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Retired Decorated Kentucky State Trooper Allen Layne to head Southeast Criminal Justice Program
Allen Layne, a decorated trooper with the Kentucky State Police for 25 years, will
take on the task of directing the Criminal Justice Program at Southeast Kentucky Community
amp; Technical College. Achieving the rank of sergeant, Layne, a resident of Cumberland,
retired from the KSP recently and will begin his job at SKCTC at the onset of the
spring semester.
The classroom setting is familiar with Layne as he has worked as an adjunct faculty
member for the college over the past 15 years. Upon his retirement from the state
agency, he noted how excited he is about the new position as he works to prepare students
for careers in the criminal justice field.
I have always enjoyed teaching, he said. There is something very exhilarating about
being in the classroom and interacting with students, teaching them the subject material
that I love. Over his years as an adjunct at Southeast, teaching several classes each
term, he has helped mold the lives of many who have since gone on to careers in law
enforcement, including: the FBI, Kentucky State Police, various sheriff's departments
across the region as well as the U.S. Border Patrol and the ATF Bureau..
In his job at Southeast, Layne, who came to the area in 1976, will build the program
to emphasize police patrol operations as well as offering course work in the supervision
of police personnel and more. However, he said, the primary goal will be to administer
and develop a local program that is of interest to students, lending guidance in order
for them to move into a four-year program as offered by Eastern Kentucky University
and possibly, soon to be offered by the University of Pikeville.
Layne began his higher education at SKCTC following graduation from Cumberland High
School. He credits Dr. Bruce Ayers, the current SKCTC president, who, at the time
of Laynes enrollment at the college, was a faculty member and adviser. Dr. Ayers knew
how much I wanted to become a policeman; he directed me down that path -- guiding
me toward an Associates Degree at Southeast and then helping prepare me for my transfer
to Eastern for the Bachelors Degree. Currently, Layne is working on a Masters Degree
in the discipline.
He is the son of a Methodist minister, the late Harold K. Layne. His mother is Judy
Layne, a former college employee, who now resides in Tennessee. Allen has been married
for 23 years to Lisa; they are the parents of daughters Ally, a student at Southeast,
and Sydney, a student at Cumberland Elementary School.
As the Criminal Justice Program, offered by Southeast, moves forward in the millennium,
it will rely heavily on course work in areas of police patrol and supervision. And,
as a certified Kentucky Law Enforcement Counsel Instructor, Layne will be positioned
to take an active role in the re-training of local officers, which is mandatory for
those working within the field. The program Layne directs at SKCTC is constructed
to lead students to an Associate in Applied Science Degree in areas of corrections,
law enforcement, criminal justice and security loss prevention.
One of my main goals is to get out and recruit students who are keenly interested
in law enforcement, he said. I want to be able to speak with them, to meet them and
tell them all about the Criminal Justice Program at Southeast Kentucky Community amp;
Technical College.
He also touted the merits of having employment within the field. A career in law enforcement
provides one with a well-paying job, and it also has very good retirement benefits,
he said. It also gives one a sense of giving back to ones community, while at the
same time helping provide a safer place in which to live and work, to enjoy life.
Beginning with the spring 2013 semester, he said a total of six classes would be offered
on the Cumberland campus, with five classes each slated to be taught at the Whitesburg
and Middlesboro sites, and with two classes to be offered at the Harlan campus. The
classes, he said, are to be taught by him and a team of well-qualified adjunct faculty
that includes lawyers, police officers and corrections officers.
With enrollment for the spring semester set for January 7-11, Layne noted that it
is not too late to enroll.
He can be reached by phoning 606-273-1334 or at klayne0003@kctcs.edu.