Justice Systems Faculty
Criminology
/
Law Enforcement /
Forensics /
Law /
Victimology /
Juvenile
Delinquency /
Corrections & Rehabilitation
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view office hours, click on professor's name-
H. Martin Jayne
mjayne@truman.edu
x4667 BT 2213
Mr.
Martin Jayne,
Chair of the Justice Systems Department and Assistant Professor, began his
teaching career at Truman State University in the fall of 2000.
He is a retired Air Force colonel
whose 27 years of service were primarily spent practicing law as a
judge advocate. He has served as a prosecutor and military
judge, and as a member of the faculty of the U.S. Air Force Academy.
He is a member of the Missouri Bar. He received a B.S. in
History from the Air Force Academy, a J.D. from the University of
Missouri -- Columbia, and an LL.M. from the University of Virginia.
Marjorie Burick-Hughes
mburick@truman.edu
x4667 BT
2214 Ms.
Burick-Hughes began teaching for Truman the Fall of 2003.
She holds a B.S. in Law Enforcement Administration from
Youngstown State University in Ohi o and a Masters of Justice
Administration (M.J.A.) from Wichita State University. She
has worked in various positions of law enforcement including
police officer, corrections officer, and evidence technician.
Her last position was a Corrections Deputy in Greeley, Colorado.
She is a
member of the International Association Chiefs of Police (IACP)
and a member and advisor for Alpha Phi Sigma, the National
Criminal Justice Honor Society.
Charles Frost cfrost@truman.edu
x4667 BT
2206 Dr. Charles Frost,
Professor Emeritus,
taught at Truman from 1985-1998 and returns to campus to teach
criminal intelligence analysis. He holds a bachelors degree from
Tufts University and his masters and doctorate from the Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy. Dr. Frost has served with the United
States Navy, the Central Intelligence Agency,
the White
House Drug Abuse Prevention Office,
and the Drug Enforcement Administration.
He is a
nationally recognized specialist in the application of intelligence
techniques to law enforcement. In recent years he has conducted
workshops in criminal intelligence analysis for law enforcement and
homeland security personnel of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation,
the Virginia State Police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The Society of Certified Criminal Analysts conferred its first
Lifetime Achievement Award on him in 1994. He was also the
recipient of the International Association of Law Enforcement
Intelligence Analysts’ Distinguished Career Award in 2003. His
other teaching interests include International Law, Intelligence and
National Security, and Comparative Legal Systems.
Joe Nedelec
jnedelec@truman.edu
x7434
BT 2215
Mr. Nedelec began
teaching the fall of 2006. He attended Simon Fraser University in
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, where he received a B.A.(Honors) in Criminology and a B.A. in Psychology and a
M.A. in Criminology. Mr. Nedelec’s specialty is criminology and human behavior. He
worked with Canada Customs Border Services for a number of years
and has experience working in numerous areas of the Canadian
Criminal Justice System. He is a member of Western Society
of Criminology, Human Behavior & Evolution Society, and Society
for Evolutionary Analysis in Law. Mr. Nedelec serves
as advisor to Truman State’s chapter of Lambda Alpha Epsilon.

Joy Pugh jpugh@truman.edu
x4667 BT 2220 Ms. Joy Pugh, Criminalist and Instructor,
has been at
Truman since 1985. She received her B.S. in Biology from the
University of South
Dakota. She is responsible for the analysis of physical
evidence submitted by area law enforcement agencies to the Northeast
Area Criminalistics Laboratory, located on campus. Her
teaching interests are in the field of forensic science. She
is a member of the Midwestern Association of Forensic Scientists,
the Clandestine Laboratory Investigating Chemists Association, and
is a Diplomate of the American Board of Criminalistics.
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Sandra
J. Rempe
sandy.rempe@dps.mo.gov
x4667 BT 2206
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Ms. Rempe began
as a lecturer in Justice Systems the Fall of
2001. Ms.
Rempe holds a B.S. in Justice Systems and a B.S.E. in Secondary
Teaching from Northeast
Missouri State University (now Truman). She earned a M.S.
in Criminal Justice Administration from Central Missouri State
University. She also completed a Juvenile Sexual Offender
Counselor Certification Program from the University of
Louisville. Ms. Rempe served the Missouri Board of
Probation and Parole and was an Assistant District Supervisor.
She held supervisory positions with the Boone County Juvenile
Court and was employed by the Missouri Juvenile Justice
Association. She has been the Juvenile Justice Specialist
for the Missouri Department of Public Safety for the past seven
years. The unit awards grant funds for prevention and
intervention services for children and youth throughout the
state. She is a member of the Missouri Juvenile Justice
Association, The National Coalition of Juvenile Justice, and The
American Corrections Association.

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Andrea Rinkol
arinkol@truman.edu
x4673 BT 2216
Ms. Rinkol,
instructor, began
teaching in 2007. She holds a B.S. in Justice Systems from
Truman State University and a M.S. in Criminal Justice
Administration from Columbia College. She has worked with a
variety of entities in the criminal justice realm, ranging from
working with families with abuse and neglect issues in the
juvenile court system, - to serving as a juvenile service
officer and as a skill builder in an intensive family
preservation program. The majority of her work, however, has
consisted of working with adult and juvenile substance abuse and
mental health issues. Her teaching interests include current
substance abuse trends and treatment. Ms. Rinkol is the
academic advisor for Justice System’s majors.
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Lynn Van Dolah
lynnv@macc.edu
x4667 BT2206 Ms. Lynn
Van
Dolah has been
at Truman since 1986. She holds her bachelors
and
masters degrees from Northeast Missouri State University (now
Truman State University) and has completed post-graduate work at
the University of Missouri-Columbia, Washburn University, and Capella University. Her teaching interests include
Contemporary Correctional Treatment Methods and Victimology.
She is also a full-time faculty member at Moberly Area Community
College. Ms. Van Dolah is a member of the Missouri
Corrections Association, American Correctional Association,
Missouri Sociological Association and the American Society of Victimology. She is a graduate of the 2002 National Victim
Assistance Academy and served as a core faculty member of the
Missouri Victim Assistance Academy.
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