody on this back end, as comparing, should we go with a process that is maintained by somebody else, or should we look at maintaining something in house, it only made sense to go with a system that was maintained by somebody else, because they're going to make sure it stays up. They have multinational clients. They have to make sure their process is working, because if they go down, business stops, and if business stops, their customers going to go elsewhere. So they're always guided by the fact of making sure that their process is running, you know, in knock on wood, I do that right now, and all the time we've been using DocuSign, I can only think of one time that we've ever had any type of lag in service, and it was quickly rectified. It was brought back up. And that's, you know, huge on my end, because the last thing I want is people calling me, because even to this day, it's one of those things where, when you create it, you kind of own it. Even to this day, as a chief of police and a different agency than I started at, I'm still maintaining the entire DocuSign program for all 27 agencies for all three counties in New Judicial Circuit. And with everything that I do and all the other things that I take care of, the ease of using this platform still enables me that if something goes on, or if a judiciary calls and says, Listen, we're changing our format, we're changing our process, whatever it is, I can usually have it back up and running as far as changing a template, not that system is down, but if there's new language that comes out because of case law or anything else like that, you know you can change it immediately. I don't have to go to DocuSign and say, hey, change this for me. If you're somebody that's an administrator like I can, I can go in there and literally change an entire search warrant, change the tags, change the routing, and be back up and running. And as much time it takes me to do it, be it a few minutes or sometimes an hour, it just depends. I can get an entire agency running, if they're doing a similar process, within a day. It's that ease of use. So, I know I've kind of babbled here, but I'm very excited about the ability to use this and how much it changed my life in law enforcement, of being able to get justice served going on the scenes. And we've how many times we've been at a search war where we hit a house there's narcotics, and then we develop information, and then all sudden, we realize there's another house that we have to serve a search warrant on, and now we gotta go back and rewrite it. We've literally had people on their cell phones, on their tablets, rewriting the search warrant, and what would normally take hours. They've done in minutes. And they can bang it out, get the state attorney to sign it, get the judge to authorize it, and then we got printers in the car. They print it out in the car, and they can go ahead and post that search warrant, post that whatever they need to do, and they can take care of it. So, it has been a game changer other than that. Jeremy, can you think of anything I might have forgot? Sometimes I ramble.
Jeremy Cooper Smith
No, no, it's all good. Greg, thank you so much. I your story, and all the work that we did over the years is always incredible to hear, because I know that the benefits and the values that you've been able to provide not only Polk County Sheriffs, but all 27 of the agencies they refer to now as the chief of police in Hane City are they've been life altering, based on quotes that you said to me before about being able to save lives with DocuSign. We thank you so much for joining us. That being said, let me turn it back over to Jeff. Thank you, Greg.
Jeff McKinley
Thanks Jeremy, and thank you, Chief Gorek, like Jeremy said, no matter how many times I hear that story, it's always amazing to me that you took the initiative to apply something that many people wouldn't have seen and realize the practicality of the solution. We pride ourselves at DocuSign of being able to provide those solutions, and a lot of times folks, maybe like those of attending today's webinar might not realize that DocuSign is the type of solution to handle those and I'm sure I'll turn this over in just a moment to Our other presenter today, Shannon Wargo, but I want to note this what I heard from Chief Gore today when he talks about overcoming a challenge, and one of those main challenges was the how we always did it, in getting people to think a little bit differently. Well, today I mentioned three reasons for digitization. One, collecting data in a way that's consistent and easily applied to making the workflow more efficient. And three user experience, and it's usually that combination of things, when people see it and realize that user experience is not going to be difficult, that it makes them change their mind. And when you add in a faster process and the ability to get all the data they need, it really strengthens the messaging. So I love hearing when chief Gore talks about that, when you got a chance to hear today were some examples, both real world, practical examples of how to use DocuSign in the field, and got to see an example of what that might look like, what that means for you is the ability to overcome some of those challenges we talked about at the start of our webinar today, meaning we can overcome the lost time, providing resource savings to avert all the time intensive tasks, allowing officers to tend to the public, while reducing the labor cost or fleet up keep as well by driving to A digital solution, it eliminates those delays in the communication and increases the productivity associated with it, that fully digital process end to end, creates a simple and efficient method of acquiring the completed warrant, which of course, leads to safer communities and enhanced trust on behalf of The community for the public safety overall, DocuSign is proud to be a part of that solution in various communities, like what Chief Gorek talked about today. We hope we'll get a chance to talk to you a little further about how we can apply it for you. I'll note one last thing, sort of a footnote in this conversation, but obviously very, very important, DocuSign tends to be synonymous with trust, and we're very proud of that. The reason being is all the documents, the warrants included that you sign within DocuSign and that you work through the process are highly secure with enterprise grade security controls and compliance, including the most stringent security and privacy regulations that we need for Fed ramp, state ramp and NIST 800 along with others, so you have the peace of mind of knowing everything you do not only will be a legally binding signature, but highly secure in the storage environment too. Thank you all for joining us today. I also want to thank our speaker, Chief Greg Gorek, it's always a pleasure to hear the story. I hope you've all gotten a lot of value out of that.
Anthony Jimenez
That wraps up today's discussion on the transformative power of e warrants in law enforcement. We hope you gained insights into how this technology can enhance operations and improve community safety. If you found this episode helpful, share it with colleagues for more resources, or to explore how e warrants can fancy your agency's workflow. Visit www.carahsoft.com/docusign Thanks for tuning in. Stay safe, stay informed, and we'll see you next time on the DocuSign law enforcement podcast.