Howard County Police Department Explained

Agencyname:Howard County Police Department
Abbreviation:HCPD
Logocaption:Seal of Howard County, Maryland
Flag:Flag of Howard County, Maryland.svgborder
Flagcaption:Flag of Howard County, Maryland
Motto:Latin: Pro bono publico
Mottotranslated:For public good[1]
Budget:FY15 General Fund Budget:
$102,451,815 [2]
Country:United States
Countryabbr:U.S.
Divtype:State
Divname:Maryland
Subdivtype:County
Subdivname:Howard County
Map:Map of Maryland highlighting Howard County.svg
Sizearea:254sqmi
Sizepopulation:334,529 (2021)
Police:Yes
Local:Yes
Headquarters:George Howard Building, 3430 Courthouse Drive, Ellicott City, Maryland, 21043
Sworn:509 [3]
Unsworntype:Civilian
Unsworn:241
Chief1name:Gregory Der
Chief1position:Chief Of Police
Stationtype:District
Stations:2
Animal1type:K9 team
Animals1:9

The Howard County Police Department (HCPD) is the primary law enforcement agency of Howard County, Maryland.[4]

History

From the founding of Howard County until 1894, the county's law enforcement responsibilities were handled by the Howard County Sheriff's Office (HCSO). In 1894, the Howard County Commissioners were granted the power to appoint local police officers in designated jurisdictions inside the county to aid in law enforcement duties. In 1904, the second district police force was formed with Julius Wosch as the sole officer.[5] Wosch was paid using a fee system of 15 cents for any paper served, and 25 cents for a dog tax with a penalty of pet destruction for non-payment. Wosch doubled the staff in 1935 paying Edgar Russel Moxley from his own earnings as an assistant.[6] In 1938, the Maryland State Police expanded police services with a station on the site of the historic Spurrier's Tavern in Waterloo.[7]

The Howard County Police Department (HCPD) in its current form was founded in 1952, by Chapter 496 of the Acts of 1894, in sections 17.200 through 17.206 of the Howard County code.[8]

After the founding of the HCPD, Howard County Commissioner Norman E. Moxley appointed his brother Edgar Russell Moxley chief, with four officers and a population of 20,000. A single 1952 ford was purchased for patrols.[9] [10] Moxley was followed by Fred L Ford, who served until December 1962.[11] By 1963, Howard County had 21 police staff employed, serving 44,000 (2095 to one ratio). The County placed a goal of 1370 to one ratio by 1975.[12] Jack L. Larrimore served as police chief from 1963-1969. Counter-insurrection training was added in 1965, and the Howard County Interracial Commission recommended hiring of African American officers to reduce countywide racial tensions in 1967.[13] [14] Larrimore ran for County Executive in 1969, against Omar J. Jones who did not renew his commission.[15] In 1971, the force increased to 68 with six day weeks implemented to handle crime sprees in the Columbia development.[16]

Garland R Walters served in 1972, a year where recorded crime rates went up 50% more per year as the Rouse Company development Columbia expanded.[17] [18] Robert Matthew was appointed by executive Edward L. Cochran for a period from 1974-1978. Paul H. Rappaport served from 1979 to 1987.[19] James N. Robey was appointed Chief of the 295 officer force by Charles I. Ecker replacing Frederick W. Chaney in 1991. He retired in 1998 to run for County Executive.[20] Matthews was convicted for raiding his mother's estate and sentenced to 1 year in jail in 2001.[21] [22] Wayne Livesay retired in 2006 to run for County Council.[23] Bill McMahon was appointed to Chief by County Executive Ken Ulman, retiring in 2014 at the end of Ulman's term and replaced by 30-year veteran Gary Gardner in July 2014.[24] Lisa Myers was appointed Chief by County Executive Dr. Calvin Ball on February 13, 2019. She was the county's first African-American and female Police Chief. After Chief Myers retired in December 2021, County Executive Ball named Gregory Der as the next Chief of Police.

Authority

All HCPD officers are fully certified, sworn law enforcement officials. The authority originates with an act of legislation performed by the Maryland General Assembly. The agency itself is also nationally accredited through the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies, which gives accreditations to agencies who meet their national standards.[25]

Organization

The current chief of police is Greg Der.[26]

The HCPD divides the county into two districts, northern and southern. The agency has the following sections:[27]

Rank structure

The Howard County Police Department operates as a military organization using these sworn personnel ranks:

Controversy

Howard County's Office of Law has attempted to block civil suits against the HCPD, citing legislation that binds the corporate entity of the HCPD to the corporate entity of the Howard County government, the latter of which being impervious to legal action unrelated to county legislation. There have been allegations that this action is a direct violation of the people's right to petition in the government for redress of grievances.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.visithowardcounty.com/listings/howard-county-police-department-museum/936/
  2. http://www.howardcountymd.gov/WorkArea/linkit.aspx?LinkIdentifier=id&ItemID=6442478689&libID=6442478682
  3. Web site: HCPD Annual Report 2022 by HowardCountyPD - Issuu. 2 June 2023.
  4. http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/24/24027.html Howard County QuickFacts from the US Census Bureau
  5. Book: Jim Clark Soldier Farmer Legislator. 25. James A. Clark Jr..
  6. News: The Times. 31 March 1965. From One Man Staff to Efficient Force.
  7. Book: Howard's Roads to the Past. Barbra Feaga. 67.
  8. Web site: State of Maryland. Maryland. Police Department. Howard County, Maryland - Government, Executive Branch, Public Safety. Maryland State Archives. January 27, 2014.
  9. News: The Baltimore Sun. Howard Police Chief Charged. 13 May 1956.
  10. News: Baltimore Sun. Edgar R. Moxley, 98, Howard County Police Department's first chief. 16 Feb 2005.
  11. News: The Baltimore Sun. Howard unit picks Miller. 5 December 1962.
  12. Web site: Howard County Facilities. 7 April 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20131203002427/http://archives.ubalt.edu/gbc/pdf/4-18.pdf. 3 December 2013. dead.
  13. News: St. Petersburg Times. 12 November 1965. Maryland County Prepares for Revolution, or Anything..
  14. News: The Baltimore Sun. 50 Years Ago. 5 August 1992. Diane Mullaly.
  15. News: The Baltimore Sun. Jack L. Larrimore, 73, Howard County Police Chief. 21 April 1997.
  16. News: The Washington Post. Rural Howard County Goes on a Crime Alert. 11 December 1971.
  17. News: The Washington Post. Howard County Boom Malignant or Benign?. 19 September 1972. Tom Huth.
  18. News: The Washington Post. County Man Shackled, Jailed in $5 Ticket Case: Police in Counties Shackle, Jail Man in $5 Ticket Case. 14 January 1972.
  19. News: The Washington Post. Bobo to Replace Police Chief in Howard County. 25 Feb 1987. Lisa Leff.
  20. News: The Baltimore Sun. Ecker Appoints County Police Chief. 26 February 1991.
  21. News: Ex-police chief looted mother's estate. Jennifer Vick. 13 June 2002. The Columbia Flyer.
  22. Web site: archives baltimoresun.com - Former Howard police chief charged with theft, perjury. pqasb.pqarchiver.com. 2017-09-27.
  23. News: The Baltimore Sun. 20 May 2006. Howard Co. chief of police to retire: Livesay is running for County Council.
  24. News: The Baltimore Sun. Gardner set to take helm of Howard police department. 29 June 2014.
  25. Web site: Howard County Police Department: Recruiting . 2008-04-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080412082109/http://www.co.ho.md.us/Police/PD_Recruiting.htm . 2008-04-12 . dead .
  26. Web site: Chief of Police . howardcountymd.gov . 2023-05-12.
  27. Web site: Police . howardcountymd.gov . 2023-05-12.