Norfolk Police Department
The Norfolk Police Department (NPD) is the primary law enforcement agency servicing 242,803 people within 96.3 square miles (249 km2) of jurisdiction within Norfolk, Virginia.
Norfolk Police Department | |
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[[File:|border|140px]] Flag of the Norfolk Police Department (Bicentennial) | |
Abbreviation | NPD |
Agency overview | |
Formed | 1797 |
Employees | 885 |
Annual budget | $63.6 million |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Operations jurisdiction | Norfolk, Virginia, USA |
Map of Norfolk Police Department's jurisdiction. | |
Size | 96.3 square miles (249 km2) |
Population | 242,803 |
Governing body | City |
General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | Norfolk, Virginia |
Police Officers | 757 |
Civilians | 128 |
Agency executive |
|
Facilities | |
Stations | 3 Patrol Divisions |
Website | |
Official Website |
Homeland Security Division
The Homeland Security Division, comprising the Harbor Patrol Unit, Special Operations Team, and Bomb Squad, serves the department and citizens by maintaining a state of preparedness for emergency response to critical incidents, terrorism and other security threats.
- Harbor Patrol Unit The Harbor Patrol Unit is responsible for ensuring safe flow of waterborne critical assets transiting the Norfolk Harbor. They also focus on recreational boating through the enforcement of state and city codes.
- Special Operations Team The SOT is responsible for a rapid ready response to critical incidents outside the training and weapons capability of the patrol divisions such as hostage rescue, barricaded suspects, tubular assaults, active threats, high-risk arrest/search warrants, narcotics search warrants, vehicle take-downs, and maritime operations.
- Bomb Squad The Bomb Squad is responsible for providing a rapid, technical response to calls for service involving real or suspected explosives and explosive devices; to provide additional resources to the Homeland Security Division; and to provide training and instruction to the NPD in the recognition of, and response to situations involving explosives.[1]
Administrative Services
Personnel Division
The Personnel Division is responsible for maintaining departmental personnel records, coordinating the department’s disability management program, overseeing police recruitment processes, and coordinating the Master Police Officer Program.
- Training Unit The Training Unit is responsible for improving job performance and proficiency, the meeting or exceeding of the Department of Criminal Justice Service's (DCJS) training standards and requirements, improving the quality of training with organizational goals in mind and to ensure the department’s philosophy and mandates are clearly understood.
- Citizens’ Police Academy and CPAAAN The Citizens' Police Academy is responsible for providing Norfolk residents information about the NPD and how it works. The Citizens’ Police Academy Alumni Association of Norfolk, CPAAAN, is offered to graduates of the Citizens' Police Academy, where members support law enforcement throughout Norfolk.[2]
Strategic Management Division
The Strategic Management Division formulates, evaluates, and monitors the policies, and procedures, that support the department in achieving its vision and mission. They are also responsible for managing the department’s directives system consisting of general orders.[3]
Central Records Division
The Central Records Division is responsible for a repository for criminal histories, correspondence, fingerprints, photographs, incident and accident reports, and all warrants.
- Warrant Unit The Warrant Unit is responsible for processing felony and misdemeanor warrants, Circuit Court indictments, PB15 parole/probation violation papers, capiases, magistrate summonses, and other legal documents, issued by courts or magistrates.
- Technology Support Unit The Technology Support Unit is responsible for the coordination of the security and administration of the Virginia Criminal Network, the police department record management system, LINx security and system administrators, and acts as the security liaison for the City Information Technology Department.[4]
Crime Prevention Unit
- Neighborhood Watch
- Business Watch
- Civic Leagues
- Security Surveys
- Safer by Design
- Environmental Crimes
- Speaker’s Bureau
- Special Programs
- Police Athletic League
- Police Explorers’ Post 191
- Seniors Programs
- Crime Prevention for the Hispanic Community[5]
Investigative Services
- Detective Division The Detective Division is responsible for investigating felony and serious misdemeanor crimes occurring within Norfolk’s jurisdiction and to identify, arrest, and present offenders to the judicial system.
- Vice and Narcotics Division The Vice and Narcotics Division is responsible for investigating cases involving narcotics activities throughout the City of Norfolk and consists of the Narcotics Unit and the Street Enforcement Unit.
- COMPSTAT COMPSTAT stands for management accountability in policing through Computerized Statistics
- Crime Analysis Unit The Crime Analysis Unit is responsible for supporting the operational elements and the administration of the Police Department by collecting, analyzing, and disseminating information on crime pattern detection, crime-suspect correlation, target profile analysis, and forecasting crime potential, trends, and patterns.
Field Operations
Norfolk is divided into 3 patrol divisions, each consisting of three sectors.
- K-9 Unit The K-9 Unit is responsible for the augmenting operations of the three patrol divisions through a complement of dog teams on patrol.
- Traffic Unit The Traffic Unit consists of motorcycles, marked, and unmarked patrol units. It also has control over the school crossing guards assigned to schools throughout the city.[6]
Rank structure
Sworn personnel
Training | Primary Ranks | Supervisory | Command Staff | |||||||||||||
Grade | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | ||||||
Insignia | No Insignia | No Insignia | No Insignia | |||||||||||||
Title | Recruit | Officer | Detective | Police Training Officer I | Master Police Officer | Police Training Officer II | Corporal | PTO Corporal | Sergeant | PTO Sergeant | Lieutenant | Captain | Assistant Chief |
Deputy Chief |
Chief | |
Abbreviation | RCT | OFC | DET | PTO | MPO | PTO II | CPL | SGT | LT | CPT | ACOP | DCOP | COP |
Non-sworn personnel
A number of uniformed civilian staff assist with the daily or periodic functions of the department. Operations Officers may perform desk functions, assist with the handling of evidence, traffic control, and various other administrative functions.[7] Chaplains are typically on call and may be paged out to incidents involving casualties, particularly of police personnel, or when their services may be otherwise warranted.[8] |
Chaplain Corps | Operations | |||
Grade | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
Insignia | No Insignia | |||
Title | Chaplain | Senior Chaplain |
Operations Officer I |
Operations Officer II |
Abbreviation | CHP | SCP | OPS | OPS II |
2 The insignia are metal pins of the religious symbol of the religion the chaplain represents, worn on the collar. The pins are silver for Chaplains and gold for the Senior Chaplain.[9] |
Misconduct
As a matter of policy, the Department does not tell the public what if any disciplinary actions it takes against is officers.[10]
In early 2011, Detective Robert Glenn Ford was sentenced to more than twelve years in prison for taking bribes from criminals. Ford was the detective who questioned the Norfolk 4 who were unjustly imprisoned for twenty years for rape and murder.[11] The men's lawyers said they had been intimidated into confessing by the police.[12]
In January 2014, a woman was mauled by a Norfolk police dog, requiring forty-three stitches. The police chief admitted his officers used excessive force and the city settled for almost $200,000.[13] Four policemen left the department as a result of this attack but were never charged.[14]
On 7 May 2016, Officer Justin Benson was driving at more than seventy miles per hour on city streets when he struck a car, killing its driver. The officer was violating the Department's policy on the maximum speed to be used when responding to a call. He was not charged.[15][16]
In July 2016, the City agreed to pay one and a half million dollars to settle a lawsuit involving a drunk driver who was shot by a policeman. The City did not admit any legal responsibility in the settlement.[17]
Fallen officers
Since the establishment of the Norfolk Police Department, 39 officers have died in the line of duty.[18]
Officer | Date of Death | Details |
---|---|---|
Officer John McNerney | Gunfire | |
Officer Rufus A. Hobbs | Animal Related | |
Officer Stonewall J. Taylor | Struck by vehicle | |
Officer Ashville T. Williamson | Gunfire | |
Officer Harvey J. Babb | Motorcycle accident | |
Officer Harry J. Charlton | Assault | |
Officer William L. Sherrod | Struck by streetcar | |
Officer Edward J. Vellines | Gunfire | |
Officer Daniel A. Weisbrod | Gunfire | |
Officer Joseph E. Johnson | Motorcycle accident | |
Officer Allen E. Lindsay | Motorcycle accident | |
Sergeant Benjamin H. Butts | Gunfire | |
Officer Jefferson R. Holland | Motorcycle accident | |
Officer John Franklin Harmann | Gunfire | |
Officer Arthur Herbert Barrett | Heart Attack | |
Officer Michael Aloisio | Motorcycle Accident | |
Officer Frank A. Davis | Gunfire | |
Officer Robert F. Dunn | Gunfire | |
Chief of Police John Fulton Woods | Automobile Accident | |
Detective George W. Perkins | Automobile Accident | |
Officer Daniel E. Hobbs | Automobile Accident | |
Officer Carlton J. Byrd | Motorcycle accident | |
Officer William Warren Lassiter | Struck by vehicle | |
Officer Louis E. Spry | Vehicle Pursuit | |
Officer Robert C. Hill | Automobile accident | |
Officer Benjamin E. Myrick | Motorcycle accident | |
Detective Robert Courtland Wash | Gunfire | |
Officer William Peterson | Struck by vehicle | |
Sergeant Robert J. Bouchard | Gunfire | |
Officer Lewis Willard Hurst Jr. | Gunfire | |
Officer Stephen Samuel Douros | Vehicular assault | |
Officer John C. Thomas III | Motorcycle accident | |
Officer Douglas Eric Drye | Gunfire | |
Police Officer William Henry Burtt | Gunfire | |
Police Officer James B. Gilbert | Gunfire | |
Police Officer Sheila Herring | Gunfire | |
Police Officer Stanley Cornell Reaves | Gunfire | |
Police Officer Seneca Bailey Darden | Gunfire (accidental) | |
Police Officer Brian Jones | Gunfire |
References
- Norfolk Police Department - Homeland Security Division
- Norfolk Police Department - Personnel Division
- Norfolk Police Department - Strategic Management
- Norfolk Police Department - Central Records
- Norfolk Police Department - Crime Prevention Unit
- Norfolk Police Department - Patrol
- "Job Classification, Operations Officer II".
- "Norfolk Police Department 2010 Annual Report".
- http://www.norfolk.gov/Archive/ViewFile/Item/65
- Edwards, Jonathan (19 September 2016). "Norfolk police to change policy, release partial results of internal affairs investigations". Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
- McGlone, Tim (26 February 2011). "Ex-Norfolk detective gets 12 1/2 years for corruption". Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
- "20 Years After Being Bullied Into Confessing, "Norfolk 4" Are Pardoned". New York Times. Associated Press. 22 March 2017. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
- Green, Kevin (18 April 2016). "Norfolk, NSU student reach $200K settlement in K-9 attack case". WAVY-TV. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
- Mechanic, Allison; Taylor, Doris. "Four Norfolk officers out of jobs following investigation into K9 attack on NSU student" (8 April 2016). WKTR. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
- Hartley, Eric (22 July 2016). ""It was negligence on our part": Norfolk police officer was driving 96 mph before deadly crash, councilman says". Retrieved 23 March 2017.
- Edwards, Jonathan (6 January 2017). "Norfolk officer who hit, killed 79-year-old on his way to crime scene won't be charged, prosecutor says". Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
- Edwards, Jonathan (21 July 2016). "Ex-sailor shot by Norfolk police settles for $1.5 million in lawsuit against city". Virginian-Pilot. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
- Officer Down Memorial page