2C-INT
Crime Characterization for Intelligence
Reveal structure, incentives and operational patterns across criminal ecosystems. 2C-INT helps teams understand groups, logistics, market behavior and financial signals through structured intelligence designed for analysts, investigators and decision-makers alike.
- Map criminal networks and ecosystem structure with documented evidence
- Trace logistics, routes, facilitators and operational shifts
- Normalize OSINT into comparable, region-aware assessments
- Support field teams, research units and leadership with decision-ready outputs
Structure over headlines
Patterns, not anecdotes: entities, relationships and money flows that actually explain activity.
Comparable evidence
Cross-source normalization so two reports mean the same thing across regions, cases and time.
Decision-ready outputs
From operational notes to executive summaries with dates, assumptions and confidence clearly expressed.
Where 2C-INT fits in your ecosystem
2C-INT is not another database or case-management tool. It sits between raw reporting and decision-making, giving investigative, research and policy-facing teams a common, structured view of criminal ecosystems.
Fragmented reporting
Signals without continuity
Field notes, media reporting and case fragments often stay disconnected, making it hard to preserve narrative continuity across operations.
- Strength: speed and local detail.
- Gap: weak structural continuity and poor comparability over time.
Case-by-case analysis only
Insight without ecosystem model
Individual cases can be rich in detail, but often fail to show how routes, entities and incentives connect across broader ecosystems.
- Strength: depth on isolated investigations.
- Gap: limited network view, weak cross-case reuse and low strategic continuity.
2C-INT backbone
Criminal ecosystem intelligence layer
Normalizes documented OSINT and structured inputs into entities, routes, financial indicators and network views that support sustained analysis.
- Connects reports, signals and cases into one reusable ecosystem model.
- Preserves sources, dates and confidence so findings remain auditable.
- Feeds briefs, operational context and policy-facing outputs without vendor lock-in.
Choose the access model that fits your needs
Research remains open and limited. Analyst becomes the first licensed operational layer. Admin / Team extends the model for controlled organizational use.
Research remains free. Analyst and Admin / Team access are available as monthly subscriptions, with annual billing options and pricing advantages.
Access options
Start with public research, move into licensed analyst access, or request a managed temporary evaluation window.
Research
Public, no-cost access to selected content and limited visibility across the 2C-INT experience. Useful for understanding the model, editorial logic and public-facing coverage.
- Free access
- Public-facing and limited visibility
- Suitable for initial exploration
Best for first orientation, not for full operational use.
Analyst
RecommendedThe first licensed layer for teams that want to consume the platform seriously, with broader visibility, stronger context and full read access aligned to investigation, research and strategic use.
- Monthly subscription available
- Annual billing available with discount
- Read-only analyst access
Admin / Team
Higher-tier licensed access for organizations that need management controls, team-level administration, governance and broader operational handling inside the module.
- Custom packaging
- Team and admin-oriented scope
- Best for structured internal workflows
Temporary evaluation access
No open demo. Qualified organizations may request temporary analyst-level read-only access for a limited evaluation window (for example, 48 hours), subject to validation and manual approval.
Temporary access is intended for product evaluation only. Approval, duration and scope remain controlled by staff.
What problems does it replace?
Spreadsheet sprawl and narrative guesswork. 2C-INT helps unify entities, routes, signals and sources so assessments stay structured and repeatable.
Where does the data come from?
Documented OSINT and structured inputs, with explicit sourcing and dates so confidence remains visible, traceable and challengeable over time.