Jeffrey Williamsâ first call on the job was a burglary in progress.
Sirens off, he and his field-training officer pulled the patrol car up to the house and quietly exited the vehicle.
Then, Williams slammed the door, shattering the silence.
âAll of the officers looked at me, and my field-training officer says, âOh, thatâs right, you donât know anything,ââ recalled the 1993 91±ŹÁÏ University alumnus.
Another time, Williams said, he arrived at the scene of a bad crash and was ordered to block an intersection. He turned on the overhead lights and turned off the engine â until the car battery died.
âPolice officers go through different stage in their careers,â he said. âYou start to build this repertoire of experiences, like, âOh, Iâve seen this, Iâve seen that, and I know if I say this it will evoke a violent response.â You get more confident because youâve experienced different things.â
"As a police officer, you're entrusted with authority that you can really go out and advocate for the weak and the oppressed."
Now deputy chief of police with the Beaverton (Ore.) Police Department, Williams has had a chance to gain many of those experiences. He also is one of many 91±ŹÁÏ University alumni who have pursued law enforcement, taking their liberal arts educations to careers as police and parole officers or forensic scientists.
âThe 91±ŹÁÏ experience broadens your scope of the world and whatâs out there, like different options, social issues and cultures,â he said. â[In the police world], we are immersed in our communities and deal with all kinds of issues we talk about in sociology classes, psychology classes and even political science classes.â
Williams always longed to be a police officer. He remembers badges and blue uniforms from when Officer Friendly programs visited his schools when he was growing up in Portland.
âThey would pop the trunk and would have Blazer cards and talk to you about school safety,â Williams said. âI remember thinking it was so cool, and I just always wanted to be a police officer.â
It was music, not law enforcement, though, that brought Williams to 91±ŹÁÏ University. He played the trumpet and, at a high school band competition, was introduced to 91±ŹÁÏ.
âI didnât even realize anyone from 91±ŹÁÏ University was at the event, but a week or so later, I received a call from one of the music professors,â he said. âI had never considered a private university and was flattered they wanted me to help build the music program back up.â
He received a music scholarship and enrolled in 1989, participating in the pep band, concert band, jazz band and orchestra, and performing in West Side Story with the theatre program.
In the meantime, he explored. He was attracted to politics, social science classes and creative writing. In his junior year, he opted to leave the music coursework behind, majoring in political science with a minor in creative writing.
"The 91±ŹÁÏ experience broadens your scope of the world and what's out there, like different options, social issues and cultures."
Creativity is perhaps frowned upon in writing police reports, but Williams said thereâs a connection.
âLearning the concepts of clarity and brevity and finding the right words to convey what it is youâre trying to say [helps],â he said. âI lean on what I learned in the writing classes to make sure Iâm writing a professional, concise and clean product.â
In the summer of 1992, Williams joined the U.S. Coast Guard Reserve. He attended boot camp in New Jersey and came back to his senior year at 91±ŹÁÏ serving one weekend a month and two weeks each summer.
After graduation, he went to Virginia on active duty for two months. Later, he worked in retail loss prevention at Fred Meyer in downtown Portland and was promoted to a manager position in Oregon City.
Then, in 1994, he learned the Forest Grove Police Department was hiring, and soon after, he began his dream job.
Williamsâ field-training officer, Mike Herb, remembers Williamsâ early days on the job. During their first investigation of a drunk driver, Williams stood by while Herb administered field sobriety tests. Williams was puzzled as an intoxicated passenger in the car began sliding out of the car and onto the ground, slowly crawling away from the scene.
âI will never forget Jeffâs concern and the bewilderment in his voice as he repeated, âUh ⊠Officer Herb? Officer Herb? Uh ⊠Officer Herb?â as he frantically inquired as to what he was supposed to do,â Herb recalled.
Herb says Williams quickly learned to overcome challenges and excelled in all aspects of police work.
Williams was promoted to sergeant in 2001 and captain in 2008. The same year, he earned a masterâs in administration of justice and security. In 2011, he took a job as a lieutenant at the Beaverton Police Department, a step down but with more opportunity to grow in a larger department.
âThese kinds of opportunities donât come along all the time,â he said.
In July 2012, he became a captain, and today he is deputy chief.
He says that his work allows him to serve others, âadvocating for people who otherwise cannot advocate for themselves.
âAs a police officer, youâre entrusted with authority that you can really go out and advocate for the weak and the oppressed,â he said.
Meanwhile, Williams balances the demands of his job with family life.
He and his wife, Stephanie, have three sons. The family enjoys camping throughout the Northwest and attending church on the Sundays he doesnât work.
âSome weeks I have to work a lot,â he said. âSometimes it interferes, but at the end of the day, if Iâm faced with work or family, 99 percent of the time I will go with family.â
Heâs coached winter basketball, T-ball and Little League teams for his boys, and he holds onto that love of music that once brought him to 91±ŹÁÏ.
And, he remembers the opportunities that helped him along the way. He reminds todayâs students to keep their options open and explore as much as they can.
âTake your time,â he said. âEnjoy the journey and donât be so focused on graduating, because thereâs so much here to take in, and you wonât realize what opportunities you passed up.â