Sunday, November 25, 2012

Thankful

This week we celebrated the Thanksgiving holiday.  I am thankful again this year that our police department members have been healthy and uninjured for the most part.  Even though we police a relatively safe community, this still is a very dangerous job and any call can turn to tragedy in a fraction of a second. 

I was reminded of this a little more than a week ago when our folks were assisting Mission PD track down a man who had just killed his brother.  Even though it does not get more dangerous than that, our officers knowingly put themselves in harms way to protect the public.  In this case, as they were closing in on the suspect's location, the incident ended when he turned the gun on himself.

So while being thankful is an everyday thing at our department, I am comfortable knowing our staff members are doing the right things for the right reasons while keeping our City, their peers, and themselves safe and protected.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Many Congratulations are in Order

Another very busy week at the Shawnee PD.  Several officers and civilian support staff were given service awards this week at Tuesday night's City Council Meeting.  Patrol Lieutenant Mark Hein was celebrated for his twenty-five years along with Deputy Chief Moser for his twenty years of service.

Wednesday night, we graduated our 2012 Session of our Citizens' Police Academy.  Training Unit Sergeant Steve McCorkill did a great job running this session with the help of all of our staff who instructed classes and from Police Department Volunteer and 2011 Session CPA Graduate Michelle Distler.  Patrol Lieutenant Mitch Brim did a great job speaking during the ceremony about the difference of police officers' wearing badges or wearing shields.

On Friday, four officers received Awards of Valor from the Kansas City Metro Chiefs' and Sheriffs' Association.  Officers Blake Larsen, Officer Steve Walsh, and Officer Ryan Robinson received the Lifesaving Award, while Sergeant Jim Baker received an award for innovation.

And Saturday night, Detective John "Butters" Stirling defended the honor of the Shawnee Police Department while representing us while boxing at the "Guns 'N Hoses" Police versus Fire Charity Boxing Event at Kansas City's Downtown Marriott Hotel.  The event is a fund-raiser for the SAFE (Surviving Spouse and Family Endowment) Fund Program administered by the Kansas City Metropolitan Crim Commission.  John went three rounds with a "fiery" firefighter/EMT out of Harrisonville and won by decision.

Congratulations to all.  You make me very proud to know and work with you to safeguard our community.

Monday, July 23, 2012

What I did this Summer by Larry Larimore

What I did?  Well, my wife and I went on a once in a lifetime vacation, with a little work thrown in.  Here is how it started...
The first time I really took notice of Shawnee Fire Department’s Firefighter Exchange Program was at Fire Chief Hudson’s retirement reception last Fall when the Fire Chief of Shawnee’s Sister City in Erfurt, Germany sent a letter of appreciation for Chief Hudson’s support of the program that sent Shawnee firefighters to Erfurt every other year and entertained firefighters and their families from Erfurt during the opposite years.  After that I wondered what it would take to start up a similar program involving our officers and the officers from the Erfurt Police Department.
I began asking questions to past and present Shawnee firefighters involved in the exchanges and found that they spoke very fondly of their experiences and they had come to enjoy a genuine professional and personal bond between the two departments and their staff.  The Shawnee firefighters invited Major Moser and me to meetings while they planned an itinerary for the Erfurt firefighters visit this past June.  I next spoke with Dennis Busby of Shawnee’s Sister City Committee and asked for his support in exploring the possibility of setting up a similar program for our two departments’ officers.  And it was that discussion is what led to our visit to Europe in June of this year.
My wife and I traveled with eight members of Shawnee’s Sister City Committee to visit Shawnee's Sister Cities in Pittem, Belgium, and Erfurt, with a side trip to Prague in the Czech Republic sandwiched in between.  In Pittem, I met the Belgium Federal Police Chief Claude Vandepitte.  Chief Vandepitte oversees a regional police force about the same size as our department in which the City of Pittem is included.  He spoke to our group about his department and crime in his region and in Belgium. 
Here is a photo from our meeting which shows their “mobile report desk (van)” leaving to go on a call for service:
In Erfurt, I met with Chief Jürgen Loyen; his Chief of Staff Hans-Peter Goltz; and their department’s staff representative Anja Keßler.  Chief Loyen told me about his department; we shared similarities and differences in public safety and law enforcement in our countries; and what was supposed to be a one hour meeting turned into three and I was late getting out of town.
Here is a photo of the Erfurt PD Staff, my interpreter Gabby, and me:
As an example of how friendly the folks were in Erfurt - there was a large festival going on in Erfurt during our visit, and while I attended an outdoor concert I met an off-duty Erfurt police officer, who, when he found out who I was, immediately whipped out his badge case and gave me his hat badge. The young officer said while he assigned to the Gera PD in Germany he participated in a police officer exchange program where is visited Fort Wayne, Indiana.  He said he would love to visit Kansas City.
Here is a photo from the outdoor concert (the Cathedral of St. Severus built from 1154–1476 is in the right background) and a photo of the police memorabilia I received from Erfurt:

This trip was one that my wife and I will never forget.  It is right up there with my deployment to Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina.  Opportunities to get out of town and visit interesting places and people are just too good to pass up.  In Europe, we saw history that was incomparable to anything I have seen in the United States (..the town of Erfurt was first mentioned in in year 742 and their first Town Hall dates back to the Eleventh Century).  Also for me, I got to “talk shop” with peers from other countries and experienced their great hospitality.  In both Pittem and Erfurt, our group was treated like royalty and taken to all the sights.  We were fed so much great food that I did not want to think about eating when we came back (I even got my barbeque fix in a restaurant in Erfurt by way of a plate of smoked spiced-rubbed ribs). 
So what is next? Through my visits, I hope that Belgium Police Chief Vandepitte will travel as a guest of the Sister City Group from Pittem when they visit next year, and that Erfurt Police Chief Loyen will travel as a guest of the Sister City Group from Erfurt when they visit next year.  I invited them both to come see the Shawnee Police Department and meet our staff; and I told them we would introduce them to law enforcement in Kansas City. 
Since this was mostly a vacation for the wife and me, I will close with this last picture.  It is a night shot of the Charles Bridge (founded in the year 1347) with the Prague Castle (founded in the year 880), which is the largest castle in the world, lit up in the background.  As you can imagine, it was awesome...


Sunday, October 9, 2011

Congratulations to the 100th Graduating Class of the Johnson County Regional Police Academy

Last Friday evening, the commanders and I attended the graduation of the 100th Class of the Johnson County Regional Police Academy at the Carlson Center of the Johnson County Community College (JCCC).  We had three recruits in this class. Our Honor Guard presented the Colors, while Shawnee Patrol Sergeant Ben Mendoza’s daughter Alyssa sang the National Anthem.  The Honor Guard and Alyssa represented our department very well.
In 1960s, Johnson County experienced enormous growth, and the Sheriff, along with several other Police Chiefs, decided a formal police academy curriculum was needed.  The late Johnson County Sheriff Fred Allenbrand, the former Overland Park Police Chief Myron Scafe, and the late Shawnee Police Chief Charlie Stump agreed to establish a formal academy specific to Johnson County.
In the fall of 1972, the first official regional academy was conducted on the campus of the JCCC.  The current academy facility, located on the west side of the college campus, was dedicated in October 2001. The academy’s curriculum is designed to meet and exceed the State’s requirements, as well as the unique nature of policing the Johnson County community.   
The Johnson County Regional Police Academy provides basic law enforcement training for officers from more than 30 Kansas agencies in the suburban Kansas City area. Successful completion of the 16-week academy results in certification as a Kansas Law Enforcement Officer. Recruits must be employed as a full-time law enforcement officer of an agency we serve before entering the police academy. The academy is operated in cooperation with the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center, JCCC, and the Johnson County Chiefs and Sheriffs Association.
In closing, I would like to congratulate Shawnee Police Recruit Justin Cobb.  Justin was awarded the Rick Staples Marksmanship Award and the Overall Achievement Award for his outstanding performance while attending the academy.  Justin, and his Shawnee classmates, Jennifer Pennington and Josh Bayless, now start their post-academy training before entering our field training program.

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Smart Policing Right Here in Shawnee

We learned a few weeks ago that we were awarded federal funds to conduct a study of our implementation of the National Highway Traffic Safety Association's Data Driven Approaches to Crime and Traffic Safety (DDACTS) Initiative.  The purpose of the study is to determine what effect the DDACTS initiative has had on crime and traffic safety in the City of Shawnee. This award is a great honor for Shawnee and we are now a member of a select few law enforcement agencies that are testing solutions to serious crime problems in their jurisdictions.
  
The goal of these Smart Policing initiatives is to develop evidence-based, data-driven law enforcement tactics and strategies that are effective, efficient, and economical. These proven tactics and strategies will be a great benefit to law enforcement agencies as measured by reduced crime and higher case closure rates.  This is so important in these days of budget constraints and limited staffing.

According to the Bureau of Justice Assistance, “The Smart Policing Initiative (SPI) seeks to build upon concepts of “offender-based” and “place-based” policing. Several longitudinal projects in the United States and the United Kingdom have demonstrated convincingly that a small number of offenders commit a disproportionate amount of crime. It is also well documented that crime reports and calls for service often cluster predominately at specific locations or narrow, easily-defined areas, and that the most convincing research indicates that “place-based” or “hotspot” policing reduces violent crime and neighborhood disorder. These persuasive findings suggest that effective policing requires a tightly focused, collaborative approach that is measurable; based on sound, detailed analysis; and includes policies and procedures for accountability.

The consistent use of preventive and tactical tools that are rooted in a scientific knowledge base of “what works” should be promoted and integrated into daily police work.  Inculcating evidence-based policies and procedures in everyday police operations is critically important to an agency’s ability to provide quality law enforcement services.”  

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Shawnee's Citizens' Police Academy 2011

This week we re-instituted our Citizens’ Police Academy.  It has been about twelve years since we last held this academy.  Various reasons were the cause for not programing this training, but most recently it was because of budget concerns.  We have talked about resurrecting the program in the past; and after becoming Chief, my staff and I made it a priority. We are saving overtime costs by having the commanders present as much information as possible, and the hourly staff are flexing their schedules.  Our Planning and Research Manager Greg Collins and Lieutenant Doug Orbin did the lion's share of planning to make this training happen.
The Citizens’ Police Academy is an opportunity for members of our community to see and experience the role of the law enforcement officer at a deeper level.  Participants in the academy will meet and interact with officers and see how the members of the Shawnee Police Department work to maintain a safe community for all who live in, work in, or visit Shawnee.  Over eight weeks, twenty women and men participating in this year’s academy will be presented information about the history of the Shawnee Police Department, police officer ethics, patrol operations, investigative procedures, support services operations, and many more topics.  A big hit from past academies is the day they meet at a local firearms range to fire the various less-lethal and lethal weapons we use to perform our jobs.
This year’s participants include two members of the Shawnee City Council, residents of Shawnee, and individuals who work at businesses in Shawnee.  One of the participants is a daughter of a retired Shawnee police officer who said she would like to follow her father’s footsteps and become a police officer in the future.  Isn't that too cool???

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Master Police Officer Michael Sedars - August 24, 1981 to September 19, 2011

Last Friday, we had a great time sending off Mike Sedars at his retirement reception.  After thirty years, Monday, September 19, 2011, will be Mike's last day as a Shawnee police officer. During his years at Shawnee PD, Mike served as a field training officer, tactical team member; and in January 2002, he became a member of the department’s newly formed Traffic Safety Unit, and that is where he served out the rest of his career.  When I came on in 1987, everyone told me to look for Mike if I had any questions about traffic crash investigations.  They said he was the department’s crash investigations expert.  Throughout the past 25 years, I have come to know why everyone looks to Mike for help.  Mike would put aside anything he was doing to explain how to perform a crash investigative task, or in most cases, he would do the work for us.  Mike is a shining example of an officer who puts others before himself.  He is one of the reasons why the Shawnee Police Department is a great law enforcement organization.

Mike - Thanks for your dedicated service to your fellow officers, the City, and  Community of Shawnee; and all the agencies around us that you have assisted throughout your honorable career.  Have fun and enjoy your well-deserved retirement.