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Michael Allen Lytle

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Biography[edit]

Michael Allen Lytle
Lytle.jpg
Forensic Lab, UTRGV
BornOct. 22, 1946
Salina, Kansas
💼 Occupation
Policy Analyst, Forensic Educator, Consulting Criminalist, Harlingen, Texas
👶 ChildrenEric-Alexander Lindquist Lytle
👴 👵 Parent(s)Lt. Col. Milton E. Lytle, Geraldine Lytle

Michael Allen Lytle resides in Harlingen, Texas retired from the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley in 2017, and remains active as a self-employed consulting criminalist. [1]

Early life[edit]

Michael Lytle was born in Salina, Kanas October 22, 1946 to Lt. Col. Milton E. Lytle[2], a career US Air Force officer and later Boeing Aeronautical Engineer, and Geraldine Lytle. His father’s military service prompted a number of family moves by transfers between airbases in South Dakota, California, Kansas, Louisiana, Ohio, and Florida. He completed high school at Choctawhatchee High School in the Class of 1964.

Education[edit]

Lytle is a 1973 graduate of Indiana University with double major degrees in Forensic Studies and Political Science. He went on to receive a graduate certificate in Law Enforcement and Police Science, at the Sam Houston State University Institute of Contemporary Corrections and the Behavior Sciences, in 1977. He received his master of education with an emphasis in college teaching in from Texas A&M, in 1978, and between 1978 and 1983 did postgraduate doctoral study in Higher Education Administration and Public Management.[3] In 2007, with a professional background involving medical-legal investigation, he completed a graduate certificate in Forensic Nursing from the University of California at Riverside.





Military[edit]

Lytle was commissioned as a US Army Military Police Corps Officer in both domestic and Vietnam assignments from 1969 to 1972. Lytle served as provost marshal for three contested provinces of the Central Highlands in Vietnam. He later participated in a forensic management traineeship with US Army Criminal Investigation Laboratory.

File:LTC Michael A. Lytle Military Photo.jpg
LTC Michael A. Lytle

He was later recalled to active duty as a Military Intelligence Officer, with Europe foreign area officer and attaché qualification, for both Operation Desert Shield and Bosnia.[4]During the European deployment, Lytle served as the NATO Southern Europe joint counterintelligence coordinating authority for the former Yugoslavia, and the Balkans. He is a graduate of the U.S. Army Command & General Staff College, and the National Defense University. Ultimately attaining the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army Reserve, Lytle is the recipient of the Legion of Merit Medal, Bronze Star Medal, Purple Heart Medal, Meritorious Service Medal with 2nd Oak Leaf Cluster, Joint Service Commendation Medal, and Army Commendation Medal with 4th Oak Leaf Cluster. He was also decorated by the Republic Of Vietnam Armed Forces with both the Staff Service Honor Medal 1st Class, and the Civic Action Medal 1st Class.

Career[edit]

In 1974, Lytle became a law enforcement trainer funded by the Southwestern Tennessee Criminal Justice Higher Education Consortium, which included teaching academic criminal justice coursework at The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, Chattanooga State Technical College, Cleveland State Community College, and the Chattanooga Police Academy.

While a graduate student at Texas A&M University, he was hired in 1980 on the professional staff of The Texas A&M University System, initially at the Office of General Counsel, then as Assistant to the Chancellor[5], and soon thereafter was appointed Assistant Director for Governmental Relations, and finally Special Assistant to the Chancellor for Federal Relations[6]. In a voluntary capacity, he served as Executive Director of the Texas Committee for Employer Support to the Guard and Reserve, and was selected by the US Secretary of Commerce as the first academic appointee to The Militarily Critical Technologies Technical Advisory Panel, a major federal policy body regarding technology transfer and export control. He represented Texas A&M University System in Washington DC, offering advocacy positions and coalition contributions as the institutional representative to the Legislative Network The National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges. In 1987, Lytle joined Syracuse University, initially as the Special Assistant to the Vice President for Research and Graduate Study, directing research development and special projects, to be soon appointed as the University’s Executive Director of Government Relations[7].He also held a concurrent, part-time research appointment in technology and information policy at the University’s Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.[8] It was during the time he served on Scientific Freedom & Responsibility Award Panel, and as an advisor to the "Effects National Security Controls and Unclassified Scientific and Technical Research Communications" study at the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was the institutional representative on the Council on Federal Relations, at the Association of American Universities, and as two-term section chair of the National Security & Defense Administration section with the American Society of Public Administration. He was also a member of the editorial board of the refereed Journal of Technology Transfer.[9] From 1988-1992, Lytle was a Secretary of the Army appointee to the Advisory Committee on ROTC Affairs, representing the American Association of Universities. A long-time academic grant reviewer for the NATO Scientific Organization, Lytle was a selected attendee to the 1988 Symposium on the State of Science In Eastern Europe, convened at Brussels, Belgium. The following year, Lytle was an Atlantic Council of the United States nominated member of the US Delegation to the Assembly of the Atlantic Treaty Association, also meeting in Brussels. Lytle taught as an adjunct professor at Marymount University in Arlington. Virginia where he established the forensic science program, the Lutheran Colleges Washington Semester, and briefly was a senior legal policy analyst with the Office of the Secretary of Defense. In 1997, Michael accepted a Washington-based senior research position with Science Applications International Corporation, and as an internationally recognized subject-matter expert on law enforcement[10], intelligence[11], homeland security, border security[12], counterterrorism[13], and counter narcotics[14], providing advisory and technical assistance to US and international agencies. He was the facilitator and proceedings editor for strategic binational working group conferences with Mexico, and then Colombia, and the multinational global forum on corruption convened by the US Vice President.[15] As a consultant to the Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence, Lytle was editor of the capstone strategy study-Taking Stock of Defense Intelligence. Lytle has continued as a reviewer/panelist with the National Institute of Justice since 1999. In 2006, Michael was recruited, and then joined the faculty of The University of Texas at Brownsville, now the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, as founding coordinator of the highly regarded Forensic Investigation Program in the Department of Criminal Justice[16]. The program served at the center of forensic education and training for South Texas. Lytle was also the co-principal investigator on a STEM Forensics grant from the Department of Homeland Security, being the second largest ever acquired in the College of Liberal Arts.

Organizations[edit]

Lytle has been involved with many international, national, and other governmental organization affiliated with national security, criminal justice, and the educational fields. Memberships include the International Association of Chiefs of Police, International Association for Identification, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, International Association of Law Enforcement Intelligence Analysts; and International Association of Forensic Nurses. He is also a member of Zeta Beta Tau social fraternity, and the honorary societies of Sigma Xi, Phi Delta Kappa, Alpha Phi Sigma, and Lambda Alpha Epsilon. He is a life member of the Indiana University, Texas A&M University, National War College, and Sam Houston State University, and alumni associations. He is a 2003 Distinguished Alumnus of Sam Houston State University, and benefactor of the LTC Michael A. Lytle ’77 Award in Forensic Science awarded[17] to the top forensic science graduate student at spring commencement convocation.[18]

References[edit]


This article "Michael A. Lytle" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Michael A. Lytle. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.

  1. "Michael A. Lytle, CMI-III, FACFE". Elite American Educators. Elite American Educators. 15 February 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  2. Gazette, Augusta. "Milton E. Lytle." Augusta Daily Gazette (KS), 28 Jul. 2009, obituaries. News Bank, infoweb.newsbank.com/resources/doc/nb/news/129BFD0C98C677E0?p=WORLDNEWS. Accessed 4 Aug. 2018.
  3. Lytle, Michael (August 1979). "Another View of the Academic Cornucopia: Off-Duty Education and the Officer Corps". 59 Military Review. 8: 15-18. |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  4. Gibbs, Stephanie (9 August 1991). "Syracuse Post Standard Archives, Aug 9, 1991, p. 87". NewspaperArchive.com. Syracuse Post Standard. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  5. Allen, Lytle, Michael (Apr 1979). "A Conceptual Typology of the Role of the University Attorney". Administrative Organization: 25. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  6. Lytle, Michael Allen (24 January 1982). "Legal Factors Related to Access to Campuses of Public Colleges and Universities: An Occasional Paper". Legal Responsibility: 28. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  7. Mengucci, Marry Ellen; Levy, Renee Gearthart (1988). "University Place- Orange in the Big Apple". University Magazine (4). SURFACE. Syracuse University Magazine. Retrieved 3 August 2018.
  8. Lytle, Michael A.; Cockman, Terry L. (September 1989). "An institutional evolution: The Bundeswehr—a New German army". Defense Analysis. 5 (3): 207–220. doi:10.1080/07430178908405401. ISSN 0743-0175. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  9. Segman, Ralph; Tansik, David A.; Block, Richard B.; Brockman, Paul; Bushnell, David S.; Chapman, Richard L.; Delabarre, Del M.; Jacobius, Thomas M.; Timothy Janis, F.; Kovaly, Kenneth A.; Lanham, Clifford E.; Linsteadt, George F.; Lytle, Michael; Marcuse, William; Rood, Sally A.; Tansik, David A.; Wolek, Francis W.; Wylie, Paul R. (December 1991). "Reflections". The Journal of Technology Transfer. 16 (2): 4–4. doi:10.1007/bf02371348. ISSN 0892-9912. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  10. Dalton, Jeff; Austin, Tate (Nov 2004). "CDRL A002A-Integrated Battle Command Decision Support Systems: Experiment B Report for Co-OPR Application". Co-OPR Project: Collaborative Operations for Personnel Recovery: 16. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  11. Sharpe, Ken; Gremban, Keith; Holloman, Kim. "Knowledge Systems For Coalition Operations". www.aiai.ed.ac.uk. SAIC. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
  12. "Border Impossible To Secure, Experts Says". Fox News. Fox News. 6 December 2011. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  13. Armendariz, Jacqueline (April 1, 2012). "U.S. teaches Mexico about criminal justice system". Brownsville Herald. The Brownsville Herald. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  14. "National Consortium for White Collar Crime Research" (PDF). NCWCCR FOCUS. 4 (1): 12. 1999. Retrieved 6 August 2018.
  15. Lytle, Michael A. (25 February 1999). "DTIC ADA373727: National Security Forces Panel: A Global Forum on Fighting Corruption: Safeguarding Integrity Among Justice and Security Officials". Defense Technical Information Center: 92. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  16. Jacobs, Don (2011). Analyzing criminal minds : forensic investigative science for the 21st century (PDF). Santa Barbara, Calif.: Praeger. pp. 7, 9, 10, 31. ISBN 978-0-313-39699-1. Retrieved 8 August 2018. Search this book on
  17. Prior, Nicole (2015). Graduate Study in Criminology and Criminal Justice: A Program Guide. 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Ahingdon, Oxon OX14 4RN: Routledge. p. 248. ISBN 9781317522492. Retrieved 6 August 2018. Search this book on
  18. University, Sam Houston State. "Distinguished Alumni - Sam Houston State University". SHSU Online. Retrieved 6 August 2018.