KEITH GREGORY LOGAN

Associate Professor

Department of Criminal Justice

Kutztown University

Kutztown, Pennsylvania

Mr. Keith Gregory Logan is an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice at Kutztown University; he teaches courses in Homeland Security; Defense and Intelligence; Criminal Law and Procedure; and Contemporary Legal Issues. He is a member of the District of Columbia Bar and the Virginia State Bar. A former Federal law enforcement officer and security officer, Mr.Logan also served as a Special Assistant United States Attorney in the District of Columbia and the Eastern District of Virginia (EDVA), and represented the United States Attorney’s Office, EDVA, before the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. His Federal service includes a short tour as a Congressional Staff assistant for a New York Congressman; he later served with the following agencies during his career: Drug Enforcement Administration; Agency for International Development; General Services Administration; Department of the Interior; Department of Education; Environmental Protection Agency; and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. He received numerous awards during his Federal service. For several years,Mr. Logan worked on government contracts and was a consultant to the nuclear industry regarding whistleblower retaliation investigations. In 2007, he was a guest lecturer at the Russian Federation Diplomatic Academy in Moscow. While a member of the U.S. Army Reserve, he achieved the rank of Major, Military Police Corps, and was an NBC/CBR defense instructor.

Mr. Logan is the editor and contributing author of Homeland Security and Intelligence (2010);
co-editor and contributing author of An Introduction to Homeland Security; and a member of the Journal of Homeland Security EducationEditorial Review Board. He presented research at the 2008 Annual Conference of the American Society of Criminology on Motor Vehicle Search Incident to Arrest: Will the Court Move in a New Direction, and at the 2007 Annual Conference on Fiction as a Didactic Tool in Teaching Criminal Justice/Homeland Security. Several of his recent publications include: “Sting Operations” in Encyclopedia of Street Crime in America; “Public Safety Sector Employment” in Industry Profiles;“Domestic Terrorism” and “Transnational Terrorism” in Transnational Crime and Justice; “Border Patrol,” “Sheppard v. Maxwell,” and “Lindberg Law” in Social History of Crime and Justice;“Son of Sam Laws” in Victimology and Crime Prevention; “United States v. Booker and United States v. Fanfan,” in Race and Crime;“People v. Lee” in Forensic Science, the “Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act,” in Battleground: Criminal Justice; and “DEA Intelligence” and “EPIC” in the Encyclopedia of U.S. Intelligence.

Mr. Logan holds an undergraduate degree in political science, a master’s degree in criminal justice, and a law degree.

May 1, 2012