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Columbus police add 31 officers in smaller academy graduating class when more needed

Wide smiles and proud relatives were abundant Friday morning at the James G. Jackson Columbus Police Academy, as 31 new officers graduated training to join the Columbus Division of Police and 18 others will join other central Ohio law enforcement agencies.

The number of Columbus recruits are significantly lower than other recent classes, which have averaged about 45 new officers. The number is not what Columbus police leadership hoped it would be to help solve staffing issues that have left the division down at least more than 150 officers.

Among those who graduated Friday, none had a wider smile than 21-year-old Prakash Poudyel, the second Nepali officer to join Columbus police. A graduate of Northland High School who was a police cadet prior to joining the academy, Poudyel said he has wanted to be an officer since he was a young kid and after moving to Columbus at the age of 10.

"I saw a lot of Columbus police officers," Poudyel said. "I always wanted to be a police officer."

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Poudyel and his 30 classmates are some help to a short-staffed department, but other help is now delayed in coming. First Assistant Chief LaShanna Potts said Friday that police have "pushed back" a second class of lateral recruits from other agencies. This was due to tweaks being made to the program based on feedback from the first class, she said; however, people within Columbus police have told The Dispatch it was because of a lack of interest and low class numbers.

There will be three academy graduations in 2023 in an effort to boost the division's ranks.

Prakash Poudyel is swarmed by his nieces, nephews and other family members following his swearing-in as a new Columbus police officer on Friday at the 138th recruit graduating class at the James G. Jackson Columbus Police Academy. Poudyel is the second Nepali police officer on the Columbus force.
Prakash Poudyel is swarmed by his nieces, nephews and other family members following his swearing-in as a new Columbus police officer on Friday at the 138th recruit graduating class at the James G. Jackson Columbus Police Academy. Poudyel is the second Nepali police officer on the Columbus force.

Poudyel said he hopes he can make a difference in Columbus and the local Nepali community, including by encouraging other young Nepalis to consider law enforcement as a career.

"Since I'm in it now, I can help them through the process," Poudyel said.

The oldest member of the 138th recruit graduating class — 55-year-old Juan A. Morales — spent 23 years in the U.S. Marine Corps and 15 years in the Illinois National Guard before deciding to begin a second career as a Columbus police officer.

"I want to keep living," Morales said. "I might be a transplant from Chicago, but the red, white and blue blankets one coast to another."

Morales said that even though his two sons are older than many of his classmates, he was happy to be able to learn from everyone in the class and hopes some of his wisdom — partially coming from deployments during the Gulf War and to Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan — was passed on to them.

Officers walk in line to the stage at the start of the swearing-in ceremony for the 138th graduating class at the James G. Jackson Columbus Police Academy.
Officers walk in line to the stage at the start of the swearing-in ceremony for the 138th graduating class at the James G. Jackson Columbus Police Academy.

"They looked up to me, not as a parent, but it was silent motivation," Morales said. "They also motivate me because I've been through life, I've seen the good and the bad. These guys are going to see some horrible stuff. That courage for me, in not knowing what's out there and stepping up anyways, they inspire me to keep going."

Morales said he hopes to work 15 more years as a Columbus police officer, so long as his body holds up.