Pima County Sheriff's Department Explained

Agencyname:Pima County Sheriff's Department (PCSD)
Abbreviation:PCSD
Patchcaption:Pima County Sheriff Patch
Motto:Keeping the Peace Since 1865 – Service with Honor Since 1865
Formed:1865
Employees:600 sworn deputies, 872 civilian
Budget:$135,000,000
Country:United States
Divtype:County
Divname:Pima, Arizona
Sizearea:9,189 square miles
Sizepopulation:380,000 unincorporated, 1,000,000+ County wide
Legaljuris:Pima County
Police:Yes
Local:Yes
Headquarters:1750 East Benson Highway, Tucson, Arizona
Sworntype:Sheriff's Deputy
Unsworntype:Corrections personnel and Civilian employees
Unsworn:Sheriff's Auxiliary Volunteers (SAV)
Chief1name:Chris Nanos
Chief1position:Sheriff
Stationtype:Substation
Stations:6
Airbases:1
Lockuptype:Pima County Jail
Lockups:1
Vehicle1type:Chevrolet Tahoe, Ford Crown Victoria, Ford Explorer
Vehicles1:400 estimate
Aircraft1type:Airplane
Aircraft1:3
Aircraft2type:Helicopter
Aircraft2:1
Website:Pima County Sheriff's Department

The Pima County Sheriff's Department (PCSD) is an American law enforcement agency that serves the unincorporated areas of Pima County, Arizona. It serves the seventh largest county in the nation.[1] It operates six district offices and three smaller satellite offices. The Corrections Bureau has four facilities which houses on average 1,850 inmates per day.

The department employs about 516 sworn officers and more than 872 civilian employees and corrections personnel and utilizes the services of over 400 volunteers. Its headquarters is on East Benson Highway in Tucson, Arizona.

Crime statistics

According to Federal Bureau of Investigation data in a media release by SCSD in 2012, Tucson has 631.94 violent crimes per 100,000 population, while Phoenix has 518.12 violent crimes per 100,000 population. The Tucson Metropolitan Area has the second lowest crime rate in the state of Arizona. Pima County Sheriff's Department averages 4.3 minutes to respond to emergencies 90% of the time and the average response time to all emergencies is 5.3 minutes.

Sheriffs

Sheriffs of Pima County!Sheriff !! Term !! Political party
(Berry) Hill deArmitt1864–1865
Francis Marion Hodges1865–1866
Peter Rainsford Brady1867–1869
(Charles) Hylor Ott1869–1872
William Sanders Oury1873–1876
Charles Alexander Shibell1877–1880
Robert H. Paul[2] 1881–1886
Eugene O. Shaw1885–1887
Matthew F. Shaw, Sr.1887–1890
James K. Brown1891–1892
Joseph B. Scott1893–1894
Robert Nelson Leatherwood1895–1898Democratic
Lyman Willis Wakefield1899–1900
Frank E. Murphy1901–1904
Nabor Pacheco1905–1908
John Nelson1909–1914
Albert W. Forbes1915–1916
J. T. "Rye" Miles1917–1920
Benjamin Franklin Daniels1921–1922
Walter W. Baily1923–1926
James William McDonald1927–1930
Walter W. Baily1931–1932
John F. Belton1933–1936
Edward F. Echols1937–1946
Jerome P. Martin1947–1950
Frank A. Eyman1951–1955
Benjamin Julius McKinney1955–1956
James W. Clark1957–1958
Waldon Vivian Burr1959–1971
William Coy Cox1971–1976
Richard J. Boykin1977–1980
Clarence W. Dupnik1980–2015
Christopher Nanos2015–2017
Mark D. Napier2017–2021
Christopher Nanos2021 – current
Notable past sheriffs include Arizona pioneers such as Peter Rainsford Brady, Charles Alexander Shibell, Robert H. Paul, Robert Nelson Leatherwood, and Benjamin Franklin Daniels.[3]

Edward F. Echols (1936–1946)

One of the most interesting of Pima County's sheriffs was Ed Echols. According to historian David Leighton, of the Arizona Daily Star newspaper, Ed Echols was born in Stockdale, Texas, in 1879. As a teenager he helped his father on cattle drives up the old Chisholm Trail. In 1902, along with his brother Art he traveled by wagon to Cochise County, Arizona, where he worked selling cords of wood and also as a ranch hand. Five years later he went on tour with the Miller Brothers 101 Wild West Show, touring cities like New York and Chicago. On the tour, he also befriended future film actor Tom Mix whom he would remain friends with for years to come.

In 1912, Echols traveled to Calgary, Alberta, Canada for the first Frontier Days and Cowboy Championship Contest (later known as the Calgary Stampede). He competed against the best ropers in the world and garner the title of World's Champion Roper.

In 1921, he homesteaded land near Mescal, Arizona (located southeast of Tucson) and its believed this land would become part of the larger Double X Ranch that he would come to own. Three years later, Leighton Kramer, an Easterner who wintered in Tucson, Arizona conceived the idea of a rodeo and rodeo parade in Tucson and turned to Echols for advice on creation of what would be called La Fiesta de Los Vaqueros. For his many years of involvement in the Tucson rodeo he would later gain the nickname "Mr. Rodeo."

In 1934, Echols ran for sheriff of Pima County, even going so far as to have his friend and movie star Will Rogers campaign for him but still lost the election. Two years later he ran again and won.

From 1936 to 1946 Echols served as sheriff of Pima County. He chose Herb Wood as his undersheriff and when he first entered office he had only six deputies for the whole county. He brought the lllCounty lllJail up to standard and improved the office filing system. For the year 1939, he reported his men had recovered $30,408 of stolen property, transported 54 prisoners to the state prison in Florence, Arizona, and served 915 subpoenas.

By 1944, his staff had increased to 24, which included 12 deputies in Tucson, 4 in Ajo, 1 in Marana, 1 in Arivaca, 3 jailers, 1 matron and 2 cooks. Two years later he ran unsuccessfully for sheriff but later would serve many years as a constable, retiring in 1962. He died in 1969.

Clarence Dupnik (1980–2015)

Clarence Dupnik was the sheriff for over 35 years. A veteran of over 50 years in local law enforcement, he served as sheriff of Pima County from February 1980 till he retired in 2015; he was elected seven times. Dupnik saw the population of Pima County increase from 191,216 to about 1.5 million people. Below are Dupnik's accomplishments.

Chris Nanos (2015–2017, 2021–current)

Deputy Sheriff Chris Nanos took over as Sheriff on August 1, 2015.Nanos has been with the department since 1984. He has worked in all fields of the Sheriff's Department.

Mark Napier (2017–2021)

Line of duty deaths

OfficerEnd of WatchDetails
Dep. Timothy GrahamStruck by vehicle
Corr.Sgt. Shannon RussellHeart attack
Dep. Randall GravesMotorcycle accident
Dep. Ernest CavilloGunfire
Dep. Jack BrierlyAutomobile accident
Dep. John AndersonFall
Dep. Clifford NelsonAircraft accident
Ranger James MercerGunfire
Dep. Joe MeeksGunfire
Dep. Andrew HolbrookGunfire
Dep. Milton McDowellGunfire

See also

References

General

Specific

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: FBI Director's Community Leadership Award Recipient: Sheriff Clarence W. Dupnik, Pima County Sheriff's Department . . March 20, 2009 . FBI.gov . . 10 May 2017 . As Sheriff of the seventh largest county in the country, with a population of 1 million residents and 9,241 square miles, including 123 miles along the Mexican border....
  2. Book: Ball, Larry D. . Desert lawmen : the high sheriffs of New Mexico and Arizona, 1846-1912 . 1996 . University of New Mexico Press . 0-585-27386-3 . 1. Albuquerque . 45731635.
  3. Web site: Sheriffs Then and Now. June 14, 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120323235855/http://www.pimasheriff.org/files/3812/6929/8203/CompleteHistoryBook.pdf. March 23, 2012.