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Cavan,
a 1968 Ferris Business Administration graduate, decided early on
that he didnt want to sit behind a desk and do the usual 9-5
routine. My dad was in management at Ford, and the expectation
was that Id do that, too, Cavan recalls. But I
realized about half-way through my junior year I wanted to do something
in law enforcement. I didnt share that with my parents at
the time for fear of losing funding!
Today,
Cavan is an FBI special agent who coordinates an Evidence Response
Team based in Columbus, Ohio. Cavan supervises 20 agents, two photographers
and two evidence technicians. Teams such as Cavans were implemented
in the early 90s after pilot projects in Massachusetts
and California.
The
innovative approach to preserving and researching crime scenes bore
fruit early on. Cavan cites the high-profile kidnapping case of
young Polly Klaas. It was the work of the newly formed San Francisco
team that supplied a crucial clue. The sophisticated equipment
the team had resulted in the discovery of a palm-print, which lead
to the arrest of the subject, Caran says. The Northern Ohio
unit was formed in 1993 shortly after that early success.
The
concept has crystallized into a standard procedure that involves
securing the scene, protecting the evidence, photographing, diagramming,
narrative description and packaging and shipping of evidence. Agents
on the team go through an 80-hour block of instruction, much of
which is on-going education in such specialized courses as trajectory
analysis, computerized sketching and blood-splatter analysis. As
such courses might suggest, its not always easy work.
And
its work that takes Cavan a long way from northern Ohio. Cavans
team backs-up a Rapid Deployment Team based at the FBIs Washington,
D.C., field office. With equipment packed and ready to go, in Ohio
the Evidence Response Team can be in Washington within six hours
of receiving a call and on their way to any part of the world via
military aircraft in eight hours.
Foreign and Domestic
One
of those far-flung places was Kosovo in the wake of the worst outbreak
of violence in Europe since the Second World War. Cavans unit
was sent to Kosovo at the behest of the Justice Department and State
Department in an effort involving several United Nations countries,
including France, Canada and Great Britain. Although the investigation
was in support of the War Crimes Tribunal at The Hague, Cavan is
quick to note that his units mission was strictly non-political.
While much of the blame of the areas ethnic cleansing
has been placed on Serb forces under the control of then-President
Slobodan Milosovic, there were atrocities on all sides.
In
Kosovo, Cavan helped corroborate information UN investigators received
about murder victims. Along with doctors from the Armed Forces Institute
of Pathology, Cavans team exhumed and examined bodies, identifying
individual victims when possible. Lack of dental and medical records
made identification difficult at best. In many cases researchers
relied upon such basic methods as identifying individual victims
through items of clothing.
Normally,
collecting forensic evidence is time-consuming and a matter of paying
close attention to each and every detail. To process a car
correctly it takes a crew of four 8-10 hours, for example,
he says. Normally you cant be in a hurry. The
scale of the violence in Kosovo, however, made normal procedures
impossible. The sheer magnitude of the offenses did, however, reinforce
the professional detachment agents have to have when working a crime
scene.
That
detachment wasnt as easy when his team was dispatched to Oklahoma
City to work the Edward P. Murrah Federal Building after it was
bombed. Going in you knew that you were going to see bodies,
but you never knew what else you were going to find, Cavan
says. There were toys from the day-care center, photographs
of kids on the wall. It was very emotional.
The Making of an Agent
After
graduating from Ferris, Cavan went into the oil business for a time,
(Which means I was pumping gas at Shell, he laughs)
before spending seven years with the Detroit Police Department.
There, Cavan became part of the DPDs Tactical Mobile Unit,
one of whose main tasks was crowd controlnot an easy job in
1968 in the wake of that citys riots. In 1973 he submitted
an application to the FBI. Suddenly his Business degree came in
handy. The Bureau looks for people with degrees in Business,
Accounting, Biology, Microbiology and, of course, now Computer Science.
So the Business degree served me well.
Cavan
has realized his early desire to have a job that gets him out from
behind his desk. He also remains active in his off-hours, refereeing
for 80-90 hockey games a year. He has, however, gone from officiating
at the high school level down to more junior leagues due to three
knee operations. But he didnt injure the knee out on the ice.
I was injured on the job. Kicking a door in, believe it or
not, while serving a search warrant.
Asked
what hed most like people to know about him and his job, Cavan
emphasizes the education he received at Ferris provided him with
the basis for succeeding in his career. Ill be honest,
I wasnt the best student when I was younger. Had Ferris not
given me a chance I probably wouldnt have gone on to college.
Ironically,
funding continues to be one of Cavans concernsalthough
now its government and not parental money. Administrations
and Congress change, so priorities get shifted. Sometimes its
hard to have a sense of continuity, laments Cavan. Some things
just never change. And thats the truth.
C&G
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