2016 annual report -...
TRANSCRIPT
SAUK CENTRE POLICE DEPARTMENT
2016 Annual Report
S A UK C E N TR E P OL I C E D E P A R TM EN T
320 Oak St S
Sauk Centre MN 56378
Emergencies call 911
Non-emergency call 320-351-7022
Fax 320-352-2206
2
Sauk Centre Police Department Staff
Bryon Friedrichs
Chief of Police 28 years of service
Dan Moldenhauer
Patrol Officer 19 years of service
Darren Danielson
Patrol Officer 15 years of service
Gary Nelson
Patrol Officer 14 years of service
Joe Jensen
Sergeant/K9 Handler 10 years of service
Melissa Kleinschmidt
Administrative Assistant 9 years of service
Dustin Von Wahlde
Patrol Officer 9 years of service
Dean Jungles
Part Time Patrol Officer 8 years of service
Matt Moorman
Part Time Patrol Officer 5 years of service
Sonny
Patrol K9 2 years of service
Mark Sprengeler
Part Time Patrol Officer 1 year of service
3
2016 2015 2014
911 Hang Up 8 10 6
Administrative Citation 49 31 30
Alarm-false 129 86 101
Animal Complaints 17 15 15
Application for gun permit 43 50 49
Assist Business 58 44 37
Bar Checks 65 37 30
Child Custody Dispute 16 33 28
Citizen Contacts 429 155 65
Civil Matter 33 34 29
DANCO Violations 4 11 11
Disorderly Conduct 19 14 11
Dog Complaints 81 72 74
Dog Impounds 16 10 19
Driving Complaints 57 57 54
Detox Admittance 2 1 0
Fights 9 10 2
Fingerprints 61 59 33
Forgery 1 9 6
Gas No Pay 88 44 22
Harassment 30 27 30
Hit & Run 17 21 19
Inattentive Driving 3 5 7
Intoxicated Person 59 39 22
Juvenile Curfew Violation 3 4 2
Juvenile Problem 64 75 52
Lost Property 17 17 7
Minor consumption 14 15 9
2016 2015 2014
Matter of Information 263 213 260
Medical Call 208 205 203
Motorist Assist 31 31 50
Neighbor Dispute 11 14 6
Noise Violations 44 48 60
Obstructing Legal Process 1 3 6
Open Door/Window 30 12 13
Paper Service 7 3 5
Personal Assist 205 128 131
Property Damage 33 23 27
Property Found 48 43 36
Records Request 85 62 64
Request for Extra Patrol 54 24 22
School Bus Stop Arm Viol 1 6 4
Special Detail 90 32 39
Stalled Vehicle 14 13 13
Suicide threat 17 18 14
Suspicious Activity 83 97 81
Suspicious Person 30 30 18
Special Phone Calls 16 22 9
Suspicious Vehicle 72 51 56
Transport/Escort 48 37 55
Unwanted Person 31 23 31
Verbal Dispute 30 30 34
Weapons Charges 6 9 2
Welfare Check 159 109 93
Total ICRs 7,840 6,707 6,359
Total Offenses 8,158 7,014 6,607
Vandalism to a building Guns officers removed from a residence because the resident was not allowed to possess them
4
Driving Under the Influence
In 2016 the Sauk Centre Police De-partment made 46 DWI arrests down slightly from 49 in 2015. 7 of the 46 DWIs were for being un-der the influence of a controlled substance. 22—4th degree, 17—3rd degree, 6—2nd degree and 1—1st degree DWIs.
2016 2015 2014 2013
January 1 3 0 5
February 0 3 6 4
March 3 4 4 6
April 4 2 3 6
May 3 4 2 7
June 5 4 4 5
July 6 3 5 4
August 6 4 4 4
September 8 4 7 0
October 3 4 5 3
November 4 8 4 5
December 3 6 3 2
Totals 46 49 47 51
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Underage Drink & Drive
5
Reportable Crime Statistics
0
1
2
3
4
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Robbery
40
60
80
100
120
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Theft
4
8
12
16
20
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Burglary
0
4
8
12
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Assault
4
8
12
16
20
24
28
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Domestic Assault
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Arson
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Sexual Assault
6
Traffic Violations
Assists for other Agencies
2016 2015 2014 2013
Driving after suspension 32 41 33 36
DAC/DAC-IPS 10 15 11 12
Driving after revocation 58 64 62 57
No proof Ins 87 104 139 107
No MN DL 82 60 66 77
Seatbelt 21 12 25 21
Speeding 329 188 166 162
Verbal Warnings 3113 3026 2802 2703
70
80
90
100
110
120
130
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Accident Totals
In 2016 Officers issued 6 cita-
tions for careless driving and 3
citations for inattentive driving
compared to 5 and 5 in 2015 and
2 and 7 in 2014.
2016 2015 2014 2013
MN State Patrol 92 89 89 111
Stearns County 104 104 114 84
Melrose PD 57 49 73 77
Todd County 11 14 9 21
K-9 24 40 3 N/A
7
Warrants
Drug Statistics
2016 2015 2014
Misdemeanor 18 22 13
Gross Misdemeanor 1 1 5
Felony 9 6 7
A& D Orders 11 15 8
Warrant Attempts 19 21 30
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2016 2015 2014 2013
Posses Paraphernalia and Marijuana
Possess Drug Paraphernalia Possess Small Amount Marijuana
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Con Sub 1 Con Sub 2 Con Sub 3 Con Sub 5
Controlle d Substance Charges
2016 2015 2014 2013
8
Canine Statistics, Training & Deployments
25,535 grams of marijuana
962 grams of methamphetamine
1.1 grams of cocaine
2.6 grams of heroin
26 grams of hash oil
5 grams of PCP
165 miscellaneous prescription pills
411 pieces of drug
paraphernalia
5 vehicles and 3 weapons forfeitures
50 pounds of marijuana were located inside a motor vehicle on
March 5, 2016
Methamphetamine located inside a vehicle
9
Sauk Centre PD Calls for Service
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Calls Per Hour
2016
2015
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
Calls Per Month
2016
2015
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
1800
PD Calls Per Day
2014
2015
2016
10
In 2016 the Sauk Centre Police D e p a r t m e n t r e t a i n e d $5,543.03 in forfeitures, down from $11,455.04 in 2015. These funds came from 5 vehi-cles and 5 cash forfeitures and of these 10 forfeitures 2 were alcohol related offenses and 8 were drug related offenses.
Budget
Forfeitures
$16,511
$21,784
$9,294
$11,455
$5,543
$0
$5,000
$10,000
$15,000
$20,000
$25,000
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Forfeiture Totals
Training In 2016 a total of 319 hours were spent on officers training done outside our de-partment. Many training hours were spent meeting mandatory state requirements on classes like firearms qualifications, de-escalation strategies, use of force, Taser refresher and driving classes. We also had officers attend specialized training. In April Chief Friedrichs attended a 4 day MN Chief’s of Police Conference. Ser-geant Jensen attended a leadership academy for 4 days at Camp Ripley and Officer Von Wahlde attended a 4 day defensive tactics instructor training. Of-ficer Jungles and Moorman attended a 3 day drug interdiction class at Alexan-dria Technical college. During 2016 our department spent just over $11,500 in officer training.
In 2016 the police department was given a budget of $810,281 for all of our expenditures. In the police administration portion of the budget we ended with a surplus of $24,947. For the police patrol portion of the budget we had a deficit of $18,575. We also had a surplus in the emergency service/siren ex-penditures of $5,153. Leaving a total surplus of $11,525 in the over expendi-tures portion of the budget. On the revenue side of the budget we had an ex-cessive $27,755.52 which left us with an overall excess to the complete budget of $39,280.52. *All of these numbers are an estimate until the audit is complete in March
11
2016 Shop With A Cop
Sauk Centre Police Department In The Community
Nig
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to U
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Gir
l Sc
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ts
Punkins & Monkeys
12
In reviewing the year end numbers you’ll see our department was very busy with a total of 7,840 ICRS, up 1,133 from 2015. This increased activity is a direct result of our department making more citizen contacts which was up 274 from 2015. This means that our officers have been making a point to know the people in our community both good and bad. With the perception of law enforcement in the national media today I want our community familiar with our officers no matter what side of the law they are on. We have also made it a point to increase our visits to business, parks, sporting events, and schools which has been categorized as Special Detail which was up 58 from 2015. We gave 3,113 verbal warnings in 2016 up 87 from 2015. From these traffic stops you will see that of-ficers issued citations to 182 drivers that either did not have a license or they have lost their driving privileges, this was up 2 from 2015. These drivers were still driving in our community along with 87 drivers that did not have proof of insurance; this was down 35 from 2014. You will see that our community continues to be active in calling in suspicious activity, person, vehicles and phone calls. There was 83 suspicious activity calls, 30 suspicious person calls and 16 sus-picious phone calls. 72 Suspicious vehicles were also called in. In summary report, you will find that the major crimes sexual assault, arson, and robbery were down. Theft and Burglary had a slight increase. Our department also had a slight increase in posses-sion of small amount and drug paraphernalia marijuana arrest. Controlled substance arrest was down slightly from 2015. Misdemeanor warrant arrest was down in from 18 arrests in 2016 to 22 in 2015. Our Canine program continues be a positive asset in the fight against drugs and crime. 25,535 grams of marijuana was seized in 2016 compared to 1647 grams in 2015. 962 grams of metham-phetamine was seized in 2016 compared to 40.85 grams in 2015. On March 5, 2016 Sonny and Sgt. Jensen seized 50 pounds of marijuana from a vehicle resulting from a traffic stop. Our officers had 319 hours of training outside the department. Besides going to the mandatory state training our officers also had some specialized training. Sergeant Jensen went to a Leadership Academy for 4 days at Camp Ripley. Officer Von Wahlde attended a 4 day defensive tactics instruc-tor training. Part time Officers Jungles and Moorman attended a 3 day drug interdiction class at Al-exandria Technical College. Our officers are doing much more than just enforcement. The officer take much of their time in interacting with children and adults in the community by greeting students at the school bus stop and walking the hallways, speaking with the pre-school children, kindergarteners, and high school students. We have given tours of the police department to daycares, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, senior citizen club and other various groups. We make appearances at sporting events, community lunches and club meetings. Our department participated in Shop with a Cop and Night to Unite which were both great success. The officers take the time to stop and pass out Junior Police Badges, football and baseball cards to kids. Officer will get out of their squads to interact with juveniles by shooting some basket-ball, play catch or kicking a soccer ball. The Sauk Centre Police Department has 104 years of combined experience with our six full time employees and data entry/records person. Also a value to this department is the 14 years of ex-perience which is shared between our three part time officers. For a department of this size, having this many years dedicated to their department shows that the officers have great loyalty, dedication and commitment to the department. Having a low turnover rate of officers helps the community to get to know the officers and establish trust in their abilities when working with them. The police department continues to be proactive in enforcement and working with the community which gives the citizens of Sauk Centre a safer community to live, work and raise a family.
Chief Bryon Friedrichs