Greensboro and High Point form Triad ICAC task force with federal support
Greensboro and High Point police announced Feb. 25 that a joint Triad ICAC task force will be based at High Point Police headquarters with federal support.

The Greensboro Police Department and High Point Police Department announced Feb. 25, 2026 the creation of a joint Triad Internet Crimes Against Children task force to concentrate investigations of online child exploitation in the Triad region. The new unit will operate out of High Point Police headquarters and is to be supported and augmented by federal partners.
High Point Police headquarters will serve as the task force’s physical base inside Guilford County, bringing personnel and casework from both Greensboro and High Point under one roof. The announcement names the two departments specifically as founding partners, making the initiative a regional collaboration rather than a single-department effort within Greensboro or High Point alone.
The research notes state that federal support will augment the unit, signaling formal coordination between municipal departments and national agencies. That federal augmentation is intended to expand investigative reach and technical resources for cases handled by the Triad ICAC task force, positioning High Point Police headquarters as a hub for interagency activity in internet crimes against children across the area.
By anchoring the task force at High Point Police headquarters, the Greensboro Police Department and High Point Police Department have created a single operational center for Triad-area ICAC investigations. The move links law enforcement capacity in two of Guilford County’s largest municipalities and aligns local casework with the federal augmentation described in the announcement on Feb. 25, 2026.
The creation of the Triad ICAC task force on Feb. 25 establishes a formal partnership between the Greensboro Police Department and the High Point Police Department, based out of High Point Police headquarters and backed by federal resources, to address online crimes against children across Guilford County and the surrounding Triad communities.
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