Hired by the state agency as a special agent in 1977, Langley also served as a deputy inspector, inspector, and deputy director, before becoming director. Following his retirement as director, he was chosen to serve as the chair and director of the School of Criminal Justice at the University of Central Oklahoma.
Three years later in 1980, after a brief period as special agent, Langley was promoted to Deputy Inspector in Woodward, Oklahoma.[3] In his position, Langley was the supervisor of the region. Langley remained an administrator and never served as a field agent for the remainder of his career. Langley was promoted to Inspector in that region four years later in 1984. In 1990, he was promoted to deputy director of the OSBI.
OSBI director
Langley became director of the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation in 1995 and has served longer than any previous director.[1]
After his appointment, the agency has implemented the Statewide Intelligence Network, a Crime Scene Agent program, and computerized databases in DNA, Firearms and Tool Marks, and digital images.[4] The agency has also become accredited by the American Society of Crime Lab Directors (ASCLD Lab) and has also attained national recognition for becoming one of only two law enforcement agencies in the state of Oklahoma to be accredited through the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA).[4]
The bureau also opened a new $30 million high-tech laboratory, the Forensic Science Center in Edmond, Oklahoma in 2008.[5]