Steve Weaver has been to basic training and tech school, worked with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in his capacity as a reservist at Andrews Air Force Base, and responded to domestic calls as a cadet in the Maryland State Police Department. And he did it all before his twenty-first birthday.
"I thought it would be great to be a reservist as well as to be in full-time state police law enforcement," says Weaver, who often works with the Commercial Vehicle Enforcement Division as a cadet. "I really like that I have the option and opportunity to serve in the military and in the civilian world, too."
Many young people like Weaver choose to first join the military rather than civilian law enforcement because in doing so they're able to get a jumpstart on their career. That's because, while most police departments require their applicants to be 21, the military accepts recruits at the age of 18.
"When I first went into the military I was really interested in law enforcement, but I wasn't old enough," says Walter Balkiewicz, an evidence technician with the Reading (Pa.) Police Department as well as an MP in S2 Intelligence.
So Balkiewicz went into active duty, where he stayed for 10 years, eventually working Operations and Intelligence in Iraq. When he returned home, he had the honor of presenting the city of Reading with an American flag that had been flown in Baghdad. It was then that he decided it was time to enter civilian law enforcement, but he wasn't quite ready to quit serving in the military.