West Virginia State Police: Difference between revisions
m General clean of articles with portal flags using AWB |
No edit summary |
||
Line 112: | Line 112: | ||
Governor [[John Jacob Cornwell]] was insistent upon having a state police force which he said, "was mandatory in order for him to uphold the laws of our state." Part of the compromise was the name of the organization: "West Virginia Department of Public Safety" was the official name until 1995 when the name was changed to "West Virginia State Police" during the legislative session. |
Governor [[John Jacob Cornwell]] was insistent upon having a state police force which he said, "was mandatory in order for him to uphold the laws of our state." Part of the compromise was the name of the organization: "West Virginia Department of Public Safety" was the official name until 1995 when the name was changed to "West Virginia State Police" during the legislative session. |
||
==Corruption== |
|||
The West Virginia State Police Forensics Labratory, under [[Fred Zain]] was found to have participated in a 20 year systematic scheme of "framing" innocent persons by falsifying [[DNA]] evidence, begining in [[1973]]. Eventually over one hundred persons received new trials, and charges were dropped against 16 innocent men. The state paid over $18 million in damages as a result of this corruption. |
|||
In [[1992]] five troopers were "involuntarially retired" for selling passing grades on commercial trucking safety inspections. |
|||
In [[1995]] a caller called [[911]] to complain of a loud party. Unknown to him, it was a police retirement party. He was then beaten, receiving life altering [[kidney]] damage, and charged with "resisting arrest". Unknown to the police, the 911 operator had stayed on the line and recorded the beating. The state paid over $500,000 in damages. |
|||
In [[2002]] the "Troopers' Association" was directed to stop fund raising from the public. The state [[Ethics Commission]] found that troopers had implied that it would ignore trivial traffic offenses in return for donations. It was also found that the "association" has sold ads at a high price in a magazine that had esentually no circulation to trucking companies. |
|||
In [[1997]] the evidence room presented $50,000 in $100 bills which it said had been confiscated in a [[1993]] drug arrest. When defense lawyers pointed out that the bills were of a type that had not been printed until [[1995]], the charges were dropped and a systematic system of stealing cash and drugs from evidence rooms was exposed. |
|||
==The State Police today== |
==The State Police today== |
Revision as of 14:34, 24 July 2010
West Virginia State Police | |
---|---|
File:WestVirginiaSP.jpg | |
Abbreviation | WVSP |
Agency overview | |
Formed | June 29, 1919 |
Preceding agencies |
|
Employees | 994 (as of 2004) [1] |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Operations jurisdiction | West Virginia, USA |
Size | 24,230 square miles |
Population | 1,812,035 (2007 est.)[2] |
General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | South Charleston, West Virginia |
State Troopers | 641 (as of 2004) [1] |
Civilians | 353 (as of 2004) [1] |
Agency executive |
|
Parent agency | West Virginia Department of Military Affairs and Public Safety |
Troops | 7 |
Facilities | |
Detachments | 63 |
Website | |
http://www.wvstatepolice.com |
The West Virginia State Police is a paramilitary organization, state law enforcement agency in the United States that provides statewide police services to the 1.83 million residents in West Virginia. It is the fourth oldest state police agency and was born in the second extraordinary session of the West Virginia Legislature on June 19, 1919 as a result of uprisings surrounding organized labor in the coal and mine industries.[3]
History
Governor John Jacob Cornwell was insistent upon having a state police force which he said, "was mandatory in order for him to uphold the laws of our state." Part of the compromise was the name of the organization: "West Virginia Department of Public Safety" was the official name until 1995 when the name was changed to "West Virginia State Police" during the legislative session.
Corruption
The West Virginia State Police Forensics Labratory, under Fred Zain was found to have participated in a 20 year systematic scheme of "framing" innocent persons by falsifying DNA evidence, begining in 1973. Eventually over one hundred persons received new trials, and charges were dropped against 16 innocent men. The state paid over $18 million in damages as a result of this corruption.
In 1992 five troopers were "involuntarially retired" for selling passing grades on commercial trucking safety inspections.
In 1995 a caller called 911 to complain of a loud party. Unknown to him, it was a police retirement party. He was then beaten, receiving life altering kidney damage, and charged with "resisting arrest". Unknown to the police, the 911 operator had stayed on the line and recorded the beating. The state paid over $500,000 in damages.
In 2002 the "Troopers' Association" was directed to stop fund raising from the public. The state Ethics Commission found that troopers had implied that it would ignore trivial traffic offenses in return for donations. It was also found that the "association" has sold ads at a high price in a magazine that had esentually no circulation to trucking companies.
In 1997 the evidence room presented $50,000 in $100 bills which it said had been confiscated in a 1993 drug arrest. When defense lawyers pointed out that the bills were of a type that had not been printed until 1995, the charges were dropped and a systematic system of stealing cash and drugs from evidence rooms was exposed.
The State Police today
Like other state law enforcement agencies, West Virginia troopers enforce traffic laws statewide, investigate crimes and protect the governor and his immediate family. The Superintendent of the West Virginia State Police is Colonel Timothy S. Pack. He was appointed in December 2008 by Governor Joe Manchin and took office on Jan. 1, 2009. He replaced Colonel Don Lemmon who has now fully retired.
West Virginia State Police troopers wear a forest-green uniform and campaign hat. They receive their training at the West Virginia State Police Academy located in Institute, a suburb of Charleston and near the agency's headquarters in South Charleston. Upon appointment, cadets undergo an intense training program at the academy.
The West Virginia State Police also runs its own forensic laboratory and provide scientific investigation services to law enforcement agencies across the state. Services offered to criminal justice agencies include biochemistry, drug, firearm investigations, latent prints, questioned documents, toxicology and trace evidence. The crime lab is accredited by the American Society of Crime Laboratory Directors/Laboratory Accreditation Board (ASCLD/LAB).[4]
Recruitment and training
The West Virginia Division of Criminal Justice Services is responsible for setting minimum physical ability standards for police officers working in the state. In 2007, following a national trend, it relaxed the physical ability standards for aspiring police officers. Right now, any police applicant must do at least 18 push-ups/minute, 27 sit-ups/minute and be able to run 1.5 mile in a maximum time limit of 15 minutes 20 seconds.[5] The State Police, however, chose not to follow those standards unlike many other local and county police agencies in West Virginia. The agency's recruiters still require applicants to perform at least 27 push-ups/minute, 29 sit-ups/minute and those same applicants have to run 1.5 mile in no more than 14 minutes 52 seconds, which were all the initial minimum requirements for all police departments in West Virginia.[6]
Training at the paramilitary academy lasts about 30 weeks compared to about 16 weeks for officers from other departments (trained at the same academy). When cadets graduate, they are promoted to the rank of "trooper." They can be stationned anywhere in the 55 West Virginia counties working from detachments (barracks). They serve an eighteen-month probationary period that starts at the time they enter the academy. After completing successfully that probationary period, they are eligible to receive an associate degree in police sciences through the Marshall Technical and Community College program. Cadets log in about 1420 hours of training by the time they graduate from the academy.[7]
Personnel
Like many police agencies nationwide, the shortage of sworn personnel in some counties has raised debates about the need for more funding to recruit more cadets. As of 2007, the agency employed 651 sworn officers and 349 civilian staff members, making it de facto the largest law enforcement agency in West Virginia.[8] Short in man power or not, the State Police is heavily relied upon to assist in some rural counties. In May 2007, the State Journal reported in an investigation that counties such as Mineral, Braxton, Wirt and Tyler depend on the state police to provide services and respond to calls from midnight up to 8 a.m. since no Sheriff deputies are available to work those shifts.
The State Police is and has been the only agency to operate a law enforcement academy in West Virginia. It trains its own troopers but also all other law enforcement officers from the state, from Sheriff deputies to city and town police officers, and from campus police officers to motor carrier enforcement officers who are not part of the State Police like in some states, but have their own separate agency.
Rank Structure
Title | Insignia |
---|---|
Superintendent - Colonel | |
Lieutenant Colonel | |
Major | |
Captain | |
Lieutenant | |
First Sergeant | |
Sergeant | |
Corporal | |
Trooper First Class | |
Senior Trooper | |
Trooper |
Vehicles
Most of the State Police vehicles are Ford Crown Victorias and Chevrolet Impalas with blue and gold colors accompanied by the agency's logo on the side front doors.[9] Typical emergency lighting on a fully marked cruiser are the overheads (bar lights) and front wig wags. The agency also uses unmarked vehicles (usually assigned to command staff members statewide), Dodge Durangos, Chargers and some Chevrolet Trailblazers.
Troops and detachments
Troop 0 Command - South Charleston
- Headquarters
- Forensic Laboratory
- Executive Protection
- Special Operations
Troop 1 Command - Shinnston
- Bridgeport Detachment
- Fairmont Detachment
- Grafton Detachment
- Hundred Detachment
- Kingwood Detachment
- Morgantown Detachment
- Moundsville Detachment
- New Cumberland Detachment
- Paden City Detachment
- Shinnston Detachment
Troop 2 Command - Charles Town
- Berkeley Springs Detachment
- Charles Town Detachment
- Keyser Detachment
- Martinsburg Detachment
- Moorefield/Petersburg Detachment
- Romney Detachment
Troop 3 Command - Elkins
- Buckhannon Detachment
- Elkins Detachment
- Franklin Detachment
- Glenville Detachment
- Marlinton Detachment
- Parsons Detachment
- Philippi Detachment
- Webster Springs Detachment
- Weston Detachment
Troop 4 Command - South Charleston
- Clay Detachment
- Elizabeth Detachment
- Grantsville Detachment
- Harrisville Detachment
- Parkersburg Detachment
- Quincy Detachment
- Ripley Detachment
- South Charleston Detachment
- Spencer Detachment
- Mason County Detachment
- Winfield Detachment
- St Marys Detachment
Troop 5 Command - Logan
- Gilbert Detachment
- Hamlin Detachment
- Huntington Detachment
- Logan Detachment
- Madison Detachment
Troop 6 Command - Beckley
- Beckley Detachment
- Gauley Bridge Detachment
- Hinton Detachment
- Jesse Detachment
- Lewisburg Detachment
- Oak Hill Detachment
- Princeton Detachment
- Rainelle Detachment
- Richwood Detachment
- Summersville Detachment
- Welch Detachment
- Whitesville Detachment
- Union Detachment
Troop 7 Command - Parkway Authority
- Parkways - Beckley Detachment
- Parkways - Charleston Detachment
Troop 8 Bureau of Criminal Investigation (BCI)
Fallen officers
Since the establishment of the West Virginia State Police, 38 officers have died in the line of duty.[10]
Officer | Date of Death | Details |
---|---|---|
Private Ernest Ripley | Gunfire | |
Private Charles M. Kackley | Gunfire | |
Private William L. McMillion | Gunfire | |
Private George A. Duling | Gunfire (Accidental) | |
Private Howard A. Deem | Automobile accident | |
Private James Shrewsbury | Gunfire | |
Private Ulric C. Crawford | Gunfire | |
Private Theodore R. Meadows | Motorcycle accident | |
Private James L. Lowe | Gunfire | |
Private Blake A. Michael | Motorcycle accident | |
Private Arza A. Allen | Motorcycle accident | |
Sergeant William Hall | Motorcycle accident | |
Trooper Farley K. Litton | Motorcycle accident | |
Trooper Allen Henry Bennett Jeffreys | Vehicular assault | |
Trooper Franklin D. Patrick | Automobile accident | |
Sergeant Newton Tressel Sites | Aircraft accident | |
Trooper Burr White Harrison | Automobile accident | |
Sergeant Joseph Pierce Horne | Gunfire | |
Corporal Arthur M. Hurst | Drowned | |
Trooper Robert F. Rulong | Vehicular assault | |
Corporal Harry E. Robinson | Automobile accident | |
Corporal William Joseph Shrewsbury | Gunfire | |
Trooper Robert Ball Noechel | Gunfire | |
Trooper Hugh Donald Swartz | Gunfire | |
Trooper First Class Thomas Dean Hercules | Gunfire | |
Trooper Charles Henry Johnson | Gunfire | |
Trooper Bruce Thompson Brown | Gunfire | |
Corporal Dewey C. Shrewsbury | Gunfire (Accidental) | |
Trooper Philip S. Kesner | Gunfire | |
Corporal Carlen Bill Stone | Aircraft accident | |
Trooper Harry G. Lucas Jr. | Aircraft accident | |
Trooper Jonathan David Harris | Automobile accident | |
Trooper William Howard Phillips | Automobile accident | |
Trooper First Class James Thomas Brammer | Gunfire | |
Senior Trooper Larry Gene Hacker | Gunfire | |
Lieutenant Charles Matthew Turner | Aircraft accident | |
Senior Trooper Douglas Wayne Bland | Automobile accident | |
Trooper Brian W. Linn | Automobile accident |
See also
- List of law enforcement agencies in West Virginia
- West Virginia State Police Academy
- State police
- State patrol
- Highway patrol
References
- ^ a b c USDOJ Bureau of Justice Statistics Census of Law Enforcement Agencies
- ^ http://www.census.gov/popest/states/NST-ann-est.html 2007 Population Estimates
- ^ History of the West Virginia State Police http://www.wvstatepolice.com/history/history.shtml/
- ^ West Virginia State Police Crime Laboratory http://www.wvstatepolice.com/crime/crime.shtml/
- ^ West Virginia Division of Criminal Justice Services: physical ability standards http://www.wvdcjs.com/lawenforcement/training/physicalability.html/
- ^ West Virginia State Police physical ability standards http://www.wvstatepolice.com/employ/phyfit.pdf/
- ^ West Virginia State Police employment brochure http://www.wvstatepolice.com/employ/brochure.pdf/
- ^ West Virginia State Police Annual Report. http://www.wvstatepolice.com/annreport/2007annualreport.pdf/
- ^ National Police Car Archives http://www.policecararchives.org/
- ^ [1]
Additional references
- State Journal (in a May 2005 article)
- State Trooper: America's State Troopers and Highway Patrolmen (Turner Publishing Company)