ALUMNI PROFILE
by Joanie Eppinga
Stay focused on it, and your dream can become your reality.
Thatâs the lesson offered by James Earl Cheeks II â95, supervisory special agent for the FBI.
Cheeksâ dream was very real on October 6, 2010. On that day, he and other agents arrested 133 subjects in Operation Guard Shack, the largest sting in FBI history.
Police officers throughout Puerto Rico were taking bribes. âSo we set up drug-selling scenarios the police thought were authentic,â says Cheeks, âand recorded the officers providing protection to drug dealers.â The resulting arrests, which spanned the island, were all high risk. Cheeks received the Attorney Generalâs Award and the FBI Directorâs Award for Excellence as a result of his hard work.
It was also dramatic work, the kind Cheeks had dreamed of as a kid.
But at his inner-city Rochester school, kids didnât get much support for their dreams. âIt was all up to you,â he says. âThe message was basically: âGraduate if you can.ââ
Fortunately, Cheeks couldâand did. Then he planned to join the military. But his older sister, Monique Bragg â90, told him, âThe Army will always be there. Get your education first.â
Heeding her advice, Cheeks earned his degree in business administration from Nazareth. However, after receiving his diploma, he didnât know how to pursue his true career goal. âThis was before search engines, and I didnât know any FBI agents,â he recalls. So he temporarily buried his aspiration, moving into the Army Reserves and the corporate world. Yet the vision of working for the Federal Bureau of Investigation persisted.
Then Cheeks heard the FBI was looking for military personnel with language and intelligence skills, which he had acquired while serving combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. He took a polygraph, along with tests in writing, math, and physical fitness, and passed them all. Cheeks received the job offer he had longed for.
As a supervisory special agent with the FBI, Cheeks spent time on the SWAT team and on the Directorâs Protective Detail. He carried out criminal investigations on violent gangs and officials on the take. The work was excitingâand hazardous.
âWhen you conduct dangerous arrests,â Cheeks says, âyou realize you have to keep honing your skills. You have to be ready for the unexpected. For example, once a suspect had an AK-47 assault rifle hidden under the mattress of his childâs crib.â
Cheeks credits the critical-thinking skills he learned at Nazareth with helping him conduct successful criminal investigations. Those skills also help him in his current role as program manager with the Cyber Division. âWe investigate computer intrusions and cybercrimes committed by foreign actors, criminal organizations, or individuals,â he says. âWe also educate the private sector, because they may be reluctant to work with law enforcement or unaware of whom to report incidents to. We treat them like victims of any crime.â
Whether heâs catching perpetrators or assisting victims, Cheekâs work is always varied.
âThe days are never the same,â he says. âYouâre not stuck behind a desk. You have to get out there and do interviews and surveillance.â
Above all, working for the FBI requires persistenceâbut thatâs not a problem for Cheeks. Itâs what got him there in the first place.
Joanie Eppinga is a writer and editor in Spokane, Washington.