
In a field historically dominated by men, a panel of powerful voices gathered at 探花精选 Monday to share their experiences, insights, and challenges as women working across the criminal justice system.
Organized by Professor Sarah Lazzari as part of the Women, Gender, and Crime course, the Women in Criminal Justice panel welcomed students, faculty, and community members into Herbster Chapel for an honest conversation. The panel featured four accomplished professionals: Seneca County Municipal Court Judge Rhonda Best, Shannon Maag of Oriana House, Kendra Shearer, the Director of Court Services, and Sgt. Rebecca Timm of the Tiffin Police Department.
Each woman brought a unique perspective, rooted in years of firsthand experience navigating courts, corrections, recovery programs, and community policing. They didn鈥檛 just talk about their titles, they shared their motivations, their challenges, and what keeps them going in a system that has not always made space for women.
For Judge Best, it鈥檚 about staying grounded in fairness. 鈥淭he court is not for politics,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 for getting results and being consistent.鈥 Even when mistaken for a man in court鈥斺淪ir,鈥 which is common for a female Judge- she shrugs it off. 鈥淚 put it aside and do the best job I can, because that is what I鈥檓 there to do.鈥
Kendra Shearer shared how personal experiences shaped her path. Inspired by her sister鈥檚 struggles, she knew early on she wanted to work with youth. Her approach is grounded in empathy. 鈥淜nowing who you are working with, getting to know their why 鈥 that鈥檚 how you find the balance.鈥
Shannon Maag offered heartfelt reflections on what brings people to this work: 鈥淲e don鈥檛 get here by accident,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou either experience something yourself or witness someone else鈥檚 journey, and that pulls you in.鈥 Her message to students? 鈥淭ake care of yourself. This field is stressful, but it鈥檚 rewarding.鈥
Sgt. Timm spoke candidly about the realities of law enforcement, from juggling her role as a mother and grandmother to managing high-stress calls with mental health awareness. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just normal people,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 have superpowers. We鈥檝e just chosen a different career path.鈥
Student Gracie Chester guided the discussion with thoughtful questions, prompting reflection not only on careers but on the emotional labor of justice work. Whether talking about long shifts, the value of trauma-informed training, or the rare moments of thanks from someone they鈥檝e helped, each panelist returned to a shared truth: their work matters.
鈥淓ven if you help one person in 10 years,鈥 Judge Best reminded the audience, 鈥測ou鈥檝e still made a difference.鈥
The event was a reminder that justice isn鈥檛 only delivered in courtrooms or patrol cars. It鈥檚 carried out in the compassion, strength, and courage of those who serve. And for Heidelberg students considering careers in criminal justice, it offered not just insight, but a vision of leadership worth striving toward.