Debra Dreisbach had no interest in pursuing a law enforcement career until taking a criminal investigations course as an undergraduate.
“That changed it all for me,” she said. “I had never picked up a gun in my life. But after that I knew it was something I felt I was going to love.”
That led to a 25-year career in federal law enforcement, with Dreisbach spending the bulk of her time as an Office of Inspector General special agent investigating white-collar crimes like corruption and money laundering. She also worked as a firearms instructor, and later in her career was assigned to Secret Service details protecting presidential Cabinet secretaries and members of Congress, as well as the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force.
“It just changed all the time. I loved the variety of the job,” Dreisbach said.
Eventually, Dreisbach found a new calling in academia, and now gets to spend her days preparing the next generation of law enforcement professionals to go into the field. After serving as a full-time lecturer at Penn State Berks for the past six years, she was recently hired as the program coordinator for Penn State Lehigh Valley’s new Criminal Justice program.
The program begins this fall, and Dreisbach believes it’ll make for a terrific addition to PSU-LV’s academic offerings, given the many jobs available within the criminal justice field, from police officer and federal agent to corrections official and prosecutor.
“It’s a popular major that students are naturally attracted to, so I think the sky’s the limit,” Dreisbach said. “With baby boomers now retiring, there’s a tremendous amount of hiring going on in the field, to an extent we haven’t seen in years. And there’s so much more you can do with the degree today.”