Tulsa Police Department
The Tulsa Police Department (TPD) is the principal law enforcement agency for the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States. It is nationally accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies[3] It is the second largest municipal law enforcement agency in Oklahoma.
Tulsa Police Department | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | TPD |
Agency overview | |
Formed | 1907 |
Employees | 987 |
Annual budget | $123 million (2021)[1] |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Operations jurisdiction | Tulsa, Oklahoma, US |
Map of Tulsa Police Department's jurisdiction. | |
Size | 196.8 square miles (510 km2) |
Population | 401,112 (2018) |
General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | Tulsa, Oklahoma, US |
Police Officers | 742 |
Civilians | 168 |
Agency executive |
|
Facilities | |
Helicopters | 2 |
Website | |
TPD Website |
TPD was officially organized in 1907 after the City of Tulsa was incorporated. However, informally, TPD existed as early as 1905.
Organizational structure
The Chief of Police supervises three deputy chiefs who are each in charge of a bureau. A bureau consist of three to four divisions. Each division is supervised by a major. The Chief of Police reports to the mayor.
Tulsa Police Department
- Chief's Office
- Administration Bureau
- Information and Technical Services
- Training Division
- Headquarters
- Forensic Lab
- Investigations Bureau
- Detective Division
- Special Investigations Division
- Fleet Operations
- Operations Bureau
- Mingo Valley Division
- Gilcrease Division
- Riverside Division
- Special Operations Division
- Administration Bureau
Support units include:[4]
- Air Support
- K9
- Special Operations Team (SOT)
- Bike Patrol
- Motorcycle Patrol
- Bomb Squad
- Special Investigations Unit
- Cyber-Crimes Unit
- Dive Team
Personnel
Tulsa Police department employs personnel from a diverse range of racial, educational and socioeconomic backgrounds. Proportionally, there is significantly greater representation of Caucasian, Native-American and male employees in the department compared with the general population of Tulsa.[5]
Non-sworn Personnel
Staff generally require a GED or high school diploma. Specialized experience and training is also required for specific roles, such as administrative assistants.[6]
Sworn-officers
Sworn-officers are required to have at least a four-year bachelor's degree to apply, generally with a background in forensic science or criminal justice.[7] TPD has no inbound transfer program for existing law enforcement officers so all candidates must complete a six-month training course at the Tulsa Police Academy regardless of previous law enforcement experience.[6][8]
In 2015 The department had 752 sworn-officers with an independent recommendation from Cincinnati University that the city hire an additional 206 officers because, for some time, "The police department is operating at a serious staffing deficiency.":5 In order to meet federally recommended staffing levels to manage shift fatigue, it was recommended that the city should have 1,264 sworn-officers and should more than quadruple the number of civilian administrative staff in order to satisfy standard staffing practices.[9] Funding has remained stagnant with funding levels for 2015 of US$96 million to the same total in 2018.[10][11] As of 2019, there is a projection of 913 sworn officers and 50 administrative staff by the end of 2019 financial year.[12]
Despite the shortage of staff, off-duty sworn-officers of the TPD are highly sought after as private security guards within the region, servicing various businesses from municipal transport services, local hospitals and banks, to convenience stores such as QuikTrip.[13][14][15] Many officers have been moonlighting for several decades due to the lucrative private security industry.[16][17][18][19]
Chief of Police
Wendell Franklin was appointed police chief of the city of Tulsa, Oklahoma by Mayor G. T. Bynum On February 1st, 2020 following the retirement of the previous chief Chuck Jordan. Chief Franklin is the city's 40th police chief and the city's 1st African-American police chief. Chief Franklin has been with the department for 23 years and is known for his attempts to lower crime rate and increase community relations. Chief Franklin graduated the FBI National Academy in 2016 and returned to Tulsa.
Police chiefs
- Herman F. Newblock (August 8, 1907–October 1, 1908)
- Jess Sam Walker (October 13, 1908–February 24, 1909)
- Hirsam A. Thompson (February 25, 1909–May 4, 1910)
- Charles W. Conneely (May 5, 1910–May 3, 1912)
- Herman F. Newblock (January 16, 1911–May 3, 1912)
- Edward Yoder (May 5, 1912–May 3, 1914)
- Foster Nathaniel Burns (May 4, 1914–November 12, 1915)
- Rees D. Moran (November 13, 1915–May 2, 1916)
- Ed L. Lucas (May 2, 1916–May 25, 1918)
- Charles E. Allen (May 30, 1918–April 26, 1920)
- John A. Gustafson (April 27, 1920–June 25, 1921)
- George H. Blaine (July 24, 1921–April 26, 1922)
- Rees D. Moran (April 27, 1922–April 30, 1928)
- John H. Vickrey (May 1, 1928–March 31, 1929)
- George H. Blaine (April 1, 1929–May 5, 1930)
- A. Garland Marrs (May 6, 1930–February 9, 1931)
- Nelson J. Moore (February 9, 1931–April 29, 1932)
- J.W. Townsend (April 30, 1932–Jun 5, 1934)
- Charles F. Carr (May 6, 1934–May 5, 1936)
- Roy Hyatt (May 6, 1936–May 3, 1938)
- L. Randolph House (May 3, 1938–May 6, 1940)
- Ralph Colvin (May 7, 1940–November 7, 1941)
- George H. Blaine (November 7, 1941–May 3, 1943)
- Richard Bland Jones (May 3, 1943–May 2, 1944)
- Roy Hyatt (May 2, 1944–May 4, 1948)
- J.W. "Bud" Hollinsworth (May 4, 1948–May 2, 1950)
- Fred Graves (May 2, 1950–May 6, 1952)
- George O'Neal (May 6, 1952–April 1, 1953)
- Joe McGuire (May 3, 1953–April 30, 1956)
- Paul Livingston (May 8, 1956–February 22, 1957)
- George O'Neal (February 22, 1957–July 15, 1957)
- Joe McGuire (July 15, 1957–July 31, 1962)
- George John "Jack" Purdie (August 1, 1962–February 28, 1978)
- Harry William Stege (March 1, 1978–November 30, 1983)
- Robert N. Dick (December 1, 1983–September 30, 1987)
- Drew Diamond (December 11, 1987–November 15, 1991)
- Ronald Palmer (August 22, 1992–August 31, 2002)
- David D. Been (November 11, 2002–April 30, 2007)
- Ronald Palmer (August 2007–January 2010)
- Chuck Jordan (January 29, 2010–February 1, 2020)
- Wendell Franklin (February 1, 2020–present)
Misconduct
In late 2011 four Tulsa police officers were convicted of stealing money from crime scenes and planting drugs at others. As a result of these actions, dozens of convictions had to be thrown out. The ringleader, Corporal Harold R. Wells, was sentenced to ten years in confinement.[20] On 2012, when offered immunity, Wells testified drug arrests twenty years before were also tainted.[21]
In June 2020, during worldwide protests against the killing in Minneapolis of an unarmed black man, Major Travis Yates pointed out on a radio talk show that it was unreasonable to expect "... our shootings should be right along the U.S. Census lines." He noted that, "All of the research says we're shooting African-Americans about 24% less than we probably ought to be, based on the crimes being committed."[22]
Tulsa Police Reserve
In 1953, the Civil Defense Volunteer Program was organized in the City of Tulsa as a division of the Tulsa City/County Civil Defense Administration. The organization was created initially and solely for training volunteers who could be deployed to provide needed aid, services, and support to the citizens of the city and county of Tulsa, Oklahoma, under the direction, coordination and control of the Tulsa Area Emergency Management Agency (TAEMA).
In 1976, the volunteer program expanded into an organization entitled the Tulsa Auxiliary Police (TAP). While retaining its original intended mission and objectives, it expanded to permit Tulsa Auxiliary Police Officers to do other functions where trained personnel could help law enforcement agencies in manning functions involving the public where there were not sufficient personnel available from professional law enforcement agencies.
In 1995, the City of Tulsa established a new era of volunteer police officers. The Mayor of the City of Tulsa authorized the Chief of Police to appoint reserve municipal police officers as provided by state law. The Tulsa Auxiliary Police became the Tulsa Police Reserve (TPR).
Equipment
Vehicles
- Dodge Charger
- Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor
- Ford Taurus
- Ford Explorer Police Interceptor
- Freightliner MT55 (special use)
- Modified Alvis FV 603 Saracen (special use)
Weapons
Tulsa Police officers carry the Glock 22 Gen 4 .40 S&W semi-automatic handgun. Officers were previously issued the Glock Model 22C Gen 3 .40 S&W.[23] In 2019, TPD began issuing officers Glock 17 Gen 5 9x19mm sidearms.
See also
- Roy Belton lynched in 1920
- Tulsa race massacre 1921
- Shooting of Terence Crutcher 2016
- Clinton Riggs innovative police chief
- List of law enforcement agencies in Oklahoma
- Tulsa County, Oklahoma
References
- Sullivan, Carl; Baranauckas, Carla (June 26, 2020). "Here's how much money goes to police departments in largest cities across the U.S." USA Today. Archived from the original on July 14, 2020.
- Ledbetter, Reagan (2020-02-03). "TPD's New Chief Starts First Week On The Job". News On 6. Retrieved 2020-02-04.
- CALEA
- https://www.tulsapolice.org/join-tpd/specialty-units--assignments.aspx RET. DEC. 22 2017 17:02 CST
- "Internal Affairs 2017 Annual Report" (PDF). Tulsa Police Department. 2017. p. 2. Retrieved 21 December 2019.
- "Employment opportunities". City of Tulsa. Retrieved July 15, 2019.
- "Written Examination Orientation and Preparation Guide" (PDF). City of Tulsa Police Department. I/O Solutions, Inc. for the City of Tulsa, OK. 2003. Retrieved July 15, 2019.
- "FAQ Recruiting - Homepage". Retrieved July 15, 2019.
- Corsaro, Nicholas (September 10, 2015). "CRIME AND STAFFING ANALYSIS FOR THE TULSA POLICE DEPARTMENT: A FINAL REPORT" (PDF). University of Cincinnati Institute of Crime Science.
- "City of Tulsa, Oklahoma: Annual Budget and Capital Plan: Fiscal Year 2014-2015: POLICE: BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS FY 2014 - 2015 & FY 2015 - 2016" (PDF). The City of Tulsa. p. 179.
- "TURKEY MOUNTAIN URBAN WILDERNESS: SECTION 3:FUNDS: ANNUAL OUTLAYS:Fund Summaries 10" (PDF). City of Tulsa. p. 11.
- "Tulsa's Great Raft Race: SECTION 4 DEPARTMENTS: Police Departmental Highlights 14" (PDF). City of Tulsa.
- "Tulsa, OK Security Jobs". Signal 88 Security. Archived from the original on July 26, 2019. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
- "Armed Security Officer: Tulsa Transit: Tulsa, OK". Metropolitan Tulsa Transit Authority. Archived from the original on July 26, 2019. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
- "Job ID: 322869: Armed Security Guard: Tulsa, Oklahoma". St. John Medical Center. Archived from the original on July 26, 2019. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
- Partain, Lauren (March 15, 2019). "New full-time armed employees helping to decrease crimes at Tulsa QuikTrips". ABC8: Tulsa, Oklahoma.
QuikTrip used to hire off-duty law enforcement or security guards to work part-time.
- Main, Frank (March 20, 1989). "Moonlighting Helps Oklahoma Officers Make Ends Meet". Tulsa World. Archived from the original on July 26, 2019. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
- "Fight between east Tulsa QT security guard and customer caught on camera". ABC8: Tulsa, Oklahoma. November 20, 2018.
we also employ off-duty law enforcement to assist us as well.
- "About: Greg Douglass' Professional Biography". Citadel Intelligence. Retrieved July 26, 2019.
- "Ex-Officers Sentenced in Tulsa Police Corruption Scandal". Associated Press. 6 December 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
- Killman, Chris (18 December 2016). "TPD corruption probe: Five years later, one former officer still seeking release". Tulsa World. Retrieved 10 June 2020.
- Polansky, Chris (9 June 2020). "TPD Major: Police Shoot Black Americans 'Less Than We Probably Ought To'". Retrieved 10 June 2020.
- http://www.tulsaworld.com/news/crimewatch/tulsa-police-upgrading-service-handguns/article_9b86e11e-1d68-5f33-83d7-ea1049700120.html
External links
- Official Website
- TPDD.org—Independent site with Tulsa Police Department statistics
- Tulsa Police Officer Memorial