Richmond Police Department (California)

Richmond Police Department
Agency overview
Formed 1910
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdiction* City of Richmond in the state of California, United States
Population 103,464
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters 1701 Regatta Blvd.
Agency executive Chris Magnus, Chief
Website
Richmond Police Website
Footnotes
* Divisional agency: Division of the country, over which the agency has usual operational jurisdiction.

The Richmond Police Department or RPD is a public safety and law enforcement agency founded in 1910 that is in charge of protecting and safeguarding the city of Richmond, California.[1] The city has struggled with serious violent crime for decades and is often described as crime ridden and as one of the "rougher" parts of the San Francisco Bay Area; in fact, in 2010 the city was the sixth most dangerous in the nation.[2][1][3][4][5][6]

History

The department was founded in 1910 and celebrated its hundredth anniversary in 2010.[1]

In 2009 a female student at Richmond High School was brutally gang raped by half a dozen men and boys while dozens more looked on and took photographs.[7] The police department came under national scrutiny for its investigation and the abhorrent acts that took place.[7]

In 2011 the force came under scrutiny due to a federal probe investigating the hiring of two of the city's "explorers" (members of a Junior Police program) by a private security firm operated by the police officers that illegally armed the young men and sent them to patrol city streets.[8][9][10] The FBI is investigating the case, which concerns events that occurred from 2004 to 2011.[9][8][10] The news has reported that once the former explorers came through with their allegations that their former mentors hired prostitutes or strippers into attempting to coax them into driving drunk in order to jail them for DUI as retaliation.[10][9][8]

PAL

Richmond Police Department Police Activities League (PAL) is an organization created by the department as part of its community policing efforts to reduce crime and build trust with the community.[11] It also serves to get kids off the streets and to expose them to positive outlets such as sports and good male role models.[11] The PAL maintains an annual "Shop With A Cop" event and in 2011 that meant a $110 per child shopping spree to the Target store in the Macdonald 80 Shopping Center.[11] The kids are transported in cop cars and limousines and are allowed to pick any items they want.[11] The funding is primarily from officer's own pockets, with a 10% boost and sales tax covered by Target this particular year.[11]

Facilities

The department's main police station is located at the Richmond Marina and was recently renovated and is LEED certified.[12]

Technology

The department has implemented gunfire sensor technology. The system of strategically placed acoustic sensors can detect the sounds of cocking, triggers, shooting, and rounds hitting the ground in addition to geolocating the direction from where it came.[12]

RPD is also installing high tech CCTV cameras in high crime areas to monitor public areas for violence.[12]

Staff and operations

The police chief is Chris Magnus, scouted from the Fargo, North Dakota, police department in a national search.[12]

In August 2010, the department was criticized for having eight officers make over $100,000 in overtime wages.[3]

The department is broken into three districts each further divided into beats.[13] The Northern district covers Eastern Richmond (beat 7), the El Sobrante & May Valleys (beat 9) in addition to the Hilltop and Parrchester Village areas (beat 8), generally the areas east of 23rd street and north of Ohio avenue.[13] The Southern district covers Point Richmond, Point Molate, the Chevron Richmond Refinery area, Marina Bay (beat 1), and the Richmond Annex (beat 3) in addition to the South of Downtown Area (beat 2).[13] It is generally defined as the areas west of Garrard Boulevard and south of Ohio Avenue.[13] Finally the Central district covers the area surrounding Downtown and the notoriously crime ridden Iron Triangle, bounded by Ohio Avenue, Garrard Street, 23rd Street and the city limits with unincorporated North Richmond, in addition to an exclave surrounding the city dump.[13] The Central district has three beats, beat 4 east of Carlson Boulevard, beat 6 south of Barrett Avenue and beat 5 north of Barrett Avenue plus the dump.[13]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 RPD main page
  2. East Bay cities ranked among most dangerous in U.S., Bay City News Services. Contra Costa Times. November 23, 2010. Retrieved November 24, 2010.
  3. 1 2 Top managers in Mountain View, Santa Clara earn top dollar compared to peers in larger San Jose, by John Woolfolk, Diana Samuels, Bay Area News Group/San Jose Mercury News, August 8th, 2010, accessed August 8th, 2010
  4. Kelly Rayburn (26 November 2009). "Report pegs Oakland with country's 3rd highest crime rate; Richmond ranked 14th". Oakland Tribune. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
  5. Henry K. Lee and Jill Tucker (27 October 2009). "Richmond High reels from girl's gang rape". The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
  6. Henry K. Lee, Kevin Fagan (29 October 2009). "5 now in custody in Richmond High gang rape". The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 13 December 2009.
  7. 1 2
  8. 1 2 3 Cops investigated for gun buying scandal. Cecilia Vega. KGO-TV/ABC News. 05-04-2011. Retrieved 07-04-2011.
  9. 1 2 3 Richmond officers accused of arming teens for private security business. Karl Fisher. Contra Costa Times. 05-04-2011. Retrieved 07-04-2011.
  10. 1 2 3 Former Richmond chief: I never OKd security firm. San Francisco Chronicle. 2011. Retrieved 07-04-2011.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 Richmond kids ‘Shop with a Cop’, Robert Rogers, Richmond Confidential, 17-12-2011, access date 25-12-2011
  12. 1 2 3 4 Public Safety Police Department
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Richmond Policing Sectors map, City of Richmond website
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