El Paso Police Department

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El Paso Police Department
Abbreviation EPPD
El Paso PD Patch.jpg
EPPD Shoulder Patch (same insignia used on doors of marked vehicles)
El Paso PD Badge.png
EPPD Badge (Since 2004)[1]
Agency overview
Employees Approx 1,300
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdiction* City of El Paso in the state of Texas, USA
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters El Paso, Texas
Agency executive Greg Allen, Chief of Police
Website
El Paso Police
Footnotes
* Divisional agency: Division of the country, over which the agency has usual operational jurisdiction.

El Paso Police Department (EPPD) is the principal law enforcement agency serving El Paso, Texas, United States. As of Fiscal Year 2014, the agency had an annual budget of more than $118 million and employed around 1,300 personnel, including approximately 1,100 officers.[2] Greg Allen was appointed as the EPPD's chief of police in March 2008.[3]

History

Early History

The early history of the department is difficult to study. Many older newspaper accounts are inaccurate and documents from before about 1950 were lost in a fire.[4] Newspaper accounts were often heavily exaggerated for local entertainment value or to bolster a "wild west" image for the city to readers in the eastern United States.[5]

The formal establishment date for the department is 1884, but historical references to the department exist before that official date.[5] During this period, the department employed a series of City Marshals who were known to be as rough and wild as the criminals in the frontier town, with shootouts and small scale wars being much more common than today. Some marshals were involved in confrontations out of town including the El Paso Salt War and the Lincoln County War. It was also not unheard of to have local, state and federal law enforcement at odds, including armed confrontations.[5]

In 1889, the police department had its first appointed chief, T.C. Lyons. Lyons had previously served in the Fire Department and was not the typical "rough" character previously known in El Paso law enforcement. His tenure may mark the beginning of the more modern and civilized approach to law enforcement in the city.[5]

20th Century Advances

Newspaper accounts show the police starting to use motor vehicles for law enforcement in 1909. Fingerprinting began in 1915.[5] By the 1920s, pictures are available showing some of these advancements.[4] Radar was introduced for speed enforcement in 1955, and the department formed its first SWAT unit in 1972.[5]

In 1946, the department hired its first African American officer (the official website states that four African American veterans were appointed in 1945[5]) However, between that time and the 1970s-1980s, black officers were not allowed to do many of the things other officers could do, including arrests, driving vehicles or writing reports. The current chief, Greg Allen, is the department's first African American chief.[4] The department started actively recruiting women in the 1940s, but none actually served as officers until 1974.[5] However, during this time women actively served as "meter maids" or worked in the jail. Today, several women have achieved high ranks in the police department and the department has hosted the Women in Law Enforcement conference multiple times.[4][6]

In 1972, the department opened a second station to serve the east side and parts of the lower valley. Growth since then has increased the number of stations to five (not including the central command).[4] In the 1990s and early 2000s, the department has implemented many other advancements, including computers, cameras and non-lethal weapons like the Taser.[5]

Recent History

Community policing has been an important goal of the police department in recent years. A 2011 study showed that police officers were spending 75% of their time responding to calls and 25% of their time on administrative work with little time left over for community patrols. Since the study, the department implemented several reforms to free up officer time, including privatized prisoner transport from stations to the jail, a call center for non-urgent reports and changes in the ways officers are called to testify. The goal is for "60-20-20" or 60% of time on reactive work (responding to calls), 20% of time on administrative tasks and 20% of time for community patrols and community involvement.[7][8]

In 2012, the City Council honored Lt. Charles Harvey for serving in the department for 45 years. Harvey is the longest-serving member of the department and currently presides over the Criminal Investigation Division and Tactical Unit at the Central Regional Command. He told an El Paso Times reporter that he does not plan to retire any time soon.[9]

Despite being near the border with Mexico and across the river from Ciudad Juarez (one of the most violent cities in the western hemisphere), El Paso is a very safe city with low crime. This may be caused by the high immigrant population in the city and the generally immigrant-welcoming environment.[10] El Paso has been in the top three large cities (500,000+ population) with the lowest crime rates since 1997, and took the #1 spot for 2010-2013.[11][12]

Possible Future Consolidation With Sheriff's Office

For years, city officials and officials in the El Paso County government have been discussing a possible consolidation of EPPD with the El Paso County Sheriff's Office to reduce costs and improve law enforcement capability in the area. Proponents of this change include current sheriff Richard Wiles, city manager Joyce Wilson and others. Possible methods of consolidation include a Las Vegas style merger with the sheriff in charge of all aspects of policing or a split consolidation with the sheriff in charge of some things and a police chief in charge of others.[13] All El Paso County sheriffs since 1985 have been former EPPD officers, including current Sheriff Wiles, who was formerly EPPD's chief.[4]

Obstacles to consolidation include questions of who would control the metropolitan agency, training levels and the complexity of combining the departments.[14]

As of late 2013, the process of consolidation has not gone forward beyond talks.[15]

In Popular Culture/Media

File:El Paso Police Pinata E-mail.jpg
An image from the infamous "El Paso Police Pinata" forward e-mail

Around 2008, forward e-mails titled "El Paso Police Pinata" or "One cop, three bad guys" were in circulation. The e-mails included graphic and bloody pictures of three men who were apparently shot by a police officer who was standing over them with his firearm.[16] The e-mail claimed that the men came from Ciudad Juarez and attempted to rob an off-duty El Paso Police officer, who killed them all in retaliation. One image is captioned "Do you realize how much the US taxpayer saved by not having to prosecute these worthless thugs?".[17] Internet forum users and bloggers determined that the incident in question likely occurred in Brazil years earlier and certainly didn't occur in El Paso.[18][19]

In 2012, F/X Networks filmed portions of their new show, The Bridge, in El Paso. For one scene, Sheriff Richard Wiles was dressed as an El Paso patrol officer guarding a crime scene. Sheriff Wiles (a former EPPD chief) helped the show's creators with their research so they could more accurately portray law enforcement in Juarez and El Paso[20]

Specialized units

*Regional Operations (Patrol)

  • Criminal Investigations
  • Intelligence
  • Special Traffic Investigations
  • DWI Task Force
  • Canine

*COMSAR

*Training/Academy

*Bomb Squad

*SWAT

*Dignitary Protection

*Internal Affairs

  • Special Investigations Group

[6]

Patrol divisions

  • Central Regional Command
  • Pebble Hills Regional Command
  • Mission Valley Regional Command
  • Northeast Regional Command
  • Westside Regional Command

[6]

Ranks

Rank Insignia [1]
Chief 4 Gold Stars.svg
Assistant Chief 3 Gold Stars.svg
Commander 2 Gold Stars.svg
Lieutenant US-O1 insignia.svg
Sergeant LASD Sergeant.jpg
Patrol Officer (20+ years) image not available
Patrol Officer (15–19 years)
LAPD Police Officer-3+1 - Senior Lead Officer.jpg
Patrol Officer (10–14 years)
LAPD Detective-1.jpg
Patrol Officer (5–9 years)
LAPD Police Officer-3.jpg
Patrol Officer (<5 years) none

Fallen officers

Since 1883, 29 municipal officers have died in the line of duty.[21]

Officer End of Watch Cause of Death
Assistant City Marshal Thomas P. Moad
July 11, 1883
Gunfire
Patrolman Newton Stewart
February 17, 1900
Gunfire
Patrolman William Paschall
December 4, 1914
Gunfire
Patrolman Gus Chitwood
February 13, 1915
Gunfire
Patrolman Sidney J. Benson
June 28, 1917
Gunfire
Deputy Tax Collector Juan M. Garcia
February 1, 1918
Gunfire
Patrolman Octaviano Perea
February 2, 1918
Gunfire
Patrolman George Franklin Drake
September 22, 1918
Vehicular Assault
Captain Harry Phoenix
June 13, 1921
Gunfire
Detective Frank Burns
April 12, 1923
Gunfire
Special Officer Enrique "Yaqui" Rivera
November 25, 1923
Gunfire
Detective John Jack Coleman
July 14, 1924
Gunfire
Patrolman Lynn Reed McClintock
October 3, 1926
Vehicle Pursuit
Captain Schuyler C. Houston*
October 4, 1927
Gunfire
Detective Ralph O. Marmolejo
March 17, 1951
Gunfire
Patrolman Warren Mitchell
May 16, 1953
Gunfire
Detective Guillermo Sanchez
December 14, 1957
Gunfire
Patrolman Arthur Joe Lavender, Jr.
December 16, 1966
Motorcycle Accident
Patrolman Roger A. Hamilton
June 21, 1970
Vehicular Homicide
Patrolman Guy Ray Myers, Jr.
July 24, 1970
Motorcycle Accident
Patrolman David Bannister
June 3, 1974
Vehicle Pursuit
Patrolman Wayne V. Carreon
June 10, 1981
Struck by Vehicle
Detective Charles Douglas Heinrich
August 29, 1985
Gunfire
Detective Normal Michael Montion
October 16, 1989
Gunfire
Patrolman Ernesto Serna
November 12, 1991
Gunfire
Patrolman Angel Andrew Barcena
September 25, 2004
Gunfire
Patrolman Karl R. McDonough
October 13, 2010
Vehicular Assault
Patrolman Jonathan Keith Molina
October 5, 2012
Assault
Patrolman Angel David Garcia
December 16, 2012
Struck by Vehicle
  • Captain Houston is not listed on the official department website, but is listed on the Officer Down Memorial Page.[21][22]

Misconduct

In June 2009, Sergeant Miguel Lucero began an inappropriate relationship with a female student at a Riverside High School where he was assigned. He later pleaded guilty to “Improper Relationship Between and Educator and Student.” He was sentenced to 400 hours of community service and a fine.[23]

In 2012, seventeen officers were indicted on charges of faking records to gain overtime pay. In October, one Officer Scott McFarland pleaded guilty to 35 counts. He was fined and ordered to undergo drug and alcohol testing.[24]

See also

List of law enforcement agencies in Texas

References

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  23. Former El Paso Police Sergeant Sentenced, 26 June 2012, KVIA.com
  24. Former El Paso police officer pleads guilty in OT case, by Aaron Bracamontes, 11/02/2012, El Paso Times

External links