By its third anniversary the Cell had aided in the recovery of 180 American citizens.[3]
The Cell has a team to assist the family members of hostages.[4]Rob Saale, director of the Cell from 2017-2019, described the government treating families poorly, prior to the Cell's creation.[5]
References
^"Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell Established". Federal Bureau of Investigation. 2015-06-15. Retrieved 2020-05-13. Staffed by hostage recovery professionals from the Department of Defense, Department of State, Department of Justice, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the FBI, and the intelligence community, the fusion cell aims to improve how the government develops hostage recovery plans, tracks developments in specific cases, shares information with families, and provides information to Congress and the media.
^Adam Goldman (2016-09-12). "In a Shift, U.S. Includes Families in Hostage Rescue Efforts". The New York Times. p. A1. Retrieved 2020-05-13. Instead of tackling hostage cases on an ad hoc basis, officials from the Defense and State Departments, the Central Intelligence Agency and the Treasury Department — part of the new group, which is known as the Hostage Recovery Fusion Cell — now gather daily at the F.B.I. headquarters to discuss them.