King County Sheriff's Office

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

King County Sheriff's Office
{{{patchcaption}}}
AbbreviationKCSO
MottoEvery Call Counts
Agency overview
Formed1852
Preceding agency
  • Municipal Police
Employees1,000+
Annual budget$138.5 million (2011 Adopted Budget)
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionKing County, Washington, U.S.
Population2.1 million
Governing bodyKing County Council
General nature
  • Local civilian police
Operational structure
HeadquartersKing County Courthouse (Downtown Seattle)
Sworn members720
Agency executive
Units
4
Facilities
PrecinctsYes (4 including HQ)
Police boatsYes
Helicopters6 ( 1 Bell 206B3,2 Bell UH-1H "Huey", one is a UH-1H "Plus",1 Bell 407, 2 TH-67 training helicopters)
Website
http://www.kingcounty.gov/safety/sheriff.aspx
The KCSO provides policing for unincorporated areas of King County, 12 contracting cities

The King County Sheriff's Office (KCSO) is a local police agency in King County, Washington, United States. It is the primary law enforcement agency for all unincorporated areas of King County, as well as 12 cities and two transit agencies which contract their police services to the KCSO. KCSO also provides police and fire Aircraft Rescue and Fire Fighting to the King County International Airport (Boeing Field). KCSO also provides regional-level support services to other local law enforcement agencies such as air support and search and rescue. The department has over 1,000 employees and serves 2.1 million citizens,[1] over 500,000 of whom live in either unincorporated areas or the 12 contract cities.

The current Sheriff of King County is Mitzi Johanknecht, a former major within the department. Johanknecht was elected in November 2017 and was sworn in on December 28, 2017.

History[]

The first King County Sheriff was elected in 1852. The office was renamed the King County Department of Public Safety after voters approved a charter change in 1968, and the director would be appointed. In the 1980s, the name of the department was again changed, this time to the King County Police Department. In 1996, voters decided to reinstate voting for the sheriff and the name was changed back to the King County Sheriff’s Office.[2] In 2020, voters decided to return to an appointed sheriff and to allow the King County Council to change the duties of the sheriff.[3]

Major Mitzi Johanknecht defeated incumbent John Urquhart in the 2017 King County sheriff election.[4]

Sheriffs since 1981[]

Divisions[]

  • Office of the Sheriff - includes the Sheriff, Undersheriff, chief of staff, aides, a media relations officer, labor negotiator, the Internal Investigations Unit, and the Legal Unit.
  • Field Operations Division - manages the core functions of patrol, precinct-based detectives, crime prevention, storefronts, and reserve deputies. The subdivision into four precincts allows for better community-based responses because the precinct commanders can use local data to direct law enforcement services. Day-to-day management of contract city police and school resource officers, are the responsibility of this division.
  • Special Operations Division - provides support services to other divisions, regional services to local agencies, and contract police service to the King County Metro Transit Division (including Sound Transit Police), King County Department of Transportation (Motor Unit (disbanded 10/1/12)), and the King County International Airport ARFF Police. Services provided by this division include: a K-9 unit with search and drug detection capabilities; Air Support (Guardian One); Marine Unit; Bomb Squad; tactical training in firearms, less-lethal weapons, and defensive tactics; Tac-30 (SWAT); hostage negotiations; dignitary protection; tow coordination and appeal hearings; Search & Rescue; D.M.T. (Demonstration Management Team); instruction in and equipment for Haz-Mat; and special event planning and coordination. The division has also taken the lead in planning for homeland security concerns.
  • Criminal Investigations Division (CID) - includes the Major Crimes Section, the Special Investigations Section, and the King County Regional Criminal Intelligence Group. The division serves citizens with follow-up investigative, warrant, and intelligence-gathering services. Specifically, it investigates crimes including homicide, domestic violence, computer fraud, forgery, sexual assault, and more. CID also addresses child support enforcement issues.
  • Technical Services Division - provides the bulk of support services that are vital to efficient operations. Often, the employees in this division provide direct services to citizens as well as support services to the other divisions. Services provided by the division personnel include emergency 9-1-1 call receiving and dispatching, managing court security (County Marshals), technology development, records, contracting, civil process, personnel/hiring, payroll, purchasing, training, photography, application and administration of grants, planning, and all aspects of fingerprint identification.

Contract cities[]

King County, WA Contract City Patches

The following cities contract their police departments to KCSO:

Other contracts[]

  • King County International Airport Police/Fire ARFF (Boeing Field)
  • King County Dept. of Transportation: Roads Division
  • Muckleshoot Indian Tribe
  • Sound Transit Police
  • King County Marshals
  • King County Fire/Arson Investigators
  • c. 15 additional contract services from school districts to security
  • Marine Patrol contract to the cities of Beaux Arts, Bellevue, Issaquah, Kenmore, Kirkland, Redmond, Sammamish, and Yarrow Point. Marine calls for service only on all other King County Sheriff's Office city patrol contracts.

Most of the contracts within the Sheriff's Office have their own patch and patrol car design and wear a King County Sheriff badge, while other contracts have no identity other than the King County Sheriff uniform, patch and patrol car. Those contracts that don't have their own identity are Beaux Arts Village, Skykomish, Muckleshoot Tribe (although they used to wear a tribal patch) and King County Metro Transit. King County Metro Transit Police, a unit of the sheriff's office,[16] do have their own style of patrol car specific to Metro Police, and their own uniform with the standard King County Sheriff patch. The city of North Bend contracted with the KCSO from 1973 until March 8, 2014 when the City of Snoqualmie Police Department took over the policing duties in North Bend, at that time the North Bend contract was KCSO longest standing contract.

The KCSO Motor Unit existed under contract with the King County Department of Transportation: Roads Division, which in turn provided funding for S.T.E.P (the Selective Traffic Enforcement Program) which targeted select arterials within unincorporated King County based on a history of accidents, chronic traffic problems, and high citizen complaints. The KCSO Motors Unit wore the standard KCSO patch and Class A uniform and rode Honda KCSO marked police motorcycles. The Motor Unit participated in traffic enforcement, instructor certifications, dignitary protection and escort, parades and special events, educational and school activities as well as extensive motorcycle training. This unit was disbanded October 1, 2012.[17]

Rank structure[]

Title Insignia
Sheriff
4 Gold Stars.svg
Undersheriff*
3 Gold Stars.svg
Division Chief
2 Gold Stars.svg
Contract City Chief*
1 Gold Star.svg
Major
US-O4 insignia.svg
Captain
Captain insignia gold.svg
Sergeant
U.S. police sergeant rank (black and yellow).svg
Master Police Officer (Deputy)
LASD Deputy.jpg
Deputy
  • Contract city chiefs wear three stars when in their contract uniform and one star when in a KCSO uniform.

Law Enforcement Exploring Program[]

The King County Sheriff's Office has a volunteer program for individuals between the ages of 14 and 21 who are interested in investigating a career in the field of law enforcement. The program is called the King County Sheriff Explorers and is a local post of the Learning for Life Exploring program. The explorer post has a rank structure similar to the Sheriff's Office. The explorers attend academies and competitions, ride-along with deputies on patrol, and receive training on a variety of law enforcement topics.

There are four Explorer posts in cities contracted with the King County Sheriff's Office, those being an unincorporated post in Woodinville, as well as city posts in Maple Valley, Burien, and Sammamish.

Controversy[]

In February 2012, Dustin Theoharis was shot sixteen times by a sheriff's deputy and a Department of Corrections officer as he lay in his bed. The officers were attempting to search the home for another man when they saw Theoharis move and they opened fire. Officers responding to the shooting allegedly[citation needed] failed to gather evidence, moved items at the crime scene and acted as advocates for the shooters. An internal investigation found no wrongdoing on the part of the officers. The officers involved refused to cooperate with the investigation. The state settled a lawsuit for $2.5 Million.[18] The county agreed to pay $3 million to settle the matter. Sheriff John Urquhart pointed out to the press that he was not responsible for this incident as he had not yet been elected.[19][20] In 2017 Detective Richard Rowe in plain clothes approached a motorcyclist from behind with his gun drawn without identifying himself as a law enforcement officer for a full minute. He also reached into the motocyclist's pocket to pull out his wallet so that an observer might think an armed robbery was in progress. The department later settled the case with a $65,000 payment to the victim.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ King County Sheriff - What We Do
  2. ^ http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20000123&slug=4000945
  3. ^ "King County sheriff to be appointed not elected under approved measure". king5.com. Retrieved November 7, 2020.
  4. ^ Miletich, Steve (November 9, 2017). "Mitzi Johanknecht unseats John Urquhart as King County sheriff". The Seattle Times. Retrieved November 9, 2017.
  5. ^ http://www.historylink.org/File/7919
  6. ^ http://old.seattletimes.com/news/local/greenriver/1987/part1.html
  7. ^ http://old.seattletimes.com/news/local/greenriver/1987/part1.html
  8. ^ http://rspoa.org/index.php?vern-thomas
  9. ^ Carlton Smith and Tomas Guillen, The Search For The Green River Killer (New York: Onyx, 1991),159
  10. ^ Carlton Smith and Tomas Guillen, The Search For The Green River Killer (New York: Onyx, 1991),418
  11. ^ Carlton Smith and Tomas Guillen, The Search For The Green River Killer (New York: Onyx, 1991),421
  12. ^ Carlton Smith and Tomas Guillen, The Search For The Green River Killer (New York: Onyx, 1991),429
  13. ^ http://www.seattlepi.com/local/article/New-King-County-Sheriff-sworn-in-3565976.php
  14. ^ http://kuow.org/post/john-urquhart-sworn-today-new-king-county-sheriff
  15. ^ http://kuow.org/post/john-urquhart-sworn-today-new-king-county-sheriff
  16. ^ Metro Transit Police, King County, Washington, retrieved July 7, 2013
  17. ^ "King County Sheriff's motorcycle unit to be eliminated (Seattle Times blog)", The Seattle Times, September 6, 2012
  18. ^ https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/16-gunshots-55-million-settlement-for-puyallup-man/
  19. ^ Shot 16 times by officers: Innocent man files $20M suit, by John Hopperstad, July 10, 2013, Q13 Fox News
  20. ^ Innocent Man Shot 16 Times While in His Bed, by Tim Lynch, July 11, 2013, QFox13.com

External links[]

Retrieved from ""