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Volume 2, Issue 4 |
May 1995 |
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The
Missing Chief |
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Chief
Byrd instituted what we would today call "community based
policing." He asked all officers to join civic organizations
to get closer to everyday citizens. The standard for taking police
reports was tightened - every contact with any citizen required
a written report. The result was that Albuquerque's crime rate
drastically rose to number one in the nation for two years. At
the time there was a lot of federal funding available under the
Omnibus Crime Bill of the Nixon administration. With the number
one crime rate, Albuquerque was able to capitalize on funding
and the number of officers increased to around 450. |
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Several
new ideas were instituted, like the DWI unit with video taping
of field sobriety testing and the purchase of new equipment
including shotguns for every marked unit. The crime rate
decreased when the reporting protocol was relaxed. It was
a political master stroke that had a positive effect on our
Department. |
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Byrd returned to
Dallas as their Chief of Police in 1973 after hand picking recently
promoted Lt. Bob Stover who headed the newly formed Internal Affairs
unit as his successor. To ignore Byrd's contributions to the Albuquerque
Police Department leads us to misperceive where we are today. |
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