The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation was born as a result of a highly publicized murder in
Greene County, Tennessee, in December 1949. The heinous crime aroused the emotion of citizens throughout the region. In an address to the Tennessee Press Association in January 1951, John M. Jones Sr., publisher of the Greeneville Sun, called for the creation of an unbiased state agency to assist local law enforcement in the investigation of serious crimes. On March 14, 1951, Governor
Gordon Browning signed a bill into law establishing the Tennessee Bureau of Criminal Identification as the plainclothes division of the Department of Safety. Following a series of legislative hearings by the
Tennessee General Assembly, the organization was re-established on March 27, 1980, as an independent agency and renamed the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. From 2002 to April 2008 the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation worked with the FBI on
Operation Tennessee Waltz, the undercover investigation portion of the operation started in 2004 and ended in 2005. This operation resulted in the arrest and convictions of a dozen state and local public officials, several of which were state senators. This operation resulted in new state ethics laws and the creation of an
ethics commission in Tennessee. In August 2024, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation led an investigation which resulted in
Clarksville, Tennessee police arresting six men, including an assistant football coach at
Austin Peay State University, for human trafficking for sexual servitude charges. == Overview ==