Healey-Driscoll Administration Announces Update on Search Process
for Massachusetts State Police Colonel
Search Committee to Guide Process and Partner with Executive
Search Firm
to Identify the Next Leader of the State Police
BOSTON – Today, the Healey-Driscoll
Administration announced an update on the search process to identify the
next Massachusetts State Police Colonel. The Administration has
formed a six-member search committee, composed of diverse public
safety professionals and community leaders with wide-ranging expertise, to
guide a robust process to identify the new executive and
administrative leader of the State Police.
The Committee will guide the
search process and partner with the International Association of Chiefs of
Police (IACP), the world’s largest and most influential professional
association for police leaders with vast experience identifying prospective
applicants for executive-level public safety roles.
Search
Committee members include:
- Molly
Baldwin,
Founder and Chief Executive Officer at Roca
- Kevin
Burke,
Former Massachusetts Secretary of Public Safety, former Essex County
District Attorney
- Gayle
Cameron,
Former Commissioner of the Massachusetts Gaming Commission,
retired Lieutenant Colonel of the New Jersey State Police
- Mark
Leahy, Executive
Director of the Massachusetts Chiefs of Police Association, retired
police chief (Suffield, CT and Northborough, MA)
- Liam
Lowney, Executive
Director of the Massachusetts Office for Victim Assistance (MOVA)
- Natashia
Tidwell,
Litigation Group Member at Mintz, former federal prosecutor and
Cambridge police officer
“The next Massachusetts
State Police Colonel has a unique opportunity to enhance public
safety across Massachusetts, build public trust and advance meaningful
reforms,” said Governor Maura Healey. “We are grateful to the remarkable
members of the search committee for their service and commitment to identifying
strong applicants with the vision and values to lead the State Police
into the future.”
“The selection of the
Department’s future leader reflects a pivotal moment and transformative
opportunity for the State Police and Massachusetts. Our administration is
committed to conducting a comprehensive search that is thorough and
expeditious,” said Lieutenant Governor Kimberley
Driscoll. “We
look forward to engaging with the search committee and appreciate their
dedication to identifying highly qualified and diverse candidates.”
By law, the Governor
appoints the colonel based upon the recommendation of the Secretary of EOPSS.
The governing statute, Massachusetts
law G.L. c. 22C Section 3, requires that the
colonel be qualified by training and experience to direct the Department’s
work. At the time of appointment, the colonel must have 10 years of full-time
experience as a sworn law enforcement officer and five years of full-time
experience in a senior administrative or supervisory position in a police force
or a military body with law enforcement responsibilities. Once appointed, the
colonel will become a uniformed member of the MSP. The colonel will also
require certification from the Massachusetts POST Commission.
On February 17, 2023, the Healey-Driscoll
Administration appointed Lt. Colonel John Mawn
to serve as Interim Colonel, succeeding Colonel Christopher Mason
upon his retirement.
Search Committee
member bios:
Molly Baldwin is the founder and Chief
Executive Officer of Roca. A graduate of UMass Amherst, Molly began her
professional life as a youth worker and community organizer and soon
founded Roca in 1988 for a small group of high-risk young people.
For 35 years, she has been a
tireless advocate, mentor, and community convener, reaching out to the young
people at the center of violence in Massachusetts’ most troubled urban
communities, and bringing together the major institutions, agencies, and
corporations affecting their lives. With the help of engaged institutions and
Roca’s committed staff, Baldwin’s efforts at Roca have helped over 25,000
young people make positive and profound changes in their lives.
Under
Baldwin’s leadership, Roca’s Intervention Model has become one of
the nation’s most effective interventions for young adults at
critical risk. Baldwin holds a master’s degree in Education from
Lesley University and honorary Ph.D. degrees from Salem State University and
Lesley University. She was a 2020 recipient of the prestigious Heinz Award in
the Human Condition category.
Kevin Burke’s five decades of public
service includes several roles in Massachusetts state and
county government. Burke served from 2007 to 2010 as the Secretary of
Public Safety in the Patrick-Murray Administration after concluding his
24-year tenure as the Essex County District Attorney. As a
legislator, Burke represented the 4th Essex District from 1975 to 1979 in the
Massachusetts House of Representatives.
He earned a bachelor’s
degree from the University of Connecticut and a law degree from Boston College.
Gayle Cameron is a former
commissioner at the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (MGC) and retired
Lieutenant Colonel of the New Jersey State Police. Appointed in 2012 as one of
the initial commissioners and reappointed in 2016, Cameron
was instrumental in successfully building a new and sustainable public
agency while simultaneously implementing a multifaceted expanding gaming law.
Before becoming an MGC commissioner, Cameron served in New Jersey State
Police (NJSP) for 28 years, beginning as a Road Duty Trooper in 1980 and rising
through the ranks to Lieutenant Colonel, Deputy Superintendent, retiring in
2008 from NJSP’s second highest rank.
Cameron was
appointed as a Commissioner to the Commission on Accreditation for Law
Enforcement Agencies (CALEA). She was responsible for policy decisions around
creating appropriate law enforcement standards. In this role, she worked to
strengthen crime prevention, solidify interagency cooperation, and improve
community confidence in the agency.
Cameron is a founding member
and past president of New Jersey Woman in Law Enforcement (NJWLE) from 2004-2011.
She holds a bachelor’s degree in
Health and Physical Education from
Bridgewater State College and a Master’s Degree in Education from
Seton Hall University.
Chief Mark K. Leahy, Ret. has served as the
Executive Director of the Massachusetts Chiefs of Police Association since
2016. He began his law enforcement career in 1976, when he was appointed as a
Connecticut State Trooper, retiring in 1997 at the rank of Captain. He went on
to serve as the Chief of Police in both Suffield, CT and Northborough, MA until
his retirement from Northborough in 2016.
A Past President (2011) of
the Mass. Chiefs, Chief Leahy sat on the Massachusetts Police Accreditation
Commission – ultimately becoming its President – and on the
Commonwealth’s Municipal Police Training Committee for eleven years. He sat on
the Executive Board of the New England Association of Chiefs of Police; the
Police Administration Committee for the International Association of Chiefs of
Police; and on the Massachusetts Gaming Commission’s Public Safety Committee.
He is currently the Chair of the Executive Director’s Section of the
International Association of Chiefs of Police.
Liam Lowney is Executive
Director of the Massachusetts Office for Victim Assistance (MOVA). He was
appointed to this position in 2012 by the Victim and Witness Assistance Board.
In this role, he leads the state agency’s administration of state and federal
funding, training for service professionals, and policy efforts on behalf of
crime victims.
In January 2007, he was
appointed as the Chief of Victim and Witness Services by the Massachusetts
Attorney General, overseeing the office’s services to crime victims and the
Massachusetts Victim Compensation Program. Lowney began working in the field of
Victim Services in the Middlesex District Attorney’s Office in 1998 as a Victim
Witness Advocate.
Throughout his career,
Lowney has advocated for policy changes that impact crime
victims, including gun safety legislation, updates to the victim
compensation and assistance statute, and Massachusetts’ first Human Trafficking
Law.
In 1994, Liam’s sister
Shannon Lowney was murdered while working at the Planned Parenthood clinic in
Brookline, MA. Since then, Liam has served as a survivor advocate and spokesman
to addressing violence, responding to mass violence, training professionals and
empowering survivors.
Natashia Tidwell is Litigation
Group Member at Mintz, focusing on white collar defense and
government investigations with a special emphasis on assisting educational
institutions in identifying and managing internal and external challenges. She
leverages her experience as a former federal prosecutor and police officer to
provide pragmatic counsel to schools on federal and state constitutional issues
and to advise individuals and institutions on government enforcement actions.
Her clients include colleges, universities, secondary schools, cities and
towns, hospitals, and other organizations.
In connection with the
nationwide focus on social justice following the murder of George Floyd in
Minneapolis, Tidwell led many investigations of alleged discriminatory
conduct by schools, local police departments, corporations, and other
organizations. As the lead monitor in Ferguson, Missouri, Tidwell is
providing oversight on city police department and municipal court reforms
stemming from a civil rights investigation by the US Department of Justice. In
Newark, New Jersey, Tidwell serves as a subject matter consultant for
the monitoring team instituting court-ordered reforms within the city’s police
force.
Tidwell previously served as
counsel at a global law firm and a Boston-based law firm and as an Associate
Professor of New England Law | Boston. Before attending law school and while
earning her JD, Tidwell worked as a police officer for the Cambridge
Police Department in Massachusetts, where she rose through the ranks to become
the department's first female lieutenant.