Detective Kurt Ballman
Det. Kurt Ballman, nicknamed “Huge,” originally didn’t intend on joining law enforcement. He says, “I went to college to be a school teacher. After college, I was a military policeman in the U.S. Army and found I really had a ‘knack’ for police work.” Ballman joined the Cincinnati Police Department in 1990. After suffering a severe knee injury in the academy, he returned to work in 1991. He joined homicide five years ago.
Det. Ballman says, “I don't work for the dead. There is nothing more that I can do for them, though a great many times I pity them for the terror they may have felt before passing. I work for the living. I work for the grieving families. And I have an obligation to society to remove the worst and most dangerous elements and put them behind bars for as long as possible before they can hurt someone else or kill a truly innocent victim.”
Ballman has spent the past few years as a single parent raising three boys. He says, “They became the focus of my life, and the only reason I did not volunteer for the homicide unit when I was originally asked.” Now that they’re grown, Ballman has dedicated himself to his work in homicide.
Life in homicide has changed the way Ballman views the world. He explains, “So many people have the luxury of living their entire existence not knowing what kind of monsters are really out there lurking. I have no distance. The worst of the worst is always in my face.” However, he adds, “Still for some reason I remain a fairly positive person and have a positive outlook on life. I enjoy waking most days just to see what's coming. I don't feel broken, just a little bent.”
In his free time, Ballman practices martial arts. He trains and teaches Tae Kwon Do three times a week. He is also an avid reader, especially interested in history, philosophy and religion.
Sergeant Joe Briede
Sgt. Joe Briede has been with the Cincinnati Police Department for 14 years. He has been a supervisor in the homicide unit for the past year and a half. As a supervisor, Briede values the opinions of his team and says he likes, "To listen to everyone's ideas or thoughts about an investigation."
Briede has been married for 17 years. He and his wife Gina met in high school. They have two sons. In his spare time, Briede coaches his sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife participate in a co-ed soccer league with some friends. He says, “this is my time to forget about the job... at least until the phone rings."
Detective David Gregory
Rookie homicide detective David Gregory has been with the Cincinnati Police Department for over 7 years. "As long as I can remember, I wanted to be either a soldier or a cop," Gregory says. He has achieved both.
After spending 13 years in the Marines, Gregory signed up for the CPD and was eventually assigned to homicide, a position Gregory says he’s coveted for the majority of his career in law enforcement.
Outside of the job Gregory spends most of his time with his seven-year old son.
Detective Bill Hilbert
Det. Bill Hilbert has been with the Cincinnati Police Department for 16 years, spending the last 6 in homicide.
Despite the grueling hours, Hilbert enjoys the challenge of working homicide. "You're put in charge of a case and then you and your partner see it through. You come up with ideas. It's a lot of frustration, but you work through it." Hilbert adds, "There's a lot of highs and lows. It's like a rollercoaster. You go two weeks without getting any breaks and all of a sudden you have the floodgates open."
As a veteran homicide detective, Hilbert has honed an effective strategy to elicit confessions from his suspects. "You have to know how to relate to people," says Hilbert. "While you can never put yourself in their shoes, you do have to look at things from their eyes. And by understanding, you might be able to get through to them."
Hilbert is married and has grown children. Outside of work, Hilbert enjoys golfing and doing "the normal things that people do when they’re not working."
Detective Doug Lindle
Det. Bill Hilbert has been with the Cincinnati Police Department for 16 years, spending the last 6 in homicide.
Det. Doug Lindle has been with the Cincinnati Police Department for 19 years. He previously worked in patrol and district investigations before transferring to homicide six months ago. He says, “I wanted to work with the best. These are the most important investigations there are.”
Lindle feels “persistence” is his most important attribute. He uses this in the interview room where he questions his subjects until the truth comes out.
Doug Lindle and his wife, a former police dispatcher, are raising a very large family. They have four girls, two boys and a newborn. Doug’s oldest son is twenty-three and is also a police officer. Lindle also owns a hardware store, which, he says, “allows me to help people in a different way.”
Detective Jenny Luke
Jenny Luke worked in the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Department before she transferred to the Cincinnati Police Department. She joined the homicide unit five years ago and says, “I would have never given up the opportunity to be part of a unit like this.”
“It doesn’t matter what the deceased person may have been doing in his life when he was murdered,” Luke says. “No one has the right to play God.” She feels a strong sense of duty to work for not only the victim, but for the victim’s loved ones. “Families depend on my unit to help them find closure. They are the ones suffering after their loved one is killed, so I want them to have any peace I can give them.”
Luke previously worked in the undercover units and credits this experience with helping her “think outside the box.” Her past experience especially helps her in interviews. “It helps me find alternative ways to catch ‘the bad guy’ in a lie.”
Luke is a single mother with two boys, ages 4 and 11. She tries to attend every one of their football, basketball and baseball games. “I couldn’t do this job without the help of my parents who constantly baby sit for me when I get called in or need to stay late,” she says. “I owe them everything.”