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Agency Administration. How are police departments organized?. Mission in a Democratic Society. Enforce and support the laws Investigate crimes/apprehend offenders Prevent crime Ensure domestic peace and tranquility Provide the community with enforcement–related services.
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Agency Administration How are police departments organized?
Mission in a Democratic Society • Enforce and support the laws • Investigate crimes/apprehend offenders • Prevent crime • Ensure domestic peace and tranquility • Provide the community with enforcement–related services How are police departments organized?
Organizing the Department Managerial Concepts
Managerial Concepts • Division of Labor – similar functions assigned to same group • Chain of Command – line of authority • Span of Control - # of subordinates • Ideal is 1:6-10 • Delegation of Responsibility & Authority • Unity of Command – one supervisor per person • Rules Regulations & Discipline How are police departments organized?
Organizing the Department Organizing by Function or Purpose
Core Operational Strategies • Preventive patrol • Routine incident response – minor traffic, order, reports • Emergency response • Criminal investigation • Problem solving • Support services – dispatch, training, records, property control How are police departments organized?
Department Organization How are police departments organized?
Organizing the Department Organizing by Personnel
Organizing by Personnel • Civil Service System – method of hiring and managing government employees • Designed to eliminate political influence, nepotism, bias • 1883 Pendleton Act – federal jobs • 95% of all gov’t employees covered • Difficult to fire employees How are police departments organized?
Organizing by Personnel • Quasi-Military organization • Strict lines of authority • Uniforms • Rank • Weapons • Authorized by law to use force • Different: • warriors vs. community figures • police limited by state & con law How are police departments organized?
Organizing by Personnel • Sworn vs. non-sworn (Civilian) • Sworn: peace officers • Under oath to uphold laws and constitution • Power to arrest under probable cause • Citizens arrest requires violation to happen in arrestors presence • Civilian: operators, dispatchers, payroll, technical jobs, lab workers How are police departments organized?
Organizing by Personnel • Rank Structure: • Peace Officer – patrol officer • Corporal – promotion, FTO • Sergeant – 1st supervisor, makes field decisions • Over squad (6-10 officers) • One per zone or per shift (size a factor) • Lieutenant – over all operations at time of shift, usually over platoon How are police departments organized?
Organizing by Personnel • Rank Structure: • Detective – has own rank structure but usually has rank over others at crime scene • Captain – over area of administration • Assistant Chief – in some depts. • Chief – Head of dept. • Usually appointed by mayor or selected by commissioners How are police departments organized?
Rank How are police departments organized?
Organizing by Personnel • Civilianization – process of of removing sworn officers from tasks and replacing them with civilians • Reduce costs • 25% of staff • Most jobs seen as punishment by officers • Parking tickets, past crime reports, some investigative functions (CSI) How are police departments organized?
Organizing by Personnel • Police Reserves/Auxiliaries • Part time - “summertime cops” • Sometimes not paid • Non-regular but sworn officer • Regular police powers • Some volunteers do not - retirees • A way to keep powers when no longer in regular position How are police departments organized?
Organizing the Department Organizing by Area
Organizing by Area • Beats/Posts – smallest • Foot, patrol units • Sectors/Zones – group of beats • Precincts – grouping of Zones • Mostly larger departments • Station House – one per precinct • Has jail, locker room, offices • Booking desk How are police departments organized?
Organizing the Department Organizing by Time
Organizing by Time • Three Tour System – three 8 hour shifts • Morning watch – 12-8am • Day watch – 8-4pm • Evening watch – 4-12am • Numerous variations – 12 hour shifts How are police departments organized?
Organizing by Time • Holidays are not assigned, it depends on the day assigned • Assigned, transfer available by seniority • Rotating tours – day – evening – morning • Fixed/Steady tours – stay same • Traditionally – cops were assigned in even #s • today many are assigned by need How are police departments organized?
Organizing the Department Wrap Up
Organizing the Department • All are methods are used to organize department • Every department is different How are police departments organized?
Post 9/11 Challenge & Change
New Age of Policing Post 9/11 • Traditionally terrorism and intelligence was a federal responsibility • Terrorism response is now a local expectation • Why do you think local is better? • Intelligence gathering is also a local priority • Terrorism is also FBI #1 priority How are police departments organized?
New Age of Policing Post 9/11 • Community Policing is also a part of the response – education, networks • Task forces and “boundaryless” policing seeks to streamline intelligence How are police departments organized?
Terrorist Goals • Mass causalities • Loss of critical resources • Disruption of vital services • Disruption of the economy • Individual and mass panic How are police departments organized?
Terrorist Weapons • Biological • Nuclear • Incendiary • Chemical • Explosive How are police departments organized?
Biological Weapons • Targets: People, animals, crops • Routes of exposure: Inhalation, ingestion, absorption Agents: • May take days or weeks to be confirmed. • May spread far beyond initial contamination point. • Considered high risk. How are police departments organized?
Nuclear Weapons • Much different than conventional weapons: • Many casualties • Very large area affected • Long-term health effects • Considered relatively low risk How are police departments organized?
Radiation Dispersal Devices • Conventional explosive with radioactive element • Radiological materials readily available • Considered moderate to high risk How are police departments organized?
Incendiary Devices • Used to initiate combustion • Easy to make • Easy to use • Considered high risk/low impact How are police departments organized?
Chemical Agents • Components readily available • Onset of symptoms from immediate to 18 hours • Considered moderate risk How are police departments organized?
Conventional Explosives • Terrorists “weapons of choice” • Can be: • Military munitions • Improvised explosive devices • Considered high risk How are police departments organized?
What Is the Risk? How are police departments organized?
B-NICE Indicators Environmental indicators: • Sick or dead animals, fish, or birds • Unscheduled spraying • Vapor clouds or mists • Absence of crops, wildlife, or insects How are police departments organized?
B-NICE Indicators Physical indicators: • Many casualties without signs of obvious trauma • Victims who are exhibiting similar symptoms • Large numbers seeking medical attention How are police departments organized?
Wind Direction “Cold Zone”Safe Area “Warm Zone”Evacuation & Decontamination Area “Hot Zone” Incident Contaminated Area Establishing Zones How are police departments organized?
Agency Administration How are police departments organized?
Dirty War Now What?
Dirty War Assignment • You are on the Mayors Crisis Team • You have 30 minutes to come up with a plan to respond to the situation in the movie • Write a summary of suggestions • Anticipate where your major problems are going to be! How are police departments organized?