Osceola County Sheriff's Office

The Osceola County Sheriff's Office is the largest and chief law enforcement agency in Osceola County, Florida, located in Kissimmee. Per the State of Florida Constitution, the Sheriff is the chief law enforcement officer of both the incorporated and unincorporated areas of the county. The current sheriff is Russell Gibson. The agency has over 700 employees and serves a population of almost 270,000. Osceola County deputies patrol 1,506 square miles (3,900 km2) which include Kissimmee, St. Cloud, Celebration, and Poinciana as well as several other unincorporated communities. The Osceola County Sheriff's Office has been a CFA-accredited law enforcement agency since 1999.

Osceola County Sheriff's Office
AbbreviationOCSO
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionOsceola County, Florida, USA
Map of Osceola County Sheriff's Office's jurisdiction.
Size1,506.35 sq mi (3,901.4 km2)
Population268,685
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersKissimmee, FL
Sworn members500+
Agency executives
  • Russell Gibson, Sheriff
  • Kevin McGinley, Chief Deputy
Facilities
Substations2
Jails1
Website
http://osceolasheriff.org

Divisions

Enforcement Bureau

  • Uniform Patrol
  • Aviation Unit
  • Mounted Patrol Unit
  • HIDTA Task Force
  • IRS Task Force
  • FBI-JTTF

Criminal Investigations Division

  • East Property Crimes
  • West Property Crimes
  • Economic Crimes
  • Persons Crimes
  • Sex Crimes/Child Abuse
  • Crime Analysis/Intelligence
  • Robbery
  • Violent Crimes
  • Evidence Unit
  • Forensics

Specialty Units

  • SWAT
  • Emergency Response Team
  • Agriculture/Marine
  • Community Response Team
  • K-9 Unit
  • Tourism Policing Unit
  • Traffic/DUI Unit
  • Gang Unit
  • N.E.T.
  • O.C.I.B.

Administrative Bureau

  • Civilian Volunteers
  • Civil Process
  • Communications
  • Community Services
  • Court Services
  • Crime Prevention
  • Fleet Maintenance
  • Records
  • Information Management
  • Quality Assurance and Accreditation
  • Research and Development
  • School Resource
  • Training
  • Warrants
  • dogs
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gollark: Most modern CPUs support "simultaneous multithreading", where one core can run multiple threads by switching between them *very* fast (without OS intervention/context switches, I think). You might expect this to make them slower, and sometimes it does, but each core has a bunch of resources which just one running thread may underutilize.
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