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  • Marietta Daily Journal

    Marietta Police Department Announces Promotions

    By Damon,

    15 hours ago

    The Marietta Police Department hosted a promotional pinning ceremony on July 17 at 9 a.m. for friends, family and coworkers of the six newly promoted staff.

    About 125 people gathered to celebrate the new promotions, with the ceremony being led by MPD Chief Beam and MPD Deputy Chief Twaddell. The promotees were Sgt. Mordarski and Sgt. Conklin, Lt. Liedke and Lt. Foster, Maj. Mixon and Deputy Chief Rutland. Chief Beam thanked the family members for supporting their loved ones and the promotees for their hard work and dedication to serving the community.

    Each member promoted was pinned with their new badge by a family member of their choosing.

    Sgt. Mordarski

    Sgt. Mordarski has been with MPD for over 20 years. During his time in college, he worked as a jailer in a regional juvenile detention center. He then worked as a patrol officer for the Sierra Vista, Arizona police department for four years prior to relocating back to Georgia in 2003.

    During his time on patrol with MPD, he worked on both evening watch and day watch. He has served as a field training officer for several year prior to being selected to work in the training unit. While in the training unit, he has been a senior instructor, firearms instructor, use of force instructor, taser instructor, ALERRT instructor and earned his state Supervisory Certificate in 2015.

    Sgt. Mordarski also took on the role of FTO coordinator where he was responsible for coordinating and teaching over 200 recruit officers their MPD post academy classes.

    Sgt. Conklin

    Sgt. Conklin has been an officer with MPD for nine years. As a patrolman he has served as a field training officer and was a member of the Gang Liaison Program. In 2018, he joined the SWAT team and continues serve with the team today. In 2022, he transferred to the investigative services division as a Task Force Officer with the FBI’s Gang and Violent Crime Squad.

    He has received numerous awards throughout his career, including the Distinguished Service Award for Combatting Drug Trafficking and Criminal Street Gangs, the Cobb County Law Enforcement Association Performance Award for Criminal Street Gangs and an additional Distinguished Service Award for a homicide investigation leading to the arrest of three gang members.

    Lt. Liedke

    Lt. Liedke began his career with MPD in 2001 and was assigned to Evening Watch. In 2003 he joined the MPD SWAT team and dayshift as an FTO.

    In 2006, he transferred to the Bike Unit where he had the opportunity under Chief Flynn to rename the Bike Unit to the Community Response Unit. While on CRU, he led and organized various programs to include the Police Explorers, Citizens Academy, COPS Areas, volunteer program and the Crime Free Housing program. While serving in CRU, he became an instructor and in 2009, he transferred to the Training Unit where he earned multiple instructor certifications, including the Cooper Institute of fitness instructor certificate, Firearms IT, Defensive Tactics IT and Health and Wellness IT.

    In June 2012, he was promoted to sergeant and supervised Evening Watch and Morning Watch. In 2013, Lt. Liedke was selected to supervise CIU and K9, a position which he held for 11 years. During that time, CIU implemented the K9 apprehension program, purpose built K9 vehicles and conducted short- and long-term complex narcotics investigations yielding over 2,000 arrests.

    In 2023, he earned a purple belt in Brazilian jiu jitsu and remains an active firearms and defensive tactics instructor. In 2024, he stepped into an SRO supervisory role at Marietta High School, Marietta Middle School and the alternative school, while continuing to supervise CIU, K9 and SWAT. His SWAT career covers 21 years where he has served on the perimeter team, entry team, sniper team, team leader, sergeant and certified explosive breacher.

    Lt. Foster

    Lt. Foster joined MPD in April 1995. Since that time, he has served as a patrol officer, a detective working homicide and crimes against children. He spent seven years on the SWAT team, as well as supervised the traffic unit and Community Response Unit. In 2016, he went back to investigations supervising person crimes until his recent promotion.

    He served as an Internal Affairs Investigator. During his tenure in CRU, he began the first Pastor’s Police Academy to reach community leaders during the troubled times of the Ferguson, Missouri riots. The PPA was favorably accepted, particularly in the African American community, where pastors and church leaders built strong ties with the Chief of Police and Senior Command Staff.

    He has received two Distinguished Service Awards and a Difference Maker Award presented by the Chief of Police for excellence.

    Maj. Mixon

    Since 2006, Maj. Mixon has held multiple positions within his department and been promoted on three separate occasions. Before being promoted he was a Lieutenant, SWAT Commander and assigned to Technology Management.

    In that role, he was responsible for all current and future technological advances of the Department. He has supervised the Training Unit, the Property and Evidence Division, and all critical and crisis scenarios when SWAT was utilized.

    He has written policies, proposals and research studies on various topics related to law enforcement such as a directive for dealing with direct and indirect threats that was adopted by Georgia Association of Chiefs of Police. He has been published in NTOA Tactical Edge, completed FBI- LEEDS Executive Development Seminar and has participated in multiple National White-Collar Crime certification courses.

    Deputy Chief Rutland

    Deputy Chief Justin Rutland has been with MPD for 18 years. He came to the department after serving as a deputy with the Cobb County Sheriff’s Office for approximately two years and the U.S. Marine Corps prior to that.

    At MPD, he has served as a patrol officer on Evening Watch and as a traffic enforcement officer on the STEP unit. After being promoted to Sergeant in 2012, he worked on Evening Watch and later in the Investigative Services Division as a Detective Sergeant. He was promoted to Lieutenant in 2016 and was assigned in the Support Services Division as the Technology Manager, Accreditation Supervisor and Internal Affairs Investigator in the Office of Professional Standards.

    During these first 11 years with MPD, he served at various positions on the Department’s SWAT Team to include Police Counter Sniper, Team Supervisor and ultimately Team Commander. In late 2018, he was transferred to command the Investigative Services Division as a Detective Lieutenant. In 2021, he was promoted to the rank of Major.

    He served as the Uniform Patrol Day Watch Commander and CRU/STEP Commander until being transferred to a newly created position in Support Services in late 2022.

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