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Home About Us Training Hogan's Alley

Hogan's Alley

The Baddest Town in America
And the FBI Owns It.

Hogan's Alley scene
The bank, post office, and drug store
in Hogan’s Alley

Hogan’s Alley? Oh yeah, it’s a hot bed of terrorist and criminal activity. Its only bank is robbed at least twice a week. Mobsters, drug dealers, and international terrorists lurk around every corner.

Exactly the way we want it.

We put Hogan’s Alley on the map in 1987 to provide a realistic training environment for our new agents. It’s located on 10+ acres at our Training Academy in Quantico, Virginia. Today, we share the mock town with new DEA recruits, as well as with state, local, federal, and global partners at the Academy for training.

How realistic is Hogan’s Alley? Very. We built it with the help of Hollywood set designers. Like many small towns, it’s got a bank, a post office, a hotel, a laundromat, a barber shop, a pool hall, homes, shops, and more. There’s a constant flow of people and traffic. You can even get a bite to eat at the local deli.

Dogwood Inn
A restaurant inside this “Dogwood Inn” is actually a classroom.

But don’t look too closely. The cars parked outside “Honest Jim’s” aren’t really for sale, although a contract painter once tried to buy one. The “Dogwood Inn Restaurant” is actually a classroom. The post office doesn’t deliver and the town’s two mailboxes have been welded shut (they kept filling up with real letters!). And don’t try to buy a ticket for the Manhattan Melodrama at the “Biograph Theater”—inside is a working FBI office.

What do our new agents learn at Hogan’s Alley? They’re taught the latest tactical techniques and are immersed in realistic, stressful scenarios where they are expected to incorporate basic tactics, investigative techniques, firearms skills, and defensive tactics in order to make the right decision. They investigate terrorist activities...plan and make arrests...process evidence at crime scenes...conduct interviews and searches...use ballistic shields as protection...tactically ”clear” areas so they’re safe to enter... and get into “simmunition” gun fights with “criminals.” All with the help of local actors we’ve hired to play both “bad guys” and innocent bystanders.

Agent in trailer clearing a scene
A trainee is given instructions on how to use a “master key”—
an entry tool for gaining access to interior rooms.
It all started with a short memo, dated July 26, 1908, and signed by Charles J. Bonaparte, Attorney General
Hogan’s Alley includes several townhouses used for training.


There are plenty of surprises along the way. We’ve asked some of our actors to resist arrest and to turn seemingly routine events into life-and-death situations. That way, our new agents learn how to make the right decisions under stressful conditions.

The bottom line? Our town helps protect your towns. It’s a place where our agents and partners learn how to enforce laws while defending themselves—and the American people.

P.S. Curious where we got the name Hogan’s Alley? Turns out, we borrowed it from the “Hogan’s Alley” comic strip of the late 1800s. The alley was located in a rough neighborhood, so we thought the name fit our crime-ridden town.