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Alumna's Forensic Science Passion Take Her to NCIS
Alumna's Forensic Science Passion
TAKES HER TO NCIS
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When Kay Een ’02 was a kid, she called many places home. Her dad was in the military and stationed around the world, from Okinawa to Greece to Hawai'i.
And with each assignment, the family would pack up, pick up and move someplace new. Een got accustomed to change, but she also found something that always stayed the same: her love of Patricia Cornwell novels. The crime author’s delicious tales of murder and mystery fascinated her.
And eventually, they would help drive her to a successful career in forensic sciences. But first, Een said, she had some “growing up to do.”
FINDING HER PASSION
After graduating from high school, Een wasn’t quite ready to jump into college so she decided to follow in her father’s footsteps and join the military. She chose the Navy and was trained as an air traffic controller. It was fulfilling, fast-paced work, but Een was looking for new ways to grow.
So when she was stationed in Hawai'i, she decided to enroll at Chaminade University.
She initially got her associate’s degree. And then after leaving active service, she returned to Chaminade to continue her education and complete her bachelor’s degree. She majored in Forensic Sciences, rekindling her desire to immerse herself in crime scene investigation and evidence analysis. At Chaminade, she also found a place where she could thrive as a nontraditional student.
“I loved the connections I made with professors. There was a camaraderie I was able to develop with them,” she said. “I also really enjoyed the fact that a lot of the younger students really looked up to us older students from a life experience perspective. We could offer our shared experiences.” But what really set Chaminade apart, Een said, was its focus on hands-on learning.
She loved every minute of mock crime scene investigations and staged witness interviews, and couldn’t get enough of the time she spent in forensic sciences labs, either. “You really got to see the work through the eyes of police officers,” she said. “It was really fascinating—and I was hooked.”
That experiential learning continued with an internship that had Een over the moon.
A CAREER AT NCIS
She got the chance to work with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) for two semesters, and suddenly found her dream job. “They had me doing real work. We were going to crime scenes, collecting evidence, I went to autopsies,” Een said. “I got to know that this was really for me.”
Een loved the work so much that she applied to NCIS after graduation in 2002. But about that same time, as the U.S. bolstered military actions in the Middle East, Een was activated from the Navy Reserves and deployed to Qatar. She was there for about six months as a Navy aircrew member.
After she returned to Hawai'i, she got the call she had been waiting for: NCIS wanted to interview her.
She was hired in short order for the agency, and before she had little more than a moment to take a breath, she was assigned to general crimes and conducting investigations. “It was a great first tour,” she said. “I really got to sink my teeth into understanding what the agency and my role were all about.”
Een’s next assignment with NCIS was in Okinawa, a place where she’d lived as a kid.
She is also half-Japanese and has family on her mother’s side in mainland Japan.
Een was assigned to the family and sexual violence unit and spent three years in Okinawa.
While there, she met her future husband, a Marine. They now have two children—10year-old Kenji and 7-year-old Cora. And from Okinawa, the couple was able to co-locate their careers to new locales. They’ve moved five times so far, including to Washington, D.C., and back to Okinawa.
Along the way, Een also received several promotions.