When these trainees learned that Jimmy had graduated from the academy less than two years ago, it truly was a moment of darkness for them. Those selected to be FBI trainee agents were the best of tens of thousands of applicants, many of whom were exceptionally talented. However, compared to Jimmy's achievements, their merits hardly shimmered.
The hijacking case, Jimmy's most notable, naturally became an essential part of the curriculum. After the instructor's explanation, Jimmy was specially invited to the classroom to provide a live explanation and answer the trainees' questions. These questions had already been discussed by several instructors the last time Jimmy visited, so his responses were very much in line with the academy's standards. The focus was not on shooting suspects through a small hole, but rather on how to analyze and obtain information under the current circumstances.
Aside from teaching, Jimmy also audited other courses in his free time, particularly the case analysis classes. Although most of the cases presented were those he had studied before, after working at the FBI for over a year, he discovered that even previously studied cases could reveal many new insights. For Jimmy, any new knowledge was a gain from his academy visit.
Through these educational activities and his own training, Jimmy successfully completed his career as an instructor.
The training period for the academy's trainees was 5-6 months, and Jimmy joined halfway through. Moreover, he had been recovering earlier and had not trained, so his actual training period was only about three months.
During this time, Jimmy not only fully recovered physically, but he also kept up with his training in shooting with both hands. Moreover, his hand-to-hand combat skills greatly improved; he could evenly match one against three when fighting instructors.
Regarding the trainees, he had once beaten up a dozen trainees during a class, ending up running around the room, achieving a record of a one against six victory. This accomplishment was not as simple as fighting street gangs; these trainees had been trained for several months, their combat skills far exceeded those of the thugs, and because they lived and trained together, their coordination was much better than that of the thugs.
By 2004, Jimmy spent Christmas and New Year's flying back to New York, though he still spent the actual holidays alone since Nia had to be with her family, but she did stay with Jimmy for a few days afterwards before Jimmy had to return to the academy.
After this batch of trainees graduated, Jimmy was also liberated and could leave the academy.
After contacting Hughes, Jimmy received Hughes's permission to leave the academy and return to New York. He still belonged to the Manhattan office; his stint as an instructor was merely an internal loan between two FBI departments, and did not transfer his allegiance.
Since the FBI academy prohibits entry to individuals who are not academy staff or affiliated personnel, Nia, even when she was off, could not visit Jimmy. He could only occasionally make trips back to New York after a long time.
Strangely enough, not long after Jimmy arrived at the academy, the NYPD launched several large-scale special operations that strongly suppressed a group of potentially threatening criminals, noticeably improving the security of New York for a while.
With the highest number of police officers in the country, whether patrol officers or detectives, the NYPD saw an improvement in social order and a decrease in new cases, allowing Nia more rest than before and a return to regular rotating shifts.
Jimmy drove back to his apartment, which he had occasionally tidied up during his brief returns, so the place was in good condition without the dust one would expect from a long-uninhabited space.
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