Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Intersections: A ride that changed a life

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Intersections: A ride that changed a life

    Glendale News Press, CA
    March 20 2014


    Intersections: A ride that changed a life

    March 19, 2014|By Liana Aghajanian


    Lt. Lola Abrahamian never intended to become a police officer. She was
    already enjoying a fruitful and rewarding career she had had since
    graduating from college, but an interest in criminal law and a chance
    meeting with the Glendale Police Department led to a ride-along that
    completely changed the course of her life.

    "I went out on the ride-along and I thought this is what I want to do.
    It was just fun and exciting and I thought, well, this is a lot more
    fun than becoming a lawyer," she said with the kind of enchanting,
    contagious laugh that makes you want to laugh, too. "The problem was
    that nobody really thought I was serious, because of what I was doing
    and what I wanted to do."

    What she was doing was a world away from law enforcement. For 14
    years, Abrahamian worked in the field of reproductive biology. With
    combined degrees in microbiology and chemistry, she was a lead
    embryologist in several Southern California in vitro fertilization
    facilities, including one of the country's largest sperm banks.


    The leap from giving someone the chance to become parents to
    patrolling the streets was a big one. And though she loved her career,
    she was leaning toward a change, one that she was very serious about
    following through with.

    "I tell people, imagine what a wonderful and intriguing thing it is to
    be able to look at a single sperm and a single egg and then look at a
    fertilized egg and embryo and then nine months later, see a live
    baby," she said. "To this day, I miss it. I didn't leave because I
    didn't like the career, I just had gone as far as I could go."

    After three years as a reserve, Abrahamian transitioned to a patrol
    officer, but her roles and opportunities within the department have
    been plentiful and diverse. She was once a crisis negotiator for the
    city's SWAT team, worked as a detective in financial crime and assault
    units and because of her science background, oversaw the fairly new
    Verdugo Regional Crime Laboratory.

    Promoted to lieutenant in 2010, she became North Area Commander last
    summer. This coming April will be her 14-year anniversary with the
    Glendale Police Department.

    She is in all senses of the word a self-confessed anomaly. With two
    careers blossoming at different stages in her life, her entrance into
    law enforcement strays away from the normal career trajectory of a
    police officer.

    http://articles.glendalenewspress.com/2014-03-19/opinion/tn-gnp-intersections-a-ride-that-changed-a-life-20140319_1_law-enforcement-police-officer-patrol-officer

Working...
X