June 27, 2006, Greencastle, Ind. - "Scott Decker's idea of scholarly research included getting burglars to drive him around and explain their techniques," begins a St. Louis Post-Dispatch feature on the 1972 DePauw University graduate, who has left the University of Missouri at St. Louis for a professorship at Arizona State West University. "He well remembers one of them explaining he once picked a target because, 'I just heard that house singing to me.' There were interviews with female burglars who described flirting in bars in search of a braggart eager to impress a young woman with talk of his wealth and possessions. Decker engaged in countless conversations with gang members and criminals of all stripes in a 29-year quest to understand what drives them -- and to apply it to the nationally ranked criminal justice department at the University of Missouri at St. Louis."
Decker has chaired that department for 15 years, but as of this week is off "to head an expanded criminology program at Arizona State West University, where he said there is a promise of better resources," writes Robert Patrick.
In the article, St. Louis Police Chief Joe Mokwa calls Dr. Decker an "institution" who is "irreplaceable... He was so intricately involved in so many aspects of the criminal justice system. He was just so immersed on a national level and on the local level
that we really relied on a lot of his insights." Patrick adds that Decker's "connections helped win or maintain grants for crime-fighting initiatives, Mokwa said. Decker provided insight when crime numbers jumped or tumbled. He could tell police, politicians and the public 'what caused crime and what the crime numbers meant' and help differentiate the effects of law enforcement from the effects of social factors such as poverty."
Former U.S. Attorney Jim Martin says, in addition to helping agencies procure grants, Decker "also gave an awful lot of his own time because he cared about law enforcement and the communities that have been riddled with crime. Just because he cared."
Read the complete story, headlined "Law officers lament loss of criminologist," at the newspaper's Web site. Last month, Scott Decker was profiled by the Associated Press. Read more here.
Edward E. Lehman, managing partner of Lehman, Lee & Xu and 1982 graduate of DePauw University, has been selected by the American Bar Association to serve on a committee of patent lawyers. The panel will make suggestions toward the drafting of China's new patent laws and regulations. Lehman is the only foreign lawyer chosen for the committee who has a Chinese practice.
/Media Relations/AlumniStanford K. McCoy, a 1993 graduate of DePauw University, has been appointed chief negotiator for intellectual property enforcement in the United States Trade Representative's newly-created Intellectual Property office. McCoy, who previously served as an associate general counsel in the USTR Office of General Counsel, will lead the new offices intellectual property enforcement efforts, with a special focus on priority countries, including China and Russia.
/Media Relations/AlumniGail Troyka Martin, a 1962 graduate of DePauw University, has been appointed director of major gifts at WNIT public television in Elkhart, Indiana. Martin has served as WNIT's development director for 20 years and hosts the program, Dinner and a Book, "which begins its sixth season this fall," notes the South Bend Tribune.
/Media Relations/AlumniA list of "favorite books about wild places of notable Americans" includes Barbara Kingsolver's recommendation of Ordinary Wolves by Seth Kantor. "Once in a great while a novel comes along that can shiver right down your bones and show you the world was always larger than you knew," says Kingsolver, herself the author of bestsellers including The Poisonwood Bible, and a 1977 graduate of DePauw University.
/Media Relations/Alumni"Commissioner General of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) Karen Koning AbuZayd urged the international community... to restore aid to the Palestinians," begins a story in the People's Daily of China. "During a meeting held in the Jordanian capital Amman [Monday], AbuZayd said that the deepening financial crisis on the Palestinian territories had increased the financial burden on the UN relief agency." AbuZayd is a 1963 graduate of DePauw University.
/Media Relations/Alumni