Archived News | Return to News Center
September 30, 2009
ULM’s Chief of Police receives Alumni Association’s 2009 Service Award
University of Louisiana at Monroe Chief of Police Larry Ellerman is the recipient of the 2009 ULM Service Award.
The ULM Alumni Association will recognize Ellerman with a plaque commemorating his selection at the Alumni Awards Reception on Saturday, Oct. 3, before the ULM homecoming game.
Since 1997, the Association has annually selected a ULM staff member for outstanding service to the university. Service award recipients must have completed at least three consecutive years at ULM and have contributed to the betterment of the campus community.
“It is inconceivable what this university would have been without the 30-years of public service and leadership that Chief Ellerman has devoted to it,” said ULM President James E. Cofer Sr. “Much has changed in campus law enforcement during that time, but with Chief Ellerman at the helm, the campus is safe and secure for all of our students, staff and faculty.”
Ellerman was hired as ULM’s Assistant Director of Police in 1979 at a time when the university was significantly smaller and quieter. Since that time, he has led the way in instituting community-oriented policing, the practice of assigning the same officer to a specific area on a permanent basis. Results of this policing style have brought ULMPD recognition statewide by other police chiefs and officers.
Ellerman also provided oversight and sought grant funding for a department-wide communications system upgrade, with improved technology that enables officers to communicate effectively with one another, and with other area and state officers in promoting campus safety.
His other accomplishments include the development and maintenance of emergency preparedness plans for the campus, as well as the coordination of on-campus crime prevention programs.
“Life is built around people. I guess that is why I’m a public servant,” said Ellerman.
Ellerman entered the law enforcement field with one goal in mind – finishing his college degree.
Ellerman heard that the Monroe Police Department was hiring patrol officers and had offered to help pay for courses at then Northeast Louisiana State University, just as Ellerman was finishing active duty service with the U.S. Army in Fort Hood, Texas. Ellerman went on to earn both his bachelor’s degree and master’s degree in criminal justice at the university.
He and his wife, Claudine, have been married for 47 years; they have three sons, all of whom are ULM graduates, and are successful in their fields of work.
He is a long-time member of First Baptist Church in West Monroe, where he serves as deacon and is on the Community Restoration Committee. A fact not as widely known about Chief Ellerman is that he sings with a southern gospel quartet, and has five recordings under his belt. The group is “Brothers in Christ,” though they were once also referred to as “The Singing Cops.”
PLEASE NOTE: Some links and e-mail addresses in these archived news stories may no longer work, and some content may include events which are no longer relevent, or reference individuals and/or organizations no longer associated with ULM.