“Campus Community - HBCU-LEEA
Transcription
“Campus Community - HBCU-LEEA
16th Annual Training Conference July 20 - 24, 2015 “Campus Community Partnerships for the 21st Century” Welcome to Our Nations Capital Holiday Inn - Capitol Welcome to Washington D.C. Welcome to the 16th Annual Training Conference. Our conference theme this year is “Campus Community Partnerships for the 21st Century.” This years conference is being held in Washington DC for the first time ever, and the Executive Board, and the DC Conference Committee would like to take this opportunity to welcome everyone to our Nations Capital. This year’s training conference will emphasize the working relationships that today’s campus safety law enforcement professionals must have in order to be successful. Our partnership(s) with Local, State, Federal, and Private enterprise colleagues is essential to our progress in providing safe campus university environments for our students, faculty, staff, and visitors. The Historically Black Colleges and Universities Law Enforcement Executives & Administrators (HBCU-LEEA, Inc.) is a not-for profit 501c3 organization of police chief ’s executives, security directors, administrators and supporters that advance campus public safety for students attending the 105 HBCU educational institutions. The group was organized to provide a network of support for public safety and emergency preparedness initiatives and the avenue for information sharing regarding challenges and best practices, as well as to provide cutting edge training annually. We encourage you to participate in the conference events and encourage you to join our organization as we continue to take bold steps toward securing our campuses across the nation. Sincerely, Chief Curtis Johnson III President HBCU-LEEA What is the HBCU-LEEA In 1965, under Title III of the Higher Education Act of 1965, Congress officially defined an HBCU as an institution whose principal mission was and is the education of black Americans. According to the United Negro College Fund (UNCF), for most of America’s history, African Americans who received a college education could only get it from an HBCU. Today, HBCUs remain one of the surest ways for an African American or student of any race, to receive a quality education. In 1999, the concept of the HBCU-LEEA was born when a group of concerned campus police chiefs and campus public safety directors reached consensus on the need to organize for the purposes of information-sharing and collectively addressing mutual challenges. The HBCU-LEEA, Inc. is a not-for-profit 501c3 organization of police chiefs, executives and security directors that advance campus public safety for its students attending the 105 HBCU educational institutions nationally. Most of the HBCU campus police departments are certified police agencies with sworn police officers. These officers are certified through their respective states as are other local police departments. The organization meets annually to share best practices, discuss areas of concern unique to HBCUs, and to identify solutions that will enhance public safety on our HBCU campuses. The organization also works closely with organizations such as the National Center for Campus Public Safety (NCCPS), the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE), the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Administrators (IACLEA), the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities and state and local groups to ensure that HBCU campus public safety issues receive attentio HBCU-LEEA Mission To protect and secure all students, faculty, staff and guests of all HBCU institutions. To provide and share data which ensures quality law enforcement and security response to campus incidents. To comply with the Jeanne Clery Act and provide protective programs and training to HBCU–LEEA members, maintaining the highest standards in promoting security and law enforcement for all HBCUs. 2015 -2016 Executive Board Members 6 Captain Lawrence Garrison Treasurer Dillard University Chief Melvin Williams Recording Secretary Bethune Cookman University Chief Curtis Johnson President, HBCU-LEEA Arkansas Baptist College Chief Edna Drake Financial Secretary Tougaloo College Andre Menzies Immediate Past President Dillard University Chief Joseph Chevalier Parliamentarian Morehouse School of Medicine Executive Director Adrian Wiggins Sergeant at Arms Morgan State University Chief Ernest Waiters Historian Bowie State University Captain Ruth Evans-Waller Vice President Lincoln University Howard University Founded in 1867, Howard University is a private, research university comprised of 13 schools and colleges. Students pursue studies in more than 120 areas leading to undergraduate, graduate and professional degrees. To date, Howard has awarded more than 120,000 degrees in the arts, the sciences, and the humanities. The historic main campus sits on a hilltop in Northwest Wash-ington blocks from the storied U Street and Howard Theatre. We are two miles from the U.S. Capitol where many students intern, and scores of alumni shape national and foreign policy. Howard is a leader in STEM fields. The National Science Foundation has ranked Howard as the top producer of African-American undergraduates who later earn science and engineering doc-toral degrees. The University also produces more minority doctoral graduates in computer science than any other university in the nation and boasts nationally ranked programs in social work, business and communication sciences and disorders. In 2013, The Washington Post named Howard "An Incubator for Cinematographers.” The College of Medicine is internationally regarded for its illustrious legacy of training students to become competent and compassionate physicians who provide health care in medically underserved communities at home and abroad. The College is a national leader in studying health dis-parities among people of color and is one of America's top institutions for training women surgeons. The Howard University Health Sciences division includes the Howard University Hospital and the Colleges of Dentistry, Pharmacy, and as well as Nursing and Allied Health Sciences. 7 For more than 140 years, the Howard University School of Law has served as an advocate for social justice and as an architect of social change. It has produced more than 4,000 social engineers including the first African-American Supreme Court Justice, noted legislators, civil rights attorneys, mayors and public officials across the United States. In 2012, the Law School was ranked among the top 20 public service schools by National Jurist magazine. The University’s motto Veritas et Utilitas, Truth and Service, represents a key part of our identity. The more than 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students dedicate hundreds of hours each year to service in nearby LeDroit Park, around the nation and far-flung places around the world. Over the U.S. Peace Corps’ 50-year history, more than 200 Howard graduates have served as volunteers around the globe, the highest number among historically-black colleges. In 2012, a Howard senior who led Engineers Without Borders service projects in Kenya and Brazil was named a White House “Champion of Change.” The University remains committed to further enhancing its strategic positioning as one of the top research universities in the nation. As we approach our sesquicentennial in 2017, we are uniquely positioned to have the next 150 years as glorious as the past. Source: Howard University 2012 Annual Report. (www.howard.edu) 8 Howard University The Howard University Department of Public Safety (HU-DPS) headquarters is located in the Howard University Service Center located at 2244 10th Street, NW, 2nd Floor, Washington, D.C. 20059. The primary duties of the officers of HU-DPS are to ensure compliance with Howard University regulations and policies adopted by the Howard University Board of Trustees, as well as the enforcement of applicable District of Columbia Codes and Municipal Regulations within its jurisdiction. The Chief of Police & Executive Director of Safety & Security establishes the department goals, policies, procedures and organizational structure. The Chief directs and controls the activities of the Department and is responsible for accomplishing its mission. He is assisted by two Deputy Chiefs who manage the Patrol Services Bureau and the Support Services Bureau. HU-DPS Police Officers are either armed Special Police Officers or unarmed Security Officers. They are commissioned, or licensed, by the Washington, D.C. Metropolitan Police Department, (MPD) Security Officers Management Branch, and operate under their guidelines and local and Federal Laws. The department patrols several campuses and is responsible for the protection and safety of persons, property, and buildings on all campuses, and a Level 1 Trauma Hospital. The HU-DPS mission is accomplished through crime prevention and safety education programs and proactive patrol of buildings and campus grounds. Officers are required to attend the Campus Public Safety Institute prior to becoming a HU-DPS Campus Police Officer, and undergo continuous and extensive training to upgrade their skills. 9 Officers are trained in First Aid, CPR, and emergency medical procedures as first responders as well as other areas. They patrol Howard University campus community areas on bicycles, on segways, on foot, on scooters and in cruisers 24 hours a day. HU-DPS officers and investigators have developed and maintain an extremely close working relationship with MPDC. This is visibly evident when special traditional events are held on campus, such as the annual Graduation, and Homecoming events when very large crowds participate. The members of both agencies work together to reach out to the University community and the diverse urban surrounding communities to prevent and control crime while helping to solve community problems. Source: Howard University Department of Public Safety website. (http://www.howard.edu/publicsafety/) 10 University of the District of Columbia Police Department The mission of the UDC Police Department (UDCPD) is to enhance the quality of life in our community by working in partnership with the stakeholders and in accordance with constitutional rights to enforce the laws, preserve the peace, reduce fear, and provide for a safe environment. UDCPD is firmly committed to ensuring that our campus is a safe and healthy academic community where students, faculty, staff and guests can take full advantage of the educational and many other opportunities that the University has to offer. UDCPD is a professional multi-service agency providing law enforcement, security, crime prevention and emergency management 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It is our belief that a safe campus environment can only be achieved by working in partnership with all segments of the campus community. Together we can and will continue to reduce environmental hazards and risks, crime, the fear of crime and disorder in our community. Maintaining a safe campus environment requires a sustained partnership between the members of the campus community and UDCPD. This means communication and “ownership” in a common philosophy predicated on the idea that campus safety must be embraced by each of us individually and collectively as a community. Please visit the UDC Police Department website for more information about our department: udc. edu/police). UDCPD Motto: Excellence through Professionalism. 11 The University of the District of Columbia A Unique History, a Rich Legacy For more than eight generations, the University of the District of Columbia and its predecessor institutions has quite literally changed the lives of thousands of students for whom a quality education seemed out of reach. It was a founding principal for Myrtilla Miner to improve the lives of young African-American women who would go on to educate others. And today, it remains deeply-rooted in the institution’s mission, vision, and core values. Founded in 1851, the University of the District of Columbia [UDC] was originally established as the Normal School for “Colored Girls” by abolitionist and educator Myrtilla Miner, who envisioned a more equitable society and believed that education and learning opportunities, should be available to everyone. Subsequently, other schools emerged as predecessors of UDC to extend quality and affordable education to all residents of the District of Columbia. Over time, a series of mergers among the District’s teachers and technical colleges gave rise to the city’s first comprehensive university system. In 1977, the District of Columbia Teachers College, Federal City College and Washington Technical Institute combined to form the University of the District Columbia. In 1999, the U.S. Department of Education formally designated UDC among the nation’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities, and the school is recognized as a congressionally mandated urban land-grant institution. In living up to its mission of continuous enhancement of its academic programs and outreach to District and world citizens, the University established the University of the District of Columbia Community College (UDC-CC) in 2009. In addition to its two-year associate degree programs, UDC-CC offers a variety of practical, non-academic educational programs and training to the residents of the District of Columbia and prepares students for immediate entry into the workforce; for the next level of education; for specialized employment opportunities; and for lifelong learning. 12 Today, the University is a pacesetter in urban education that includes the Community College, and offers 68 undergraduate and graduate academic degree programs through the College of Arts and Sciences, the School of Business and Public Administration (SBPA), the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), the College of Agriculture, Urban Sustainability and Environmental Sciences (CAUSES), and the University of the District of Columbia David A. Clarke School of Law – one of only 6 accredited HBCU law schools in the nation, and that is also regarded as one of the finest public interest law schools in the country. The enrollment at the University is 5100. On July 1, 2015, the University embarked on a new era of leadership. Our rich legacy continues under Ronald F. Mason, the 9th President of the University of the District of Columbia. 13 Conference Agenda Monday July 20, 2015 12:00pm - 11:59pm Member Arrival / Check-in (Holiday Inn Capitol) 2:00pm - 3:00pm Holiday Inn Capitol Caucus Boardroom 3:00pm - 4:00pm DC Conference Committee Meeting Holiday Inn-Capitol Caucus Boardroom 6:00pm - 9:00pm Networking, Light Snacks (Hospitality Suite) Tuesday July 21, 2015 8:30am — 3:30pm National Center for Campus Public Safety Focus Group Discussion-”Reclaiming the Spirit of the Clery Act” 12:00pm - 11:59pm Member Arrival/Check-in - (Holiday Inn Capitol) 12:00pm — 1:00pm Lunch On your own 3:00pm - 5:00pm HBCU-LEEA Executive Board Meeting Holiday Inn-Capitol - Caucus Boardroom 6:00pm - 10:00pm Conference Registration Opens outside of the Holiday Inn-Capitol - Congressional Ballroom 6:30pm - 11:00pm Opening Night Reception Holiday Inn Capitol Congressional Ballroom 11:00pm - 12:00am 14 Networking, Light Snacks (Hospitality Suite) Conference Agenda Wednesday July 22, 2015 7:00am Bus departs Holiday Inn-Capitol for Howard University 7:30am - 8:45am Breakfast at Howard University On-site Conference Registration Exhibitors/Vendors Setup 9:00am - 9:30am Opening Ceremonies Procession Presentation of Colors - HU-DPS Honor Guard The National Anthem Invocation (Dean of the Chapel or Designee) Welcome & Opening Remarks Chief Brian Jordan - Conference Chairman Welcome to Howard University Dr. Wayne A. I. Frederick, President Welcome to Washington D.C. (The Mayor or Designee) Remarks - President of the HBCU-LEEA Chief Curtis Johnson 15 Conference Agenda Wednesday July 22, 2015 (Cont’d) Training Session #1 9:30am - 10:30am “21st Century Policing in America ” Dr. Sheldon Greenberg Johns Hopkins University, School of Education 10:30am - 10:45am Break Training Session #2 10:45am - 11:30am “Title IX - 2015 Update” Assistant Secretary Catherine Lhamon US Department of Education Office of Civil Rights 11:30am - 12:00pm “White House Initiative on HBCU’s” Meldon Hollis, Retired Associate Director 12:00pm - 12:30pm Luncheon “University Police and Local Police Agencies” Commander Charnette I. Robinson Metropolitan Police of the District of Columbia 16 12:30pm - 1:00pm Conference Vendor Presentations Training Session #3 “Active Shooter Response” 1:00pm - 2:30pm On Campus Exercise (Burr Gym) Charles Yarbaugh, President & CEO Precision Tactical Training & Consultants Conference Agenda Wednesday July 22, 2015 (Cont’d) 2:45pm - 4:00pm “FBI Active Shooter Initiative” (Burr Gym) Katherine Schweit, FBI 4:30pm Bus departs Howard University for the Holiday Inn-Capitol 6:30pm - 11:00pm HOST CITY NIGHT EVENT - Spirit of Washington Cruise on the Potomac River” Thursday July 23, 2015 7:00am Bus departs Holiday Inn-Capitol for the University of the District of Columbia (UDC) 7:30am - 8:45am Breakfast at the UDC Exhibitors/Vendors Setup Remarks - Welcome to UDC Chief Marieo Foster Remarks - Chairman of the Consortium of Universities or Designee Chief Jay Gruber - Georgetown University Training Session #4 9:00am - 10:00am “Continuity of Operations” Ms. Anita Womack - FEMA Mr. Mark Brown - ICE 10:00am - 10:15am Break 17 Conference Agenda Thursday July 23, 2015 (Cont’d) Training Session #5 10:15am - 11:00am “US Secret Service Presentation Deputy Assistant Director Michael Williams 11:00am - 11:15am Break Training Session #6 11:15am - 12:00pm “FBI - JTTF, and Campus Liaison Initiative(s)” Assisant Special Agent Nathan Morgan 12:00pm - 12:30pm Luncheon Welcome to UDC - President Mason Kim Vansell - Director of the National Center for Campus Public Safety 12:30pm - 1:00pm Conference Vendor Presentations Training Session #7 1:00pm - 2:00pm “Clery Act Compliance 2015 Update” Alison Kiss - The Clery Center James L. Moore III US Department of Education 2:00pm - 2:15pm Break 2:15pm - 3:15pm “HBCU-LEEA Business Meeting” (Members only) 3:30pm Bus departs for the Holiday Inn - Capitol 6:30pm - 11:00pm “DC at Night” - Evening Activities Menu: • Tour the National Mall at night (Self -Guided) • DC Restaurant Hopping at night (Bus transportation available) 18 Conference Agenda Friday July 24, 2015 8:15am - 9:00am Breakfast at the Host Hotel Holiday Inn - Capitol Congressional Ballroom Training Session #8 9:00am - 10:00am “Preparing Tomorrow’s Future Leaders” Chief Leonard Hamm - Coppin State University 10:00am - 10:30am Conference Wrap-up Official Hand-off to the 2016 Conference Chair 19 Family Events & Activities Tuesday July 21, 2015 6:30pm - 10:00pm Opening Night Reception Holiday Inn - Capitol, Congressional Ballroom Dinner, Beverages and Entertainment Wednesday July 22, 2015 9:00am - 4:00pm Self-Directed Visits of the National Mall Visit the Smithsonian’s Air & Space Museum, the National Archives, the National Museum of the American Indian, the National Museum o African Art, the U.S. Capitol, the Washington Monument, the Newseum and so much more. Located just blocks from our host hotel (Holiday Inn-Capitol), the National Mall offers lots of activities to keep you busy for a few days. 5:30pm - 10:30pm “Spirit of Washington Cruise” on the Potomac River Travel on our Complimentary Bus from the Host Hotel to Pier Six on the Southwest D.C. Waterfront. Board the “Spirit of Washington” for a 3 hour cruise on the famous Potomac River. Sightseeing, Dinner, Dancing are all to be had aboard this fantastic voyage. Cruise by Old Town Alexandria, Virginia, under the recently rebuilt Woodrow Wilson Bridge, and view the National Harbor. Resort from the majesty of your cruise ship. Our Complimentary Bus will bring you back to the host hotel at the end of the cruise. 20 Family Events & Activities Thursday July 23, 2015 10:00am - 3:00pm DC Tour/ Lunch/ Shopping Excursion. (Visit those National Monuments a bit out of walking range via our Complimentary Bus (i.e. the Dr. Martin Luther King Memorial, the White House, the Lincoln Memorial, the Jefferson Memorial, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the World War II Memorial. Travel to the National Harbor Resort for lunch (on your own), then finish off the day with shopping at the newest Tanger Outlet Mall in the area, and a relaxing bus ride back to the host hotel. 7:00pm - 10:00pm See D.C. @ Night Take beautiful pictures of the U.S. Capitol Building, the Washington Monument, and other DC Landmarks when lit up at night. Or jump aboard our Complimentary Bus for a short ride to the heart of DC (7th & H Street (Chinatown) for Restaurant Hopping. Enjoy a diverse selection of restaurants, and dine at your favorite, while enjoying the bustling ambience of the city. 21 Presenters Sheldon Greenberg, Ph.D. Public Safety Leadership Program Johns Hopkins University School of Education Sheldon Greenberg, Ph.D., is Professor of Management in School of Education, Division of Public Safety Leadership. He served as Associate Dean for more than a decade, during which time he led the Police Executive Leadership Program and established University partnerships with the U.S. Secret Service and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). For almost two years, Dr. Greenberg served as Associate Dean and Interim Director of the Johns Hopkins Division of Business and Management (currently the Carey Business School). His primary research interests are police patrol, the relationship between police and public health, police organizational structure, highway safety, campus and school safety, the role of the police in community development, and community organizing. Prior to joining Johns Hopkins University, Dr. Greenberg served as Associate Director of the Police Executive Research Forum (PERF), the nation’s largest law enforcement think tank and center for research. He began his career with the Howard County, MD, Police Department, where he served as a patrol officer, supervisor, director of the police academy, director of research and planning, and commander of the administrative services bureau. He worked with the U.S. Marshals Service, U.S. Border Patrol, Department of Justice, and Department of State, as well as with police agencies in Cyprus, Jordan, Kenya, Panama, Hungary, Pakistan, and the Czech Republic. Dr. Greenberg served on national commissions and task forces on violence in schools, race-based profiling, police response to people who have mental illness, police recruiting, highway safety, military deployment, and homeland defense. He serves as a member of the Federal Law Enforcement Training Accreditation Board. Dr. Greenberg is the author of numerous articles and several books including Stress and the Helping Professions, Stress and the Teaching Profession, and On the Dotted Line, a guide to hiring and retaining police executives. He has completed his fourth book, Mastery of Police Patrol, to be published by Pearson Prentice-Hall, and is working on his fifth book on managing community fear. 22 Presenters Catherine E. Lhamon Assistant Secretary US Department of Education Office of Civil Rights Meldon Hollis Former Associate Director White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges & Universities Catherine E. Lhamon is the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights at the US Department of Education. President Obama nominated her for this position on June 10, 2013, and she was unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate on Aug. 1, 2013. Immediately prior to joining the Department, Ms. Lhamon was director of impact litigation at Public Counsel, the nation’s largest pro bono law firm. Before that, she practiced for a decade at the ACLU of Southern California, ultimately as assistant legal director. Earlier in her career, Ms. Lhamon was a teaching fellow and supervising attorney in the Appellate Litigation Program at Georgetown University Law Center, after clerking for The Honorable William A. Norris on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. In 2004, California Lawyer named Ms. Lhamon Attorney of the Year for Civil Rights. The Daily Journal listed her as one of the Top 20 California Lawyers Under 40 in 2007, and as one of the state’s Top Women Litigators in 2010 and 2007. Ms. Lhamon received her J.D. from Yale Law School, where she was the Outstanding Woman Law Graduate, and she graduated summa cum laude from Amherst College. Meldon Hollis is the former Associate Director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Mr. Hollis worked with federal departments and agencies to ensure that HBCU’s have access to federally funded programs. Prior to joining the initiative, Mr. Hollis served as Coordinator of Intergovernmental Affairs at the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Prior to joining FEMA, he taught Government and Political Science courses at Howard University. He graduated from the University of Maryland at College Park, with a Master’s degree in government and politics, and a Juris Doctorate (J.D.), and a M.P.A. from Harvard University. 23 Presenters Charnette I. Robinson, Commander Homeland Security Bureau Metropolitan Police DC Commander, Charnette I. Robinson has undertaken various assignments throughout her twenty-nine year career to include: Commander of the youth Investigations Division, Commander of the School Sfety Division and Commander of the Hoeland Security BureauPatrol Support Division. In her assignment as the Director/Commander of the Youth Investigations Division, Commander Robinson managed a unit of approximately 106 employees thus ensuring the professional investigation of missing juveniles (Amber Alerts), management of physical and sexual abuse allegations/investigations, Internet Crimes Against Children and Human Trafficking (ICAC), the Juvenile Processing Unit and the Youth Outreach Unit. While commanding this unit, she partnered with various public entities creating the Early Intervention and Juvenile Mediation Program, ensuring that youth were provided with mentoring, and various alternatives to arrest. As the supervisor for the School Safety Division-Resource Office Program, she worked closely with the District of Columbia Public Schools Office of Youth Engagement, the Office of Security, and the Office of Contracting and Procurement ensuring the safety of students as they traveled to and from school. She ensured that seminars were conducted for students and staff members regarding protocols for ensuring safety during domestic (Active Shooter) and natural disasters. Commander Robinson subsequently transferred to the Homeland Security Bureau-Patrol Support Division where she oversees the Field Commander and Patrol Support Team redeployment Initiative. This unit provides additional support to various patrol districts, ensuring high visibility, community engagement and support. Commander Robinson holds a Bachelor of Science degree from West Virginia State University in Political Science/Criminal Justice. She is a 2002 graduate of Johns Hopkins University receiving a Bachelor of Science degree in Leadership and Management and a Master’s degree in Business Management. She also is a graduate of the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) Law Enforcement Executive Development Seminar (LEEDS). She is currently an appointed member of the District of Columbia Mayors Advisory Committee on Child Welfare, the Juvenile Justice Advisory Board, and the Police and Firefighters Retirement Board. 24 Presenters Charles Yarbaugh, President Precision Tactical Training & Consultation Charles D. Yarbaugh is the President of Precision Tactical Training & Consultants LLC (PTTC). Mr. Yarbaugh has been a Certified trainer/instructor in various Law Enforcement areas for over 25 years. Mr. Yarbaugh is a 31-year retired veteran of the Metropolitan Police Department Washington, DC. During his tenure with the department he served 10 years as a supervisor and physical skills instructor at the DC Police Academy. Mr. Yarbaugh has also served as a member / Team Leader for the Department’s Emergency Response Team (ERT) for 18 years. He has participated in over 1,600 tactical operations and is highly regarded in the SWAT Community as an Active Shooter Trainer and Instructor. Mr. Yarbaugh has developed and was the lead instructor for the DC Police Departments Active Shooter Training Program. He has authored editorials in highly recognized magazines such as SWAT and Tactical Response Magazine. Special Agent Catherine Schweit Federal Bureau of Investigations Katherine Schweit is the senior executive responsible for the FBI’s Active Shooter Initiative, an effort initiated nearly two years ago after the tragedy at Newtown. In more than 17 years with the FBI she has worked both national security and criminal investigations in FBI Headquarters and in the Milwaukee and Washington field offices. Prior to joining the FBI, Agent Schweit was a state prosecutor and journalist for 14 years in Chicago. She has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Michigan State University and a juris doctor degree from DePaul University School of Law. 25 Presenters Michael A. Williams Deputy Assistant Director United States Secret Service Office of Protective Operations Michael A. Williams is currently the Deputy Assistant Director in the Secret Service Office of Protective Operations. He plans, directs, coordinates and implements protective policies of the Secret Service. He ensures that the President, the First Lady and all protected persons, places and events receive the highest level of security based on threats and vulnerabilities. His career with the Secret Service has spanned more than twenty nine (29) years. In 1985, he was initially hired as a Secret Service Uniformed Division Officer assigned to the White House. In 1988, he was selected as a special agent and received his field experience in the Miami Field Office. While assigned to the Miami Field Office, he received numerous achievement awards to include the Outstanding Law Enforcement Officer Award. In 1996, he was assigned to the Presidential Protective Division where he protected President William J. Clinton and President George W. Bush. In 2001, he was promoted to a Supervisory Special Agent assigned to the Secret Service Protective Intelligence Division. While serving in this capacity, he was the intelligence supervisor at the White House during the September 11, 2001 attacks on this country. In 2003, he was promoted to Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the Birmingham Field Office. In 2005, he returned to Washington, DC where he served as the Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the Presidential Protective Division. In October 2008, he was promoted to the Special Agent in Charge of the Columbia Field Office. In January 2013, he was promoted into the Senior Executive Service in Washington, DC where he served as the Special Agent in Charge of the Secret Service Protective Intelligence and Assessment Division. Michael is a native of Birmingham, Alabama. He is a graduate of the University of Alabama at Birmingham with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Social Work. He is married to Angela Bryant-Williams and they have a nineteen year old son name Bryant. 26 Presenters Alison Kiss Executive Director The Clery Center for Security on Campus Alison Kiss is the Executive Director of The Clery Center for Security on Campus (March 2011) and formerly served as Director of Programs (September 2005-September 2009.) She was instrumental in the development and implementation of curricula for the Safe On Campus Peer Education Program and for the Victim Support Services Module of the Clery Act Training Program. Ms. Kiss also applied her direct service crisis counseling skills to create policies and procedures for the Clery Center’s Victim Advocacy Program among many other accomplishments. Since her departure from the Clery Center in 2009, she remained an active supporter of the agency and assisted with development efforts and as an Instructor for the Clery Act Training Seminars at University of Massachusetts at Amherst and University of Pennsylvania. Ms. Kiss rejoined the Clery Center after serving as Director of Wellness, Alcohol, and Drug Education at Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia. She also remains active as an adjunct instructor teaching in criminal justice and sociology programs throughout the Delaware Valley. She has contributed and appeared in major media outlets, including CNN, NBC Today, CBS Early Show, Time Magazine, and FOX News. Ms. Kiss recently published book chapters on campus safety in “Victims of Sexual Assault and Abuse: Resources and Responses for Individuals and Families” and “Campus Crime” (3rd Ed). Ms. Kiss has provided services as an expert witness in campus sexual assault civil cases and is affiliated with many professional organizations, including: Rapid Response Expert Network, Violence Against Women Online Resources (VAWNET), Expanded Partners Group, “Vision 21: Transforming Victims Services”, Department of Justice: OVCsponsored project, and the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators (NASPA). She also served as a member of the National Attorneys General Task Force on School and Campus Safety. 27 Presenters Mark Brown Continuity Program Manager Immigration and Customs Enforcement Ms. Anita Womack Continuity of Operations Specialist Federal Emergency Management Agency 28 Mark Brown has over twenty years in the planning, senior management, government operations, Emergency Management, and Continuity preparedness at the federal, state, local, and private sector level. He is currently the Continuity Program Manager for the Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE) agency within the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Mr Brown also served as a Continuity Program Specialist for the National Continuity Program division at FEMA. Mr. Brown received his undergraduate degree from Virginia Wesleyan College and earned his Master’s Degree in Urban and Regional Planning from Howard University. Anita Womack is an Emergency Management Specialist for the Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency, specializing in Continuity of Operations. As a Master Exercise Practitioner, with a vast skill set, her responsibilities include continuity program analysis, planning, training, designing, creating and evaluating continuity exercises and exercise documents. Ms. Womack travels throughout the United States and its territories, assisting Federal, State and local government agencies to develop or improve their continuity readiness. Over the past two years, she has been instrumental in integrating continuity into the local community – specifically Law Enforcement and Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Ms. Womack has earned great respect from her colleagues for her passion of emergency preparedness and her thorough knowledge of continuity of operations. She has received numerous awards, recognition and accolades throughout her tenure with FEMA. Presenters Special Agent John Gardner is assigned to the FBI’s Washington Field Office, Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF.) SA Gardner has over (17) years investigative experience in White Collar Crime, Drug–Diversion, Violent Crime-Fugitive matters and Counter Terrorism matters. SA Gardner has worked major terrorism crime scenes/investigations and has taught counter terrorism operations courses in the Middle East, Central Asia and Africa. Special Agent John Gardner Federal Bureau of Investigation Kim Vansell Executive Director National Center for Campus Public Safety SA Gardner has Bachelor degrees in Accounting and Political Science and a Masters in Business Administration (MBA) from the State University of New York. Kim Vansell is the inaugural Director of the National Center for Campus Public Safety. She is responsible for leading and administering the National Center including the hiring of staff, managing the budget, overseeing the conditions of the cooperative agreement, and ensuring that the National Center operates successfully within the goals that have been articulated for the National Center by the US Congress. Kim facilitates the mission of the National Center which is to provide an array of services to campus public safety agencies, members of campus communities, advocacy organizations, professional associations, and government entities. Prior to joining the National Center, Kim spent over 30 years at the University of Central Missouri, and retired as the Chief and Director of Public Safety. Director Vansell received her BS in Criminal Justice Administration and her MS in Security from the University of Central Missouri. She is also a graduate of the FBI National Academy Session 235. 29 Presenters Mr. James L. Moore III Clery Act Compliance Division US Department of Education James L. Moore III is the Director and Compliance Manager of the Clery Act Compliance Division (Clery Division) at the US Department of Education. The Clery Division is charged with nationwide enforcement of the Clery Act, and the Drug-Free Schools and Communities Act. Under Mr. Moore’s leadership, the Clery Division has developed a comprehensive monitoring and enforcement program as well as the agency’s first Clery Act training, technical assistance, and community outreach initiative. He is recognized as a national expert on the Clery Act and has been involved in every major Clery Act case since he joined the Department in 1997. Mr. Moore is a frequent speaker and trainer on campus sexual assault and prevention, threat assessment, and emergency response, and is regularly called as an expert witness on these and other matters. Mr. Moore represented his principal office during the negotiated rule-making process to develop regulations that implemented the new Clery Act provisions that were added as a result of the Violence Against Women’s Act reauthorization. Mr. Leonard Hamm Chief of Police & Director of Public Safety Coppin State University Chief Hamm has been the Chief of Police and Director of Public Safety at Coppin State University in Baltimore, Maryland since 2008. Prior to joining Coppin State, he was the Commissioner of Police for the Baltimore City Police Department, and had also served as the Chief of Police at Morgan State University. Chief Hamm started his professional law enforcement career with the Baltimore City Police Department spending 22 years on that agency beginning his career as a footman and ending it as a Command Official. He is a member of N.O.B.L.E., the HBCU-LEEA, and several other national and international police associations. Chief Hamm is also an author, and a professor at Coppin State University. 30 SPONSORS 31 SPONSORS 32 SPONSORS 33 SPONSORS 34 PARTICIPANTS 35 Thank you for attending the 16th Annual Training Conference 36