Certainly. As a field agent or as an individual who was working on a street-level intelligence-gathering process, they would report first to their first supervisor. Depending on what job they were doing, they would report daily to the supervisor as to what actions they'd taken. That supervisor would be accountable to another level of supervision. The levels of supervision would go up until there was an overall commander responsible for that investigation or that project they'd been working on.
Daily reports would come in. The overall officer or person in charge would review what had happened by all the different investigators who were working that day to ensure that they were compliant with the processes for whatever job they were doing, whether in information sharing or in an enforcement action with regard to a judicial request. They would be reporting daily through supervision levels.
As well, each organization would have its own internal audit process. They call it quality assurance. They might not do so daily, but they would review that to ensure that if there were any changes in legislation or any changes in processes, the supervisors would be well aware of those and they could pass that information down to the investigators.