Michigan State University President Samuel L. Stanley Jr., M.D., has selected Marlon Lynch to serve as the sixth chief of the MSU Police Department. Based on his vast experience and expertise, Lynch will also hold the title of vice president for public safety.
“Marlon has a highly distinguished service record, including leading some of the largest university police departments in the country,” said Stanley. “His nearly 25-year career in law enforcement will allow him to look expansively across the spectrum of public safety to identify areas for improvement in the department and maximize its community engagement. I know he will be a great addition to the Spartan community.
U of U chief safety officer leaving for Michigan State
University of Utah Communications
and last updated 2021-02-02 13:17:04-05
SALT LAKE CITY â The University of Utah s first-ever Chief Safety Officer is leaving to accept a position at his alma mater.
Marlon Lynch will leave the university at the end of March to take up a similar job at Michigan State University. Lynch will be Michigan State s first vice president for public safety and chief of police. It is with mixed emotions I leave Utah, Lynch said. âThis new opportunity was unexpected, and my decision was not an easy one to make. In addition to enabling me to be closer to my family, I have deep connections to MSU, which is my alma mater and an institution attended by a number of my family members.
Primaries for North Carolina s 2022 US Senate seat are already heating up as another Democrat gets in localnews8.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from localnews8.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Primaries for North Carolina’s 2022 US Senate seat are already heating up as another Democrat gets in
North Carolina state Sen. Jeff Jackson announced his 2022 bid for Senate on Tuesday, setting up a divisive Democratic primary for the open seat that will be pivotal to the party’s future control of the Senate.
Jackson launched his “100-county campaign” in a video with his wife Marisa and his young sons, who are seen packing their bags in preparation for the months-long contest.
He talked about a “North Carolina agenda” that addresses the pandemic, the unemployed, the opioid crisis, a lack of rural broadband and housing, health care and criminal justice racial disparities. Jackson also nodded to the state’s 2020 election, in which Cal Cunningham, a former state senator and military veteran, lost his race against Republican Sen. Thom Tillis by less than two points after his sex scandal.