November 07, 2006
Following the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, the City of
New York swiftly implemented new security measures to protect
itself from future strikes. Five years later, New Yorkers are
accustomed to heightened security in and around train stations,
airports, building lobbies and event grounds.
What the public doesn’t notice is the behind-the-scenes work
conducted in the burgeoning field of counter-terrorism. Because of
New York’s higher susceptibility to terrorist attacks, many of the
country’s top counter-terrorism heavyweights operate in the New
York region. And because of St. John’s University’s growing
criminal justice program, many of these officials serve as full-
and part-time faculty members for the St. John’s College of
Professional Studies.
“In the discipline of counter-terrorism, the St. John’s faculty
is second to none,” says the College’s Assistant Dean, James
O’Keefe, Ph.D.
Students who graduate from the criminal justice program often
assume professional roles within federal and state law enforcement
agencies like the NYPD, FBI, CIA, NSA and Department of Homeland
Security. St. John’s alumni might, for example, monitor the
Internet for communications between terrorist cells or investigate
companies and non-profit agencies suspected of filtering money to
terrorists.
“The St. John’s criminal justice program continually produces
graduates who excel within the NYPD,” says Police Commissioner
Raymond W. Kelly. “The program is an asset to the City of New
York.”
Students concentrating on counter-terrorism take a variety of
classes examining the current operations, organizational structures
and origins of worldwide terrorist organizations like al-Qaeda,
Hezbollah, the Tamil Tigers and the Irish Republican Army. Through
specialized field trips, students also have been exposed to
day-to-day operations at places like the New York Police Academy
and the NYPD Counter-Terrorism Headquarters, which O’Keefe calls
“one of the most impressive and technologically advanced
headquarters in the world,” also noting that it is not open to the
public.
Following is a list of counter-terrorism experts serving on the
St. John’s faculty:
- Adjunct Professor Vincent DeMarino; Deputy Chief and Commanding
Officer of the NYPD Counter-Terrorism Unit; teaches courses on
global terrorism, police administration and public administration
in the field of criminal justice
- Adjunct Professor John Rowland; Lieutenant in the NYPD
Counter-Terrorism Unit and Homeland Security Instructor; teaches
courses on counter-terrorism, criminal justice systems and
community policing
- Associate Professor Harvey Schlossberg; former Director of the
psychological services units of the NYPD and the Port Authority
Police of New York and New Jersey; teaches courses on forensic
psychology and global terrorism
- Associate Professor Angelo Pisani; former Deputy Commissioner
for the New York Department of Investigation and Commissioner of
the New York Arson Strike Force for the Office of the Mayor;
teaches a course on international terrorism
- Adjunct Assistant Professor Thomas Mauro; drafts Emergency
Action Plans for high-rise commercial buildings in Manhattan (used
in cases of terrorist attack); teaches courses on general criminal
justice, police management/organizations and community
policing
The St. John’s criminal justice program offers a Bachelor of
Science, an Associate of Science, a Master of Professional Studies
and a forensic psychology track. Students are given opportunities
to participate in several internships and attend a yearlong lecture
series. The program is advised by the Criminal Justice Advisory
Council, composed of distinguished leaders in police service, law,
corrections and public safety administration.
A Fine Investment for New York’s
Finest
The program made headlines last month when the University announced
plans to provide up to $10 million in scholarship grants to support
the University’s NYPD Cadet Corps Program — originally created by
the NYPD to subsidize the tuitions of college students also
enrolled as part-time police cadets. Beginning fall 2007, the
University will match the NYPD’s contributions by awarding each
undergraduate cadet with a scholarship package of up to $27,500,
dispersed over the course of the student’s four-year career at St.
John’s.
NYPD cadets are trained by the police department in law, police
science and behavioral science and are put through the same
physical training regimen used by the New York Police Academy.
“This program is a wonderful way to bring college-educated
students into the Police Academy,” says O’Keefe, who ran the
academy for 10 years prior to his appointment by St. John’s.
“Research shows that educated recruits are better recruits. And we
think we educate these cadets better than anybody else.”
The program also highlights the longstanding relationship
between St. John’s and the NYPD. In the immediate aftermath of
September 11, the University allowed the police force to move an ad
hoc command post onto the St. John’s Manhattan campus (located
blocks from the World Trade Center site), where it operated for
months. The University provided officers with food, cots, showers
and opportunities to consult with clergy members.
“We’re proud of our New York identity,” says O’Keefe. “St.
John’s is part of the fabric of this city, so we come to the
assistance of the city when we can because it’s the right thing to
do.”