Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center Graduates 268th Basic Training Class


Seventy new law enforcement officers graduated from the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center on Sept 18th.

Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center 268th Basic Training Class

Seventy new law enforcement officers graduated from the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center (KLETC) on September 18th at a ceremony held in KLETC’s Integrity Auditorium. The large class size was designed to prevent disruption to Kansas law enforcement and to ensure there was no additional delay in training created by the suspension of on-campus classes in the spring of 2020 due to COVID-19.

Christopher Engle-Tjaden of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation was the graduating class president. Mike Satterlee, KLETC Instructor of Police and Class Coordinator for the 268th Basic Training Class, was the speaker for the ceremony.

Officers Aaron Free of the Salina Police Department and Charles Semenko of the Scott City Police Department were named to the Director’s Honor Roll. Officer Semenko was also awarded the Larry Welch Award of Academic Excellence while Officer Free was recognized as the class “Top Shot”. Randy Baily and Caleb Dickey of the Shawnee County Sheriff’s Office both won the Top Fitness award for most miles, with Dickey also being named the most improved. 

KLETC Executive Director Darin Beck stands with CACKS Executive Director Juliane Walker and 268th class president Christopher Engle-Tjaden.
KLETC Executive Director Darin Beck stands with CACKS Executive Director Juliane Walker and 268th class president Christopher Engle-Tjaden.

The 268th also raised over $1700 for the Children's Advocacy Centers of Kansas (CACKS). This money will be going to a project called My Backpack, that will benefit children across the state. Class president Engle-Tjaden presented CACKS Executive Director Juliane Walker a check on behalf of the class.

Graduates receive certificates of course completion from KLETC and Kansas law enforcement certification from the Kansas Commission on Peace Officers’ Standards and Training, the state’s law enforcement licensing authority. The training course fulfills the state requirement for law enforcement training. Classroom lectures and hands-on applications help train officers to solve the increasingly complex problems they face in the line of duty.

Established by the Kansas Legislature in 1968, KLETC trains the majority of municipal, county and state law enforcement officers in Kansas and oversees the training of the remaining officers at seven authorized and certified academy programs operated by local law enforcement agencies and the Kansas Highway Patrol.

About 300 officers enroll annually in KLETC 14-week basic training programs. KLETC offers continuing education and specialized training to over 10,000 Kansas officers each year. KLETC is located one mile west and one mile south of Yoder, near Hutchinson, and is a division of University of Kansas Lifelong & Professional Education.

The graduates, who began their training in June 2020, represented 42 municipal, county and state law enforcement agencies from across Kansas. Graduates who granted permission to release their names are listed below by county and agency:

Barton

  • Kevin Norton - Great Bend Police Department

Butler

  • Jacob Blevins - El Dorado Police Department
  • Walter Clayton - Butler Community College Dept. of Public Safety
  • Thomas Maloney - Butler County Sheriff’s Office

Cloud

  • Alan Garcia - Concordia Police Department

Comanche

  • Devon Duffield - Coldwater Police Department

Cowley

  • Jessica Floyd - Udall Police Department

Crawford

  • Gregory Adelman - Mulberry Police Department

Dickinson

  • Angel Martinez-Rivera - Abilene Police Department

Finney

  • Julio Morales - Garden City Police Department
  • Idris Muhammad Patterson - Garden City Police Department
  • Morgan Withington - Garden City Police Department

Franklin

  • Dustin Van Leiden - Ottawa Police Department
  • Kevin Virosteck - Ottawa Police Department

Geary

  • Robert Benzer - Junction City Police Department
  • Steven Clarke - Junction City Police Department
  • Diamond Denson - Junction City Police Department
  • Gus Falter - Junction City Police Department
  • Demetrius Jones - Junction City Police Department
  • David Nolting - Junction City Police Department

Harvey

  • James Morris - Harvey County Sheriff’s Office

Kearny

  • Noah Everett Parnell Day - Kearny County Sheriff’s Office

Leavenworth

  • Austin Dyche - Leavenworth Police Department

Logan

  • Julie Eskew - Oakley Police Department

Marion

  • Matthew Regier - Marion County Sheriff’s Office

Miami

  • Andrew Gonzalez - Paola Police Department
  • Christopher Lee - Miami County Sheriff’s Office

Montgomery

  • Joe Elliott - Caney Police Department

Neosho

  • Hayden Cole - Chanute Police Department

Norton

  • Courtney Kaus - Norton Police Department

Pottawatomie

  • Peter Paras - Pottawatomie Police Department

Reno

  • Madaline Carr - Hutchinson Police Department
  • Lance Fairchild - Hutchinson Police Department
  • Tyler Proctor - Hutchinson Police Department
  • Braden Stewart - Hutchinson Police Department
  • Francisco Gutierrez - Reno County Sheriff's Office
  • Matthew Lutz - Reno County Sheriff's Office
  • Ethan Price - Reno County Sheriff's Office

Riley

  • Gibson Joseph Akers - Kansas State University Police Department
  • Nicholas Coffey - Riley County Police Department
  • Benjamin Tracy - Riley County Police Department

Saline

  • Patrell Brown - Salina Police Department
  • Curtis Cooke - Salina Police Department
  • William Dickerson - Salina Police Department
  • Aaron Free - Salina Police Department
  • Haylee Harris - Salina Police Department
  • Koby Ingalsbe - Salina Police Department

Scott

  • Jared Odea - Scott City Police Department
  • Charles Semenko - Scott City Police Department

Sedgwick

  • Ryan Aden - Cheney Police Department
  • Benjamin Deaver - Derby Police Department
  • Zachary Nolan - Clearwater Police Department
  • Madison Smith - Wichita State University Police Department

Seward

  • Juan Salas - Liberal Police Department
  • Taylor Shuman - Liberal Police Department

Shawnee

  • Randy Bailey - Shawnee County Sheriff's Office
  • Caleb Dickey - Shawnee County Sheriff's Office
  • Christopher Engle-Tjaden - Kansas Bureau of Investigation

Trego

  • Derek Hoskinson - WaKeeney Police Department

Wyandotte

  • Casey Dalton - University of Kansas Med Center Police Department
  • Joshua Thomas - Wyandotte County Sheriff's Office
  • Thomas Williams - Wyandotte County Sheriff's Office

Learn more about the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center.

 

About the University of Kansas Lifelong & Professional Education

KU Lifelong & Professional Education supports the teaching, research and public service missions of the University, contributing to postgraduate professional education, workforce development, distance learning and quality of life for Kansans and worldwide communities. Other programming within Lifelong & Professional Education includes Professional Programs, Aerospace Short Courses, Osher Lifelong Learning Institute, Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center and Kansas Fire & Rescue Training Institute. Combined, these programs teach more than 30,000 individuals a year in every county in Kansas, across the United States and internationally. It is headquartered at the KU Edwards Campus in Overland Park, Kansas.

About the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center

Established by the Kansas Legislature in 1968 as the central law enforcement training facility for our state, the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center (KLETC) serves as the headquarters for all law enforcement training in Kansas.  Located at the former naval air station south of Hutchinson and west of Yoder in Reno County, Kansas, the Center’s mission, as expressed in the Law Enforcement Training Act, K.S.A. 74-5601 et. seq. is “the promotion and development of improved law enforcement personnel and procedures throughout the state, and the training center shall offer to qualified applicants such programs and courses of instruction designed to fulfill this end.”  KLETC directly trains the overwhelming majority of municipal, county and state law enforcement officers in Kansas, and oversees, supervises and monitors the training of the remaining officers at eight authorized and certified academy programs operated by local law enforcement agencies and the Kansas Highway Patrol.

 

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