If you’ve ever walked into a briefing room and felt like you had to prove yourself before you even opened your mouth, you’re not alone.
For many forensic professionals (especially women in law enforcement) building credibility, navigating disagreements, and communicating confidently with sworn counterparts can feel like an uphill battle.
In this session from the Forensic Supervisor Success Summit, we sat down with Dr. Heidi Sievers, founder of Sievers Forensics, certified bloodstain pattern analyst, and forensic trainer, to talk about her experiences navigating leadership, disagreement, and communication inside law enforcement.
So let’s dive into one of the hardest leadership skills in our field:
Having confident conversations — even when they’re uncomfortable.
Watch this episode of the Forensics Unfiltered podcast, then let’s break down what that really means for forensic supervisors below.
The Confidence Gap in Forensic Leadership
Dr. Sievers entered law enforcement at 21 years old — young, petite, holding a degree — and immediately encountered a challenge many forensic professionals recognize:
Being technically qualified does not automatically translate to being taken seriously.
And this doesn’t get easier when you’re promoted to supervisor. You may have:
- Been promoted from within
- Been supervising former peers
- Been placed in charge of sworn personnel
- Or stepped into leadership younger than expected
Respect does not automatically arrive with your title. It builds through consistency, competence, and confidence. And here’s the turning point Dr. Sievers described:
“It took quite a while to realize that the only person I need to prove myself to is me.”
When she stopped chasing approval and focused on strengthening her own confidence, others began to respond differently.
The Unique Challenge of Being a Woman in Law Enforcement
While communication struggles affect everyone, women in law enforcement often face additional layers:
- Age bias
- Assumptions about authority
- Being perceived as “too assertive” or “not assertive enough.”
- Being mistaken for “support staff” rather than subject matter experts
Dr. Severs talked about constantly feeling like she had to prove herself. But instead of shrinking herself, she expanded her expertise. She volunteered for bloody scenes. She pursued advanced training. She shadowed experienced professionals. She intentionally stepped into leadership opportunities before anyone required it of her.
Confidence wasn’t accidental. It was built.
Here is what that means for you as a supervisor: You can’t always control perception, but you can gain confidence with better preparation. When you know your material deeply, your tone changes. Your posture changes. Your response time changes. You do not rush to defend yourself. You calmly explain.
That is the foundation of confident conversations in law enforcement.
Why Civilian and Sworn Conflict Happens
Let’s address the tension many forensic professionals experience.
In many agencies, forensics is categorized as a “support service”. That structure is not inherently wrong, but it can unintentionally create hierarchy and tension.
This is where civilian and sworn conflict often begins.
Common friction points include:
- Who owns the scene?
- Who makes final calls?
- Whose interpretation carries more weight?
- Who gets invited to case debriefs?
Dr. Sievers described how, in her agency, forensic personnel were rarely invited to major crimes debriefings unless they pushed for inclusion. Think about the message that sends.
Now imagine the opposite. Forensics and detectives sitting at the same table, sharing observations and aligning strategy before reports are finalized. Finally both sides can feel collaboration instead of competition.
You see, both sides need each other. Detectives need forensic insight to guide strategy. Forensics needs investigative context to process scenes effectively. And strong CSI and detective collaboration is built through communication before it becomes necessary under pressure.
How to Disagree Professionally Without Burning Bridges
Disagreement is inevitable, especially in high stakes investigations. And one of the most powerful parts of this conversation was Dr. Sievers’ approach to disagreement.
For supervisors, this is critical. You will disagree with detectives, with command staff, with your own team. But the goal is not to win an argument, the goal is to gain clarity on both sides of the aisle.
When you present evidence, reason, science, or limitations, you shift the conversation from ego to expertise. And that builds long-term credibility.
As a consultant, Dr. Sievers is frequently brought in to review cases. And sometimes? The evidence doesn’t support the narrative investigators hoped for.
She puts it plainly: “You’re not paying me to agree with you.”
Instead of escalating tension, here is how she approaches disagreement:
1. Separate the Person from the Position
When you disagree, focus on evidence. Not identity.
Instead of:
“You’re wrong.”
Try:
“Here is what the evidence is showing me and why.”
2. Prepare Before You Push Back
Dr. Sievers creates structured explanations (sometimes even a PowerPoint). She walks investigators through her reasoning step by step.
Preparation does two things:
- It reduces emotional reaction.
- It increases clarity.
When you walk into a disagreement armed with data instead of frustration, the entire tone shifts.
3. Invite Education Both Ways
She also says something many leaders forget to do:
“Maybe I’m missing something. Please educate me.”
That sentence disarms defensiveness immediately. Remember, confident conversations in law enforcement are not about dominance but rather about grounded clarity.
Building Confidence as a Forensic Supervisor
You cannot fake confidence, but you can build it. Dr. Sievers emphasized that confidence looks different for everyone, but it must be developed intentionally.
Here are actionable strategies to help you build confidence:
Deepen Your Expertise Strategically
Do not just attend random trainings. Identify your niche area of forensics.
Ask yourself:
- What cases does my unit handle most?
- Where are our knowledge gaps?
- What specialty would strengthen our credibility agency wide?
Then pursue education in that direction.
When Dr. Sievers chose bloodstain pattern analysis as her niche, it gave her a platform. Authority in a defined area. Specific expertise strengthens confident conversations in law enforcement because you are not speaking in broad terms, you have training and expertise to back it up.
Practice Micro Leadership Before Formal Leadership
You do not have to wait for promotion.
Volunteer to:
- Lead a mock scene.
- Present at briefing.
- Draft procedural updates.
- Mentor new hires.
Every small leadership exposure builds your tolerance for visibility and confidence grows through repetition.
Rehearse Hard Conversations
Yes. Rehearse.
Before meeting with a detective about a disagreement:
- Write down your key points.
- Anticipate pushback.
- Prepare factual responses.
- Remove emotional language.
This feels unnatural at first. Then it becomes second nature.
Practical Strategies to Improve CSI–Detective Collaboration
If you’re a forensic supervisor looking to reduce tension between civilian and sworn personnel, consider implementing these structural changes:
1. Cross-Shadowing
Have new detectives ride with CSI.
Have new CSI shadow major crimes.
Mutual understanding reduces unrealistic expectations.
2. Joint Debriefings
Get forensic personnel invited to major case debriefs and ensure information flows both directions.
3. Normalize Evidence-Based Disagreement
Create a culture where:
- Questions are welcomed.
- Opinions require explanation.
- Science leads decisions.
4. Stop Fighting Every Battle
Sometimes you will present your evidence clearly. You will explain thoroughly. And leadership will still move in a different direction.
But not every disagreement needs escalation…
You document your position.
You maintain professionalism.
You more forward (even if it doesn’t go your way).
If every disagreement becomes a hill to die on, you lose credibility. So choose your battles strategically.
That balance is particularly important for women in law enforcement who may already be navigating perception challenges. Measured firmness builds long term authority.
Final Advice for Women in Law Enforcement on What Confidence Actually Looks Like
Let’s take a final look at what confident conversations in law enforcement actually look like:
- Maintaining a steady tone under pressure.
- Referencing facts without apologizing for them.
- Listening fully before responding.
- Saying “I disagree” without raising your voice.
- Clearly documenting your professional recommendations.
- Refusing to take evidence based disagreement personally.
Notice what is not on that list? Loundness… Aggression… Intimidation.
Confidence is calm. And for women in law enforcement, that distinction is especially important. You do not have to overcompensate to be taken seriously.
But you also do not have to shrink to be accepted. Dr. Sievers’ closing advice was simple and powerful: Have confidence in yourself.
Remind yourself:
You went to school for this.
You completed your FTO program.
You attended training.
You worked scenes at 2 a.m.
You built real experience.
That matters! So don’t minimize your expertise just because someone else is louder.
Over time, you’ll confidence will strengthen. The more you practice grounded, prepared, evidence-based communication, the more natural confident conversations in law enforcement become. Eventually, they are no longer intimidating – they are simply a tool for how you lead.
Your Next Leadership Step
Communication struggles don’t disappear with promotion… they intensify and become more frequent.
If you’re leading:
- A blended sworn/civilian team
- A crime scene unit
- A lab section
- Or preparing for advancement
You must master confident conversations.
That’s exactly why sessions like this from the Forensic Supervisor Success Summit live inside The Vault.
Inside the membership, you get full access to past Forensic Supervisor Success Summit presentations, in depth webinars, leadership focused eCourses, and ongoing training designed specifically for forensic professionals who want to lead well.
If this topic resonated with you, The Vault is where you continue the work. It gives you a library of tools and presentations you can revisit anytime you are facing a tough conversation, a personnel challenge, or a leadership crossroads.
Because leadership growth does not happen in a single episode. It happens through repetition and practice. And confident conversations change everything.





