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J.B. VAN HOLLEN
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Van Hollen Appoints Gary Hamblin as Administrator for the Division of Law Enforcement Services
Earlier this month I appointed Gary Hamblin Administrator for the Division of
Law Enforcement Services (DLES) with the Wisconsin Department of Justice (DOJ).
Gary’s extensive law enforcement experience, as well as his working
relationships with state and local agencies, will be a vital asset for DOJ’s
efforts. He will be integral to the support and partnership DOJ will
provide to you, from small rural law enforcement agencies to our largest urban
jurisdictions.
A
professional law enforcement officer for 39 years, Gary Hamblin was appointed
Dane County Sheriff by Governor Tommy Thompson in 1997. He was reelected
in 1998, 2000, and in 2002 to the first four-year term for sheriff.
Gary
served in the Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) of DOJ for 29 years,
where he worked on organized crime investigations, white collar crime
investigations, and murder investigations. He served as DCI’s
administrative officer for eight years before heading up DCI’s drug enforcement
program and then establishing DCI’s Gaming Enforcement Bureau.
Prior to
that, he served with the Sawyer County Sheriff’s Office in Hayward. He
earned a bachelor’s degree at UW-Eau Claire and is a graduate of the FBI
National Academy.
The DOJ
Division of Law Enforcement Services provides technical assistance and training
to state and local law enforcement agencies and officers; maintains central
fingerprint identification records and criminal history information for use by
state and local police agencies; maintains the TIME System (Transaction
Information for the Management of Enforcement); administers three state crime
laboratories which analyze physical evidence for law enforcement officials and
prosecutors; and ensures that the minimum recruitment and training
qualifications established by the Law Enforcement Standards Board are met by all
state and local police officers. DLES includes the Crime Information
Bureau, the Training and Standards Bureau and the State Crime Laboratory, which
has facilities in Madison, Milwaukee, and Wausau.
I know
that Gary’s work at DOJ will further strengthen our partnership with the men and
women of law enforcement. His many years of law enforcement experience at
the highest levels will help ensure a safer Wisconsin.
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