This page is dedicated to my activity at the GECCGeorgia Emergency Communications Conference. You can find my presentation as well as my research referenced here. If you need anything more please reach out. I'm happy to help.
2026
Get Presentation Materials
I am hosting all my materials involved in the presentation at GECC 2026. This includes the actual slides presented, a recording of the presentation, the paper this presentation is based on, and my reserach sources.
If you have any questions (or just want to talk) feel free to get in contact with me!
Item | Access |
---|---|
Slide deck | View (GitHub) |
Presentation Recording | Watch Online (YouTube) |
Research Paper | View (GitHub) |
About Me
I'm a (at the time of writing) 25 year old former dispatcher from Georgia sharing what I've learned. I have a passion for public safety, especially emergency communication (PSAPsPublic Safety Answering Point are, after all, the backbone of the whole public safety system).
I was a communications officer for ~5 years in Coweta County, Georgia. I did the full array of duties - training, programming, law and fire dispatch, call taking, tactical dispatch, public relations… I enjoyed the job! It was fullfilling.
I got my bachelors while at 911. While attending previous GECCs, I had my initial introduction into the world of cybersecurity, as far as emergency communications is concerned. I started doing research in my free time and eventually was accepted into graduate school at Georgia State University, where I am now.
My research focus is in Security & Privacy and I plan on doing more research that is Public Safety specific.
Sources Referenced & Attributions
"I have gathered a posy of other men’s flowers, and nothing but the thread that binds them is mine own."
-Michel de Montaigne
Moore, P.D. (2022) Denial-of-Service (Dos) Attacks Against the Availability of the Next Generation 911 (NG9-1-1) System. M.S. Utica University. Available at: https://www.proquest.com/docview/2666996306/abstract/2413019E59E1485EPQ/1.Awesome paper that covers multiple attacks on legacy and next-gen 911 systems, provides methods for simulating 911 architecture.
Goebel, M., Dameff, C. and Tully, J. (2019) “Hacking 9-1-1: Infrastructure Vulnerabilities and Attack Vectors,” Journal of Medical Internet Research, 21(7), p. e14383. Available at: https://doi.org/10.2196/14383.