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St. Petersburg Police Department

Police department of St. Petersburg, Florida, United States


Police department of St. Petersburg, Florida, United States

FieldValue
agencynameSt. Petersburg Police Department
abbreviationSPPD
commonnameSt. Petersburg P.D.
patchPatch of the St. Petersburg, Florida Police Department.png
formed1903
employees757
volunteers62
budget$86.9 million (2010 FY)
countryUnited States
divtypeState
divnameFlorida
subdivtypeCounty
subdivnamePinellas County
mapPinellas County Florida Incorporated and Unincorporated areas St. Petersburg Highlighted.svg
mapcaptionMap of St. Petersburg Police Department's Jurisdiction.
sizearea64 sqmi
sizepopulation262,000 citizens
legaljurisSt. Petersburg, Florida, U.S.
policeYes
localYes
headquarters1301 First Avenue North
St. Petersburg, Florida, U.S.
sworntypePolice Officer
sworn562
unsworn212
chief1nameAnthony Holloway
chief1position
Chief of Police
chief3nameJoseph Dente
chief3positionAssistant Chief, Uniform Services Bureau
chief4nameAntonio Gilliam
chief4positionAssistant Chief, Investigative Services Bureau
chief5nameMichael Kovacsev
chief5positionAssistant Chief, Administrative Services Bureau
unittypeBureaus
unitname
officetypeDivisions
officename
stationtypeDistricts
stations1
boat1typePatrol Boats
boats12
websiteSt.Petersburg Police Department

St. Petersburg, Florida, U.S. Chief of Police

The St Petersburg Police Department (SPPD) provides crime prevention and public safety services for the city of St. Petersburg, Florida. The department was created in 1903. The St. Petersburg Police Department has an authorized strength of 550 sworn officers and 212 civilian support staff. The department serves the fifth largest city in the state of Florida, with a population of 250,000. The St. Petersburg Police Department is one of over 1,000 law enforcement agencies in the United States accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA). Anthony Holloway is the chief of police.

The department has specialized units, both uniformed and undercover, to target specific public safety issues within the city (i.e., auto thefts, violent crime). The department uses community outreach programs like Park Walk and Talk, Facebook, Twitter, and a tip 411 app to gather information from the community and address specific concerns.

History

In 1960s African American police officers were discriminated against. They were not allowed to work in certain locations, move up in rank, and also were not permitted to arrest whites. They had separate water fountains and lockers in the police station and were referred to as "half-police officers" by the community. The officers even had to deal with their inability to arrest white people by having to wait for a white officer to come and make any actual arrests.

In 1965, a dozen officers, dubbed "the Courageous 12", sued the city for discrimination. These officers included Leon Jackson, Adam Baker, Freddie Crawford, Raymond DeLoach, Charles Holland, Robert Keys, Primus Killen, James King, Johnnie B. Lewis, Horace Nero, Jerry Styles, and Nathaniel Wooten. After losing their case, a federal appeals court, ruled in their favor in 1968, effectively ending the department's policy of segregation. James B. Sanderlin was an activist and a lawyer that fought to end social and legal inequality in St. Petersburg. He was the lawyer who represented the " Courageous 12", and later went on to become the first African American judge of Pinellas County.

Riots occurred in St. Petersburg, Florida in 1996 following the shooting and death of an African American male teenage motorist during a police traffic stop.

In 2011 three SPPD officers were killed within the span of less than one month.

In 2019 the Courageous 12 were honored by the creation of a plaque that was placed in the Saint Petersburg FL. Police department. In 2020 the only officer from the original Courageous 12 group still alive was Leon Jackson.

In January 2022, after the St. Petersburg Police Department fired an officer for using a stun gun on a 64-year-old man in a wheelchair, it sent a report to the Florida Criminal Justice Standards & Training Commission for it to decide whether the officer could keep his Florida certification.

Districts

The St. Petersburg Police Department has divided the city into three districts:

  • District One – Bethel Heights, Campbell Park, Bayfront Hospital, Roser Park, Lassing Park, Harbordale, Coquina Key, Albert Whitted Airport, Eckerd College, Lakewood Estates, Jordan Park, Maximo, Skyway Bridge
  • District Two – Downtown, Tropicana Field, The Peir, Northshore Park, The Vinoy, Harris Park, Placido Bayou, Meadowlawn, Fossil Park, Snell Isle, Shore Acres, Old Northeast, St Anthony's Hospital
  • District Three – Childs Park, Tyrone Square Mall, Azalea, United Central, Garden Manor, Holiday Park, St Pete General Hospital, Yacht Club Estates

References

References

  1. www.stpete.org/police. "Welcome to the St. Petersburg Police Department".
  2. (September 25, 2015). "64 Arrested in Multi-County Auto Theft Crackdown {{!}} Patch".
  3. "St. Petersburg police Chief Tony Holloway, after 100 days in office, gets high praise".
  4. "Tip411".
  5. "St. Petersburg's 'Courageous 12' officers see familiar struggle 50 years later".
  6. (February 14, 2020). "James B. Sanderlin Black History Award honors William Darling and Elder Jordan, Sr".
  7. "Neighborhoodtimes: '96 riots: After national shame, did city change?".
  8. "Sergeant Thomas John Baitinger".
  9. "Police Officer Jeffrey Adam Yaslowitz".
  10. "Police Officer David Scott Crawford".
  11. (2019-11-01). "City honors the Courageous 12 with plaque at new police building".
  12. Mike Sunnucks. (January 27, 2022). "SPPD Fires Cop Who Tasered Black Man in Wheelchair".
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