Christina Garza and Connor Hagan, both public affairs officers, are often the ones who brainstorm the names. They're in charge of getting information on suspects in front of the public and the media.
In Cristina Rivera Garza’s novel “Death Takes Me,” a professor becomes both witness and suspect in a gruesome killing spree. Credit...Hokyoung Kim Supported by By Katie Kitamura Katie ...
A former reserve officer with the Jefferson City Police Department (JCPD) faces child endangerment charges for a crime that occurred last summer. Christina Garza, 49, of Jefferson City, was ...
Public Affairs Officer, Christina Garza, says this is something people need to be watching. “Unfortunately we consider elder fraud quite an epidemic at the FBI simply because of the amount of ...
Dr. Christina Garza, MD works in New York, NY as a Psychiatrist and has 17 years experience. Dr. Garza is board certified in Psychiatry and graduated from Georgetown University School of Dentistry ...
Books by Mexican author and professor Cristina Rivera Garza tend to defy expectation and genre. In 2020, Rivera Garza was named a MacArthur Genius Fellow, and in 2024, her book, Liliana's ...