Joe Mokwa

Joseph J. Mokwa was appointed St. Louis' 32nd Police Chief. was an officer for 37 years and Chief for 7½ years in the Metropolitan Police Department, City of St. Louis.[1] Mokwa retired amidst controversy in late July 2008.[2]

Joe Mokwa
32nd Police Chief Metropolitan Police Department, City of St. Louis
In office
May 11, 2001  May 11, 2008
Director of Public SafetyCharles Bryson
Mayor of St. LouisFrancis Slay
Preceded byRon Henderson
Succeeded byDaniel Isom
Personal details
Born
Joseph J. Mokwa

(1949-03-02) March 2, 1949
Spouse(s)Janet Torrisi-Mokwa (Deceased 7/23/2018)
ResidenceLadue, Missouri

He was previously St Louis' Police Chief from 2001 to 2008.

Career

Col. Mokwa joined the Metropolitan Police Department, City of St. Louis on February 8, 1971. He was promoted to Police Commissioner on May 11, 2001. He was the city's 32nd Chief of Police.[3]

During his 34-year career Mokwa served in almost every unit of the Department. His first assignment as a patrol officer was in the Sixth District. He worked in the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and Ninth Districts as an officer and as a supervisor. As an investigator he worked in the District Detective Bureau as well as the Intelligence Unit and the Internal Affairs Division. Prior to being promoted to Chief of Police, he served as the Assistant Chief of Police, responsible for the Bureau of Professional Standards, which includes the Internal Affairs, Police Academy, Information Services (Technology) and Special Services Divisions. [4]

gollark: I said nothing about them being serious arguments or not.
gollark: This is also bizarre. Your perceptions of importance don't necessarily match other people's, and what they post in the channel is governed by their own perception.
gollark: > You could argue that it's an action of a protest, but a) protest is taken after negotiations fail, and there were no negotiations, b) there's a thing called self-preservation.I have no idea what this is actually supposed to mean, so I can't respond to it much.
gollark: If you do a thing, and it turns out to not fix a problem, it does not follow that you should just immediately increase the thing further.
gollark: Metadiscussion being tightly restricted and controlled sounds more like a way to consolidate palaiologistic power than something to actually generally benefit the community.

References

  1. Mokwa's retirement letter from the SLPD's website, undated.
  2. Betsy Bruce, Police Chief Joe Mokwa Retires Amid Controversy, 25 July 2009, Fox St. Louis. Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "Career" (PDF). SLMPD.org.
  4. "Business Journal". bizjournals.com.
Police appointments
Preceded by
Ron Henderson
Metropolitan Police Commissioner
20012008
Succeeded by
Daniel Isom


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