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E E a a t t o o n n P P o o l l i i c c e e D D i i v v i i s s i i o o n n 2016 Annual Report "Proud to Serve" Prepared by: Dispatcher Tonya Hickman & Chief of Police Chad DePew January 27, 2017

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  • EEaattoonn PPoolliiccee DDiivviissiioonn

    2016 Annual Report

    "Proud to Serve"

    Prepared by:

    Dispatcher Tonya Hickman

    &

    Chief of Police Chad DePew

    January 27, 2017

  • Eaton Police Division 2016 Annual Report

    Chief’s Letter of Introduction

    Mission, Vision, & Guiding Principles Page 1

    Personnel Page 2

    Organizational Chart Page 3

    Calls for Service Page 4

    Call Distribution Page 5

    Index Crimes Page 6

    Arrests/Charges Filed Page 7

    Arrests by Month & 5 Year OVI Comparison Page 8

    5 Year Incident Summary Page 9

    Traffic Citations and Crash Break Down Page 10

    Employee Recognition Pages 11-12

    Community Involvement Page 13

  • Eaton Police Division

    Dear Sirs,

    It is with great pleasure I submit to you the Eaton Police Division's Annual Report for 2016. The

    Annual Report contains a variety of information from 2016 but I wanted to take this opportunity to

    inform of you of some of the highlights from 2016 not mentioned in the report including:

    • Sergeant Beeghly and Sergeant Hurd attended administrative leadership training through the Ohio Association of Chiefs of Police. Sgt. Eric Beeghly completed the Certified Law

    Enforcement Executive program (CLEE) in February, 2016, and Sgt. Steve Hurd began the

    CLEE program in December, 2016.

    • Our employee training program continued throughout the year and some of the training topics included firearms training, Taser training, and Crisis Intervention Training. All officers also

    completed the mandatory 11 hours of Continued Professional Training (CPT) that was mandated

    by the State of Ohio.

    • Officer Craig Jones picked up K9 partner Shadow in August, 2016. K9 Shadow and Officer Jones were able to get several successful drug arrests in 2016.

    • Dispatcher Terri Shepherd helped the dispatch center successfully complete, with no errors, the L.E.A.D.S. audit that happens every 3 years.

    • Personally, I attended the 264th session of the FBI National Academy.

    The City of Eaton changes year to year, progressing in a positive direction, and we strive to make sure

    we are changing and adapting to meet the needs of the community. We appreciate the opportunities

    afforded to us and the support given to us by City Council members that allow us to effectively serve the

    citizens of Eaton. On behalf of the dedicated men and women of the Eaton Police Division it is my

    pleasure to present this report to Council.

    Respectfully,

    Chad W. DePew

    Chief of Police

    Mr. David Kirsch – Mayor Mr. Brad Moore – Vice Mayor

    Mr. David Daily – Councilman Mr. Craig Moormeier - Councilman

    Mr. Joe Renner – Councilman Mr. Brad Collins – City Manager

  • Page | 1

    Mission

    The mission of the City of Eaton Police Division and Communications Division is to

    help save lives, protect property, and assist the citizens of the City of Eaton in their

    time of need.

    Vision

    United in the spirit of teamwork, we are dedicated to the City of Eaton and will be

    unyielding in our efforts to provide the highest level of professional service, compassion,

    and respect to our citizens.

    Guiding Principles

    Central to this mission are principles that guide our chosen profession, our

    daily decisions, and our daily life. We keep our principles clearly visible to

    remind us of our ideals. These guiding principles are the foundation for which our

    policies, goals, and practices are anchored.

    Teamwork - Each and every member of the Eaton Police Division and

    Communications Division is a valuable and important member of the team, recognizing

    that we are most effective when we combine our strengths.

    Integrity- An Eaton Police Division and Communications Division employee shall

    never compromise himself or herself by dishonesty, lack of character, or favoritism.

    Commitment to excellence - An Eaton Police Division and Communications

    Division employee shall strive to maintain the highest standards of effectiveness and

    efficiency.

    Ethics - An Eaton Police Division and Communications Division employee challenges

    himself or herself both on duty and off duty with the following question, "Is what I'm

    doing legally and morally right?"

    Professionalism – Each member of the Eaton Police Division and Communications

    Division strives to demonstrate the leadership, skills, judgment, attention to detail, and

    professional behavior that is expected of law enforcement professionals.

    Chad W. DePew

    Chief of Police

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 2

    Personnel We are proud of our team at the Eaton Police Division and would like to commend them to our Council,

    and our Community. They are professional men and women that take pride in their service. We have a

    dedicated and well trained staff that has served an average of 16 years with the City of Eaton. Below is our

    roster for 2016. The first number is total years of service which includes time spent with other law

    enforcement agencies. The second number is the time the individual has been with the Eaton Police

    Division.

    Administration

    Chief Chad W. DePew - 15 Years of Service (14 Years with Eaton PD)

    Sgt Eric Beeghly - 17 Years of Service (16 Years with Eaton PD)

    Sgt. Steven Hurd – 19 Years of Service (19 Years with Eaton PD)

    Officers

    Officer Dale Haney 46 Years of Service - 46 Total Years with Eaton PD

    Officer David Sizemore 31 Years of Service - 25 Years with Eaton PD

    Officer Brian Carpenter 21 Years of Service - 18 Years with Eaton PD

    Detective Pete Wray 20 Years of Service - 16 Years with Eaton PD

    Officer Scott Eversole 19 Years of Service - 16 Years with Eaton PD

    Officer Clinnie Stevenson 17 Years of Service - 16 Years with Eaton PD

    Officer Anthony Schmidt 14 Years of Service - 14 Years with Eaton PD

    Officer Craig Jones 9 Years of Service - 8 Years with Eaton PD

    Officer Sean Mackey 8 Years of Service - 6 Years with Eaton PD

    Officer Luke Baker 4 Years of Service - 4 Years with Eaton PD

    Dispatchers

    Dispatcher Terri Shepherd 25 Years of Service - 25 Years with Eaton PD

    Dispatcher Susan Lain 19 Years of Service - 19 Years with Eaton PD

    Dispatcher Tonya Hickman 8 Years of Service - 6 Years with Eaton PD

    Dispatcher Kathryn Burchfield Newly Hired - August 1, 2016

    Part Time Employees

    Officer Josh Singleton

    Officer Lucas Schlumpf

    Officer Garrick Sweet

    Dispatcher Melissa Schneider

    Dispatcher Amber Stevenson

    Koda - 8 Year old

    German Shepherd.

    EPD K9 Since 2010,

    retired in 2016

    K9 Teams

    Shadow - 2 Year old

    German Shepherd.

    EPD K9 Since 2016

  • Page | 3

    Eaton Police Division

    2016 Organizational Chart

    Chief of Police

    Chad DePew

    Communications

    Sgt. Eric Beeghly

    Dispatchers

    Terri Shepherd Susan Lain

    Tonya Hickman Kathryn Burchfield

    Part Time Dispatchers

    Melissa Schneider Amber Stevenson

    Patrol

    Sgt. Steve Hurd

    Patrol Officers

    David Sizemore Brian Carpenter

    Scott Eversole Clinnie Stevenson

    Anthony Schmidt Dale Haney

    Craig Jones Sean Mackey Luke Baker

    Part Time Officers

    Josh Singleton Lucas Schlumpf

    Garrick Sweet

    Detective

    Pete Wray

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 4

    Activity Levels

    During 2016 there were 15,481 occurrences of public safety services. This includes citizen calls

    for Police, Fire, & EMS services as well as Police officer self-initiated activity. The breakdown of

    the 15,481 occurrences is as follows:

    • 13,393 were for Police services; o 9,194 were citizen initiated calls for service o 4,199 were officer initiated activity

    • 2,088 were for Fire and/or EMS services. *This number represents only the Fire/EMS calls to the dispatch center; not all Fire/EMS activity.

    The 13,393 police occurrences were an 11% decrease in total police activity compared to15,109

    occurrences in 2015. However, citizen calls increased by 21.7%, police reports increased by

    21%, and arrests increased by 48.9%.

    0

    5,000

    10,000

    15,000

    20,000

    2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

    Calls 7,052 6,770 7,751 9,017 10,162 13,206 13,999 13,700 15,109 13393

    10 Year Police Activity Comparison

    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

    2016 1011 1018 1218 1270 1304 1237 1333 1264 1348 1277 1101 923

    2015 1421 1059 1256 1431 1370 1239 1358 1431 1283 1158 1044 1059

    0

    500

    1000

    1500

    2000EPD Monthly Police Activity Comparison 2016 & 2015

    Of the total public safety calls received in

    2016, 3,004 were received as a 911 call.

    An increase of 6.3% over last year’s

    2,827 911 calls. 911 Calls have increased

    consistently since 2010 (1,571 in 2010).

    0

    1000

    2000

    3000

    4000

    2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

    911 Calls

    911 Calls

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 5

    Activity Distribution by Shift

    % of Activity Load - 1 Hour Increments

    The below chart reflects the percentage of total activity handled in 2016, broken down by hour.

    Each shift handles a variety of calls but it is worth noting that Day shift had the most number of

    police reports, Evening Shift had the most number of arrests, and Midnight shift had the most

    officer initiated activity.

    Midnight to 1 a.m. 3.6% Noon to 1 p.m. 4.5%

    1 a.m. to 2 a.m. 3.1% 1 p.m. to 2 p.m. 4.8%

    2 a.m. to 3 a.m. 2.9% 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. 5.6%

    3 a.m. to 4 a.m. 2.6% Highest 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. 6.1%

    4 a.m. to 5 a.m. 2.0% 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. 5.6%

    5. A.m. to 6 a.m. 1.6% Lowest 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. 5.8%

    6 a.m. to 7 a.m. 1.7% 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. 5.6%

    7 a.m. to 8 a.m. 3.3% 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. 5.4%

    8 a.m. to 9 a.m. 3.7% 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. 5.3%

    9 a.m. to 10 a.m. 4.0% 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. 4.9%

    10 a.m. to 11 a.m. 4.6% 10 p.m. to 11 p.m. 4.9%

    11 a.m. to Noon 4.3% 11 p.m. to Midnight 4.1%

    The busiest hour during the day was 3pm-4pm, with the busiest block of time being

    2pm-9pm. The least busy hour of the day was 5am-6am.

    Night

    Shift

    20%

    Evening Shift

    42%

    Day

    Shift

    38%

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 6

    Index Crimes

    Index Crimes are those crimes which are considered violent crimes, crimes that affect the very fiber of

    society. Eaton continues to have a relatively low index crime rate. The strength (personnel and other

    resources) and the aggressiveness of the Eaton Police Division in conjunction with the support of the law

    abiding citizens of Eaton are key factors in keeping these levels low.

    Crimes can be cleared by arrest, or with a disposition of “exceptional,” which means when some element

    beyond the control of law enforcement precludes the filing of formal charges against a suspect. The arrest

    of one person may clear several crimes or several persons may be arrested in connection with a single

    incident. As indicated below overall index crimes for 2016 increased by 57.7% from 2015.

    Index Crimes 2012 through 2016

    Clearance Rate

    2013

    2014

    2015

    2016

    % Change

    2015 – 2016

    2016

    Reported

    Crimes

    2016

    Crimes

    Cleared

    Percentage

    Cleared

    Homicide

    0

    0

    0

    0

    0%

    0

    0

    NA

    Rape

    6

    4

    2

    1

    -50%

    1

    0

    0%

    Robbery

    5

    3

    2

    2

    0%

    2

    0

    0%

    Assault

    34

    27

    24

    21

    -12.5%

    21

    16

    76.2%

    Burglary

    73

    52

    43

    56

    30.2%

    56

    12

    22.5%

    Theft

    349

    387

    313

    515

    64.5%

    515

    184

    35.8%

    Motor Vehicle Theft

    18

    9

    11

    28

    154.5%

    28

    6

    21.4%

    Arson

    0

    2

    0

    0

    0%

    0

    0

    NA

    Totals

    485

    484

    395

    623

    57.7%

    623

    218

    35%

    Index Crimes by Month for 2016

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    80

    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 7

    Arrests

    There were 810 people arrested in 2016, 266 arrests more than the 544 in 2015, or an increase of 48.9%.

    Total arrests include 726 adults and 84 juveniles. Arrested persons often are charged with more than one

    crime and as a result the total charges filed will exceed the total number of people arrested.

    Charges Filed in 2016

    Adult Parole Violation

    Animal Laws

    Assault

    Burglary\B&E

    Chemicals to Manufacture Meth

    Complicity

    Consumption of Liquor in MV

    Contributing to Delinquency

    Corruption of a minor

    Crim Misc\Damaging

    Criminal Tools

    Cultivating/Manufacture Drugs

    Curfew

    Deception to Obtain Prescription

    Disorderly

    Disrupting Public Service

    Disseminate Matter Harmful to Juv

    Domestic Viol

    Drug Paraphernalia

    Endangering Children

    Failure to Appear (Warrants)

    Falsification

    Fleeing Eluding Police Officer

    Forgery

    Gross Sexual Imposition

    Illegal Poss of Drug Document

    Importuning

    Inducing Panic

    Littering

    Loitering

    Making False Alarms

    0

    10

    22

    8

    0

    3

    0

    19

    0

    27

    3

    0

    34

    0

    76

    3

    0

    57

    47

    5

    146

    4

    2

    4

    0

    0

    0

    1

    0

    0

    1

    Menacing

    Misconduct at an Emergency

    MV Theft

    Noise Violations

    Obstruction of Justice

    Offenses Involving Rail Roads

    Open Container

    OVI

    Passing Bad Checks

    Physical Control

    Poss of Drugs - Schedule I\II\III

    Possessing Drug Abuse Instrument

    Possession of Marijuana

    Probation Violation

    Protection Order Violation

    Public Indecency

    Purchase Pseudoephedrine

    Rape

    Receiving Stolen Property

    Resisting Arrest

    Robbery

    Sale of Liquor to Underage

    Tampering with Evidence

    Telephone Harassment

    Theft

    Tobacco Viol

    Trafficking in Drugs

    Trespassing

    Underage Consumption/Purchase

    Unlawful use of Vehicle

    Vandalism

    21

    0

    5

    5

    28

    0

    10

    41

    3

    0

    80

    104

    38

    0

    13

    0

    0

    1

    18

    16

    0

    3

    10

    2

    177

    8

    3

    62

    17

    2

    0

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 8

    0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    80

    90

    100

    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

    Arrests 37 49 61 55 79 93 60 73 89 62 71 73

    Total Arrests by Month 2016

    Arrests0

    10

    20

    30

    40

    50

    60

    70

    2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

    Arrests 55 69 47 43 36

    OVI Arrest 5 Year Comparison

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 9

    5 Year Incident Summary

    The RED bold numbers indicate a significant change (+/-) in that respective category.

    Incidents 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016

    Vehicular Crash – Non-injury 255 213 278 237 189

    Vehicular Crash - Injury 50 57 39 32 48

    Vehicular Crash - Fatal 0 1 0 1 1

    Animal Complaints 248 324 304 231 219

    Burglaries \ B&E’s 102 76 51 33 56

    Criminal Mischief 160 112 92 136 113

    Disorderly Conduct 307 330 286 303 382

    Domestic (Non-violent) 110 101 59 36 43

    Domestic Violence (Violent offense) 62 71 27 12 12

    Drug Related Incidents \ Drug Labs 80 \ 0 128 \ 2 153 \ 4 143 \ 3 284 \ 1

    DUI (OVI) 55 69 47 43 36

    Menacing/Harassment 32 33 18 20 26

    Juvenile Complaints 239 215 198 189 192

    Citizens Assists 118 156 121 139 130

    Liquor Complaints (Excludes DUI) 17 12 9 7 7

    Noise Complaints 103 113 103 92 133

    Parking Complaints 196 174 166 178 229

    Suicide 0 1 0 1 1

    Suicide Attempts 17 11 10 9 5

    Suspicious Calls 1287 1162 966 1200 1744

    Threatening \ Menacing 41 36 29 33 39

    Traffic Complaints 177 197 210 194 223

    Traffic Stops by Officers 1307 1345 1060 833 728

    Telephone Harassment 83 83 76 74 59

    Trespass Complaints 77 62 55 79 157

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page |10

    Traffic Violations

    In 2016 Eaton Police Officers handled 259 incidents where at least one (1) traffic citation was issued. The

    bottom line in the graph below represents the monthly breakdown of those incidents. Of those incidents, one

    or more citations may be issued. In 2016, 134 citations were filed from those 259 incidents. Each citation

    corresponds to a violation of City or State traffic laws. The top line in the graph below represents the

    monthly break down of the citations filed by the Eaton Police Division in 2016. A majority of the citations

    stemmed from 728 traffic stops and 237 motor vehicle accidents.

    Motor Vehicle Crashes

    The 238 Motor Vehicle Crashes that occurred on City streets was a 11.9% decrease over last year’s

    270 crashes (these totals do not include private property crashes). The table below shows the

    monthly break down of crash reports handled and their totals. There was 1 fatal crash in 2016.

    Month

    Private

    Property

    No Injury

    Crashes

    Crashes with

    Injuries

    Traffic

    Offenses

    Cited

    OVI Involved

    January

    1

    13

    4

    7

    0 February

    3

    17

    2

    13

    0

    March

    1

    16

    4

    12

    0

    April

    2

    9

    5

    8

    1

    May

    3

    17

    2

    15

    2

    June

    4

    12

    1

    7

    0

    July

    1

    14

    5

    13

    0

    August

    2

    11

    5

    10

    0

    September

    7

    12

    7

    12

    0

    October

    4

    19

    2

    9

    1

    November

    2

    20

    7

    13

    0

    December

    2

    29

    4

    15

    1

    Total

    32

    189

    48

    134

    5

    Monthly Citations from Traffic Incidents

    0

    5

    10

    15

    20

    25

    30

    35

    Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

    Citations

    Incidents

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 11

    Employee Recognition

    Employee of the Year

    The 2016 Investigation of the Year Award went to Officer Scott Eversole for

    EPD case #2016-2427. The investigation took several months to complete and

    Officer Eversole had to gather a large amount of intel in order to gain enough

    evidence to serve a search warrant on the suspect’s home. Scott is an active

    member of the Montgomery County Regional SWAT team and was able to

    coordinate efforts with MCSO SWAT on the execution of the search warrant.

    The case resulted in the suspect being indicted on 2 felony charges as well as

    several misdemeanor charges. Officer Eversole’s hard work on this case was a

    great example of our Guiding Principles of Teamwork and Commitment to

    Excellence.

    Officer Luke Baker won the 2016 “Proud to Serve” Award. Proud to Serve is

    our motto at the Eaton Police Division and the recipient of this award is

    selected by the administrative team. 2016 was Luke’s first year as a full-time

    officer but he started part time with EPD in 2012. During 2016 Luke worked

    diligently at being a pro-active officer and quickly became one of the

    departmental leaders in officer initiated activity. Luke has a knack for drug

    enforcement and was a key reason why we had increased drug arrests in 2016.

    Although he has only been full time for 1 year, Luke spent 3.5 years with EPD

    as a part time officer. Luke is also a black belt in Jiu-Jitsu and helps train his

    fellow officers in subject control and defensive tactics.

    “Proud to Serve” Award

    Selecting an Employee of the Year is a tradition that began in 2011 for the Eaton

    Police Division. Each year staff members get the opportunity to nominate a co-

    worker who they feel best exhibits the agency's Guiding Principles of Teamwork,

    Integrity, Commitment to Excellence, Ethics, and Professionalism. Our 2016

    winner was Officer Brian Carpenter.

    Officer Carpenter began his career with the Eaton Police Division in 1998 and has

    21 years of total law enforcement experience. Currently, Brian is the 2nd most

    senior officer on the department. In addition to being a patrol officer, Brian is also

    one of the department’s firearms instructors and weapons armorers and takes pride

    in providing valuable firearms training to his fellow officers. Brian was one of the

    more active officers on the department in 2016 and led the agency in arrests.

    Officer Carpenter is also an active member in the Army National Guard and is

    currently a Sergeant First Class in the 2-107th Calvary. Brian has served in the

    military for over 25 years, including 3.5 years with the Navy Reserves.

    Investigation of the Year Award

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 12

    The “Top Shot” award went to the

    Officer that had the best overall

    accuracy during our 2016 firearms

    training. The 2016 Top Shot was

    Sergeant Steve Hurd

    Employee Recognition Activity Awards

    Activity Awards are presented to officers for the amount of activity they performed throughout the year.

    Activity includes calls for service as well as officer initiated activity such as business checks, foot patrols,

    traffic stops, arrests, etc. Each officer initiated event or incident counts as 1 line of activity for the

    officers. Officers are proud of the proactive work they do in our community and we make sure to

    recognize them for their hard work.

    1500+ Activity Award: Most Active Officer Award:

    Officers Anthony Schmidt, Scott

    Eversole, Dale Haney, and Luke Baker

    all received the 1,500+ Activity Award.

    Officer Baker led this category with

    2,020 actions of activity.

    Officer Stevenson’s 3,143 actions of activity made him

    the most active officer on the department for the 6th

    year in a row. Clinnie doesn’t know the meaning of

    downtime because he takes advantage of every

    opportunity to pro-actively patrol the City of Eaton.

    Clinnie takes great pride in preventing crimes from

    occurring and works diligently to solve challenging

    cases. Officer Stevenson also had the most business

    checks with 1,127, the 2nd most traffic stops with 111,

    and tied for the highest number of OVI’s with 5.

    ZERO Sick Time Award

    Years of Service Awards

    Top Shot Award:

    Pictured left to right: Chief DePew, Detective Pete Wray, Officer

    Brian Carpenter, Officer Clinnie Stevenson, Officer Luke Baker,

    Dispatcher Tony Hickman and Sgt. Hurd all used 0 hours of sick

    leave in 2016. We applaud them on their dedication to the agency

    and their accomplishment in not using any sick time. Dispatcher

    Tonya Hickman has never used a sick day since joining the Eaton

    Police Division in 2010.

    Dispatcher Terri Shepherd (pictured

    left) reached 25 years of service in 2016.

    Detective Pete Wray (pictured right)

    reached 20 years of service in 2016.

  • Eaton Police Division Annual Report 2016

    Page | 13

    2016 Community Involvement

    Purple Paws 2016

    The Eaton Police Scholarship is awarded to an

    Eaton High School Senior pursuing a college degree

    in criminal justice, law, or law enforcement related

    field. Our 2016 recipient was Maria Kern. Maria

    plans on pursuing a career in forensic science after

    graduating college.

    2016 marked the 3rd year we have given the award.

    To date, we have awarded scholarships to 4 Eaton

    High School Seniors (2 recipients in 2014).

    In 2016 we worked with several community

    members to hold a Neighbors Against Crime

    program in the summer. We held several meetings

    with community members to learn issues affecting

    the City of Eaton and helped develop action plans to

    better the quality of life for all citizens.

    Neighbors Against Crime

    K9 Shadow was the “K9 Ambassador” for the 1st

    annual Purple Paws fundraising sponsored by the

    YWCA in support of Domestic Violence

    Awareness month in October.

    Old Fashioned Downtown

    Saturday Night

    Eaton Police Scholarship

    The Eaton Police

    Association along with

    the Eaton Fire & EMS

    Association were

    proud co-sponsors of

    the Old Fashioned

    Downtown Saturday

    Night event for the 4th

    year with Downtown

    Eaton Inc.

    Sheriff Simpson and Chief DePew teamed up to

    provide training to several area churches on ways they

    can keep their congregations safe and what to do in the

    event of a church assault.

    Church Safety Training

    Cover pagePage 0.1 Table of ContentsPage 0.2 Intro LetterPage 1 Mission, Vision, & Guiding PrinciplesPage 2 PersonnelPage 3 Organizational ChartPage 4 Calls for ServicePage 5 Call DistPage 6 Index CrimesPage 7 ArrestsPage 8 Monthly arrests and OVIPage 9 - 5 yr summaryPage 10 Traffic Cites and CrashesPage 11 Employee RecognitionPage 12 Employee RecognitionPage 13 Community Involvement