Los Angeles Police Department resources
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The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD), the primary law enforcement agency of the City of Los Angeles, California, US, maintains and uses a variety of resources that allow its officers to effectively perform their duties. The LAPD's organization is complex, with the department divided into bureaus and offices that oversee functions and manage specialized units. The LAPD's resources include the department's divisions, transportation, communications, and technology.
Police stations
It has been suggested that this section be merged with Los Angeles Police Department. (Discuss) Proposed since August 2023. |
The LAPD's deployment of officers has reflected the growth and changes of Los Angeles since the late 19th century. The earliest LAPD police station (or community station or division, originating from the "Patrol Division") was Central Division, located in Downtown Los Angeles on the southeast corner of 1st and Hill. This station opened in 1896 and was the department's first dedicated police station (another had been located at 2nd and Spring, but was possibly a leased or rented storefront type of set-up). The Central Jail was located directly south of it. "Old Central", as it came to be known, housed not only Central Division but also many of the department's headquarters units until its closure in about 1955 in favor of Parker Center and Central Community Police Station.
The city's largest growth period was from approximately the late 19th century through the 1930s when the city grew at a geometric rate. Approximately 100 smaller portions were added to the original five square mile pueblo. Of these, about 90 were formerly unincorporated areas. The remaining ten portions had been their own incorporated cities, and included the cities of Watts, Venice, Hollywood, San Pedro, Wilmington, Barnes, Hyde Park, Eagle Rock, Sawtelle, and Tujunga. When the city consolidated another existing city, its police officers became LAPD officers with corresponding ranks and titles at the LAPD, per the city charter. The LAPD would then create a new division named after the city that had been consolidated and would continue using the former city's police station, usually replacing these facilities with larger renamed police stations within a few years.
The following is a list of LAPD community stations (patrol divisions), along with their original division numbers:
- 01 Central Police Station, 251 East 6th Street 90014
- 02 Rampart Police Station, 1401 West 6th Street 90017
- 03 Southwest Police Station, 1546 West Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard 90062
- 04 Hollenbeck Police Station, 2111 East 1st St 90033
- 05 San Pedro Police Station, 2175 John S Gibson Boulevard 90731
- 06 Hollywood Police Station, 1358 North Wilcox Avenue 90028
- 07 Wilshire Police Station, 4861 West Venice Boulevard 90019
- 08 West Los Angeles Police Station, 1663 South Butler Avenue 90025
- 09 Van Nuys Police Station, 6240 Sylmar Avenue 91401
- 10 West Valley Substation, 19020 West Vanowen Street 91335
- 11 Northeast Police Station, 3353 North San Fernando Road 90065
- 12 77th Street Police Station,7600 South Broadway 90003
- 13 Newton Street Police Station, 3400 South Central Ave 90011
- 14 Pacific Police Station, 12312 West Culver Boulevard 90066
- 15 North Hollywood Police Station, 11640 South Burbank Boulevard 91601
- 16 Foothill Police Station, 12760 West Osborne Street 91331
- 17 Devonshire Police Station, 10250 North Etiwanda Avenue 91324
- 18 Southeast Police Station, 145 West 108th Street 90061
- 19 Mission Police Station, 11121 North Sepulveda Boulevard 91345
- 20 Olympic Police Station, 1130 South Vermont Avenue 90006
- 21 Topanga Police Station, 21501 West Schoenborn Street 91304
Transportation
Patrol cars
The Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptor is one of the LAPD's three primary patrol sedans, the other two being the Dodge Charger Pursuit and the Ford Police Interceptor Sedan. Chevrolet Impala 9C1s were also purchased in small numbers in the 2000s. With the Ford Crown Victoria's discontinuation in 2011 and the Ford Taurus' discontinuation in 2019, the LAPD has shifted from sedans to crossovers, purchasing primarily the Ford Police Interceptor Utility. The LAPD also uses a small number of Chevrolet Tahoe PPVs, though they are gradually decommissioning them due to their poor gas mileage.
LAPD vehicles are ordered painted in black clearcoat with the roof, doors, and pillars painted white from the factory, though some vehicles assigned to special divisions, such as K-9 or the bomb squad, may be painted all-white or all-black. Options available from Ford ordered by the LAPD today include dual pillar-mounted Unity spotlights, 16-inch heavy duty steel wheels with chrome center caps, and ballistic panels within the two front doors. Most LAPD patrol cars bear at least two rear bumper stickers: one reading "There's NO Excuse - For Domestic Violence" and another for "Watch The Road - Operation Traffix". On the rear side panel is a black and white sticker that reads "EMERGENCY DIAL 9-1-1 Fire Police Medical." The front door design is similar to most other city government fleet vehicles, and consists of the city seal, the department slogan ("to protect and to serve"), the five-digit "shop number" (a fleet vehicle identification number custom to the city government; format "00000"), and city department name ("POLICE"). The last three numbers of the shop number are reprinted on the roof to help air units visually identify cars. On the trunk is a number that identifies which division the unit belongs to (e.g., a 25 would be "South Traffic Division" or a 3 would be "Southwest Area"). The LAPD has used the same black-and-white paint scheme and markings since roughly 1940 with minimal modifications.
Unmarked cars
The LAPD has many unmarked vehicles, primarily used by special units such as gang units, detectives, SWAT, and some traffic units. They are usually assigned Ford Crown Victorias, Ford Explorers, Dodge Chargers, Chevrolet Impalas, and Chevrolet Tahoes.
Certain investigative units, such as detectives, vice, special investigations, homicide units, may be assigned civilian vehicles that are not normally used for police work, ranging from civilian models of cruisers (such as Ford Crown Victorias or Ford Explorers) to common civilian vehicles (such as Honda Civics and Chevrolet Silverados). These differentiate from traditional unmarked cruisers due to their prevalence among regular civilian traffic and their lack of police equipment.[1]
Special vehicles
The LAPD Metropolitan Division's SWAT operates a fleet of unmarked Chevrolet Suburbans and Chevrolet Tahoes alongside regular unmarked cruisers. They also operate a fleet of armored SWAT vehicles, primarily Lenco BearCats and possibly also a Cadillac Gage Commando, which are designated as "Rescue" vehicles. As well as specialized variant M113 APCs.
The bomb squad and the K-9 unit both operate a mix of all-white cruisers and pickup trucks (the bomb squad also operates all-black vehicles as well), such as the Ford Police Interceptor Utility and the GMC Sierra. The bomb squad also operated a custom Peterbilt 367 with a Total Containment Vessel until June 2021, when it was destroyed after illegal fireworks accidentally detonated while being stored in the truck.[2]
The LAPD uses various trucks, including a Peterbilt used to move a mobile command center trailer, and several retired military flatbeds acquired from the 1033 Program. At least two modified Pierce rescue trucks are used by SWAT and the bomb squad. The LAPD also uses several vans, with white Ford E-Series, Ford Transit, Chevrolet Express, and Chevrolet Astro vans being used for transport, administrative, and special purposes. The LAPD Honor Guard is transported in a white Ford Transit.
The LAPD briefly had a Lamborghini Gallardo with a black-and-white livery and patrol-specification lighting. The Gallardo was loaned to the department in 2014 and was used to promote the Air Support Division at several promotional events.[3] As it was on loan and has not made any further appearances, it is likely no longer used by the department. Other vehicles the LAPD uses to promote recruitment include the Hummer H3 and the GMC Yukon.
On September 11, 2015, the Mayor of Los Angeles announced a plan to lease 160 battery electric vehicles and 128 plug-in hybrids for city department use.[4] In 2016, the LAPD leased a Tesla Model S and a BMW i3 for testing purposes,[5] and decided to purchase 100 BMW i3s for administrative and non-emergency duties.[6] However, they were almost never used due to concerns over their low mileage, and were decommissioned and sold in bulk for $19,000 each in 2020.[7]
A cruiser with 1-Adam-12 markings is used by Central Division to reward officers for "outstanding duty performance". It was activated in 2003. It is unknown if the vehicle is still used.[8] A specially-marked 2001 Ford Crown Victoria with an older Federal Signal Aerodynic lightbar (used by the LAPD in the 1980s and 1990s) is used by officers assigned to patrol Panorama Mall; despite its visible age, it is still in service as of November 2020.
Motorcycles
Kawasaki police motorcycles have historically represented the majority of the motorcycle vehicles in the LAPD's motor pool. In recent years, the LAPD has shifted to using Harley-Davidson FLHP and BMW R1200RT-P motorcycles. LAPD motorcycles are painted black and white and carry a radio, emergency lights, a long arm, police equipment, and police documentation. The LAPD also operates a smaller fleet of electric motorcycles and electric scooters.[5] Motorcycle units are not deployed during rainy or inclement weather, during which all traffic units patrol in cruisers.
Aircraft
The LAPD Air Support Division maintains 21 helicopters and 1 fixed-wing aircraft.[9] Older helicopters were painted silver and blue; newer models use the traditional black-and-white paint schemes, similar to patrol cars. The letters "LAPD" appear on the top side of the aircraft in blue, capital letters.[10] LAPD air units (known as "Airships") use Eurocopter AS350B2 AStars, Bell 206B-IIIs, and the Bell 412. They are equipped with a wide variety of electronics and equipment that include a 30 million candlepower Nightsun spotlight, optical FLIR cameras and electronically stabilized binoculars, a LoJack signal receiver, and police radios. The Air Support Division operates from LAPD Hooper Heliport in downtown Los Angeles, and Van Nuys Airport.
Two officers with at least three years of patrol car service fly in each air unit; they are armed and able to land and make arrests in areas not accessible by other means. Air units provide information with regards to barricaded suspects, suspects fleeing on foot or in a vehicle, violent incidents involving large numbers of individuals, and then some. Air units are automatically requested when initiating a traffic stop on a Code 5 vehicle, or suspect with known wants or warrants that are a felony, to limit the potential for a vehicle pursuit.
Air units do not fly during poor or inclement weather (particularly dense fog) due to aviation safety procedures.
Bicycles
Occasionally, police bicycle units patrol, usually in large numbers and especially during special events to provide fast and easy access to police assistance. Bicycle units may go on patrols lasting between 10 and 25 miles during any given beat. Bicycle units train rigorously in the hills of Elysian Park near Academy Road and Dodger Stadium. The bicycles used by the Los Angeles Police Department are manufactured by Giant.
Horses
Metropolitan Division also has a Mounted Unit that consists of approximately 40 police horses. These are normally used for riots and special events. Specially trained officers also wear their uniform along with boots and a Stetson hat with the same police shield as the one worn on the brim of the traditional police hat. Equestrian units normally appear in the city only on special occasions. Metro Division is also responsible for the K-9 units (which also wear ballistic vests). Narcotics and Bomb K-9 units belong to different divisions. The reason the police force uses Mounted Police is the added height and visibility that the horses give their riders allows officers to observe a wider area and be easier to spot in a crowd.
Radio communications
Inspired by a contest in 1924, Police Chief R. Lee Heath ordered his staff to investigate the use of radio communications to "more quickly dispatch officers to where they are needed." It was not until Police Chief Roy E. Steckel, however, that the department was assigned its first Federal Communications Commission license. On May 1, 1931, KGPL, the LAPD's dedicated radio callsign, began broadcasting at 1712 kHz, just above the commercial radio broadcasting frequencies; this was later changed to 1730 kHz. Any citizen could monitor outgoing police radio traffic on their home sets. The system was "one way" until the mid-1930s when mobile transmitters were installed in patrol units. In 1949, the FCC changed KGPL's callsign to KMA367. This was later changed again at an unspecified point in time; the LAPD's current primary radio callsign is KJC625. Other frequencies are also used for varying divisions and purposes, such as WPLQ343 for talkaround (direct unit-to-unit communications), WPRJ338 for detectives, and WIL868 for tactical operations. KMA367 is still used by a handful of LAPD divisions, but it is no longer the primary radio callsign for a majority of the department.[11]
Emergency calls for police service are handled by the Communications Division. First, an Emergency Board Operator answers calls placed to 911 (with a lower number of operators assigned to the non-emergency 1-877-ASK-LAPD). A call for service is assigned an incident number, which resets to the number 1—citywide—at midnight each night. Upon receiving the call for service, the Radio Telephone Operator (RTO) will go on the air to broadcast to the division (with the option to simulcast on bureau-wide, geographically adjacent or citywide frequencies).
RTOs provide the following information in what is known as a crime broadcast:
- A set of beep tones based on call priority (none for low priority, three for priority, four for major priority),
- to whom this message is intended (a particular unit, a certain division's units, nearby units, any available units, or all units receiving the transmission),
- the type of incident that just occurred (usually per the California Penal Code, but sometimes an abbreviation established by the Communications Division),
- how long ago the incident occurred,
- the location or address of the incident,
- the number of suspects (if more than one),
- a description of the suspect or suspects, their clothing and/or other uniquely identifiable attributes if available, any weapons they may have,
- a description of the suspect vehicle or vehicle(s), including type, make, model, color, and license plate number (if suspect is using a vehicle, and if such information is available),
- additional details, such as information about the "PR" (person reporting) or simply an order to "monitor comments for further" (a direction to responding officers to read about the incident on their mobile data terminals),
- a response code (Code 3 for emergency lights and sirens, Code 2-High for lights and no sirens, Code 2 for no lights and no sirens),
- a request for the responding units to identify themselves with their callsigns, and
- the incident number and the "RD" or reporting district (a numbered area within the division).
A fictitious example of an LAPD dispatch radio transmission would be:
Any available Central unit, a 211 just occurred at 714 South Broadway Street. Suspect is a male, white, six-foot seven, approximately 280 pounds; shaved head, black eyes, white shirt, blue jeans. Vehicle is a dark grey late-model Chevrolet Malibu. Weapon used was a semi-automatic handgun. Monitor comments for additional. Units to handle Code 3, identify. Incident number 171 in RD 193.
Without using jargon, this radio transmission reports an armed robbery at 714 South Broadway Street, followed by the suspect's physical description, vehicle description, and weapon, an order to read information in the MDT, and a request for the responding units to identify themselves using their callsign and respond to the scene with emergency lights and sirens, ending with the call's daily incident number, the 171st call of the day.
Radio codes
- Code 1: Answer radio
- Code 2: Respond
- Code 2: Respond to the call without emergency lights and sirens
- Code 2-High: Respond to the call with emergency lights, but without sirens. Alternatively, sirens may be used if necessary, such as to make traffic yield or when going through intersections
- Code 3: Respond to the call with using lights and sirens
- Code 4: No further units needed to respond, return to patrol
- Code 4-Adam: No further units needed to respond, suspect not in custody, units already en route to the scene position or patrol in strategic areas near the scene
- Code 5: Stakeout, marked police cars must avoid location
- Code 6: Unit has arrived to location, officers investigating
- Code 6-Adam: Unit has arrived, may need further assistance from nearby units
- Code 6-Charles: Dangerous suspect (usually felony want or warrant reported); units stand-by for assistance
- Code 7: Meal break request (no longer used)
- Code 8: Fire reported in area of high fire hazard or threat to firefighting personnel
- Code 8-Adam: Units requested to scene of fire for traffic and crowd control
- Code 10: Request to clear frequency for broadcast of want/warrant information
- Code 12: False alarm
- Code 20: Notify media (or media already on scene)
- Code 30: Burglar alarm (can be Code 30-Silent)
- Code 37: Vehicle is reported stolen (Code 6-Charles is given if vehicle license check produces dangerous suspect or felony want/warrant information)
- Code 99: Emergency (e.g. officer under attack), all units respond
- Code 100: Units in position to intercept fleeing suspect
- Code Robert: Request for deployment of rifle to location
- Code Sam: Request for deployment of shotgun slug ammunition to location
- Code Tom: Request for deployment of taser to location
A unit that responds Code 3 must state their starting location (e.g. intersection or street address), after which the RTO broadcasts a Code 3 notification, announcing the unit number is responding Code 3 from that starting location to the location of the distress call.
Typical radio traffic (usually not simulcast citywide) includes the activity generated from traffic stops. A patrol unit may radio control that they are Code 6 on a traffic stop, to which Control will acknowledge. Additional broadcasts will be requests for information on "Cal IDs", or "CalOps" (the numbers that appear at the top of California Department of Motor Vehicle driver licenses) or on vehicle license plates, the result of which provides all of the expected details about the subject plus important details such as whether or not the licensee has any wants or warrants, FTAs (failure to appear in court) or FTPs (failure to pay a fine), etc. In the case of a vehicle, this information can help check whether or not it is Code 37. Off the air and via MDT, officers can check to whom the vehicle is registered.
In the event a Code 6-Charles is broadcast, the unit in question must verify their location, advise if they are Code 4 and the nature of the Code 4 (e.g. suspect in custody, common name, information only or wrong suspect.)
A noticeable characteristic of police broadcasts is the expedited nature of crime broadcasts; due to the number of broadcasts that need to be made at any given moment of the day, each transmission is necessarily as brief as possible. As a standard of police professionalism, RTOs are trained to use a tone that is strictly business-like.
Unit callsigns
From the perspective of control, each unit is represented by an LAPD-specific callsign. Typically, a callsign is made up of three elements: the division number, the unit type and the "beat" number. For example, division 1 is Central Division (or, now, "Central Area"), an "A" is patrol unit with two officers and their patrol area number can be a number like 12. Such a unit would identify themselves as 1A12 (or 1-Adam-12, using the LAPD phonetic alphabet). There are several types of units, designated by a letter:
Service Identification Letter | Type |
---|---|
A | Basic Patrol Car (Two Uniformed Officers) |
Air | Airship |
B | Community Safety Partnership Unit |
BRT | Bus Riding Team |
C | Bicycle Detail |
CP | Command Post |
CR | Area Community Relations |
DV | Domestic Abuse Response Team (DART) Unit |
E | Traffic Enforcement Automobile Unit |
F | Specialized Investigative Unit, or Crime Task Force Unit |
FB | Uniformed Foot-Beat Patrol |
FM | Motor Task Force |
FP | Security Services Division Fixed Security Post |
G | Bureau Gang Coordinator, Gang Unit, Area Gang Impact Team, Gang Enforcement Detail |
HOPE | Homeless Outreach Proactive Engagement Unit |
J | Juvenile Unit |
K9 | K-9 (Canine) Division |
L | Basic Patrol Car (One Uniformed Officer) |
M | Traffic Enforcement Motorcycle Unit |
MQ | Specialized Motorcycle Unit |
MV | Vice Task Force Motorcycle Unit |
MX | Specialized Motorcycle Unit |
N | Narcotics Unit |
OP | Observation Post Assignment during special event or unusual occurrence |
P | Unit assigned to an operations bureau who may perform administrative or law enforcement duties (e.g. task force units) |
Q | Special Event or Unusual Occurrence Unit |
R##A | A Platoon, Metropolitan Division |
R##B | B Platoon, Metropolitan Division |
R##C | C Platoon, Metropolitan Division |
R##D | D (SWAT) Platoon, Metropolitan Division |
R##E | E (Mounted) Platoon, Metropolitan Division |
R##K9 | K-9 (Canine) Platoon, Metropolitan Division |
RP | Security Services Division Mobile Security Patrol |
S | Senior Lead Officer (Two Uniformed Officers) |
SL | Senior Lead Officer (One Uniformed Officer) |
T | Collision Investigation Unit |
U | Report-taking Unit |
V | Vice Unit |
VCP | Volunteer Citizen Patrol Engagement Units |
W | Detective Unit |
X | Additional Patrol Unit in an assignment district |
Z | Geographic Uniformed Unit assigned to a special detail, or a Career Criminal Detail |
The immediate supervisor of any patrol officer is called a field supervisor, which typically have beats that end in zero beginning from 2 through 7 (for example, 7-L-60 for a Wilshire Area supervisor). The watch commander is a usually a lieutenant I at a geographic division. Their radio code always ends in Lincoln-10 (e.g., the watch commander at division 6 or Hollywood Area station is always 6-L-10). The watch commander is responsible for the geographic area (e.g. "Southwest Area") and reports to the area patrol captain I.
Staff Unit Designations
Designation | Assignment | Rank |
---|---|---|
Executive 1 | Mayor | |
Executive Security 1 | Mayor's Security Detail | |
Executive 1A | Deputy Mayor | |
Executive 1B | Executive Assistant to the Mayor | |
Executive 2 | City Attorney | |
Executive Security 2 | City Attorney's Security Detail | |
Commissioner 1 | President, Board of Police Commissioners | |
Commissioner 2 | Vice President, Board of Police Commissioners | |
Commissioner 3, 4, 5 | Commissioners, Board of Police Commissioners | |
Commission Staff 1 | Executive Director, Board of Police Commissioners | |
Commission Staff 2 | Inspector General, Board of Police Commissioners | |
Council 1-15 | Council Member, Council District 1-15 | |
Staff 1 | Chief of Police | |
Staff 1 Security | Chief's Security Detail | |
Staff 1A | Chief of Staff | Deputy Chief |
Staff 1B | Commanding Officer, Community Safety Partnership Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 1C | Assistant Commanding Officer, Community Safety Partnership Bureau | Police Administrator II |
Staff 1E | Director, Public Communications Group | Public Information Director II |
Staff 1F | Employee Relations Administrator | Commander |
Staff 1G | Commanding Officer, Professional Standards Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 1I | Commanding Officer, Internal Affairs Division | Captain III |
Staff 1L | Director, Office of Constitutional Policing and Policy | Police Administrator III |
Staff 1M | Commanding Officer, Risk Management and Legal Affairs Division | Captain II |
Staff 2 | Director, Office of Operations | Assistant Chief |
Staff 2A | Assistant to the Director, Office of Operations | Commander |
Staff 2B | Homeless Coordinator | Commander |
Staff 3 | Director, Office of Support Services | Assistant Chief |
Staff 3A | Assistant to the Director, Office of Support Services | ? |
Staff 3B | Commanding Officer, Administrative Services Bureau | Police Administrator III |
Staff 3C | Commanding Officer, Support Services Group | Commander |
Staff 3D | Commanding Officer, Fiscal Group | Police Administrator II |
Staff 3I | Commanding Officer, Police Training and Education | Director/Doctor |
Staff 3J | Commanding Officer, Behavioral Science Services | Chief Psychologist/Doctor |
Staff 3K | Commanding Officer, Training Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 4B | Commanding Officer, Force Investigation Division | Captain III |
Staff 8 | Director, Office of Special Operations | Assistant Chief |
Staff 8A | Assistant to the Director, Office of Special Operations | ? |
Staff 8B | Commanding Officer, Counter Terrorism and Special Operations Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 8C | Assistant Commanding Officer, Counter Terrorism and Special Operations Bureau | Commander |
Staff 8E | Chief of Detectives, Detective Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 8F | Commanding Officer, Detective Services Group | Commander |
Staff 8H | Commanding Officer, Information Technology Bureau | Commander |
Staff 24A | Commanding Officer, Operations-Central Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 24B | Assistant Commanding Officer, Operations-Central Bureau | Commander |
Staff 24C | Assistant Commanding Officer, Operations-Central Bureau | Commander |
Staff 25A | Commanding Officer, Operations-South Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 25B | Assistant Commanding Officer, Operations-South Bureau | Commander |
Staff 25C | Assistant Commanding Officer, Operations-South Bureau | Commander |
Staff 26A | Commanding Officer, Operations-Valley Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 26B | Assistant Commanding Officer, Operations-Valley Bureau | Commander |
Staff 26C | Assistant Commanding Officer, Operations-Valley Bureau | Commander |
Staff 27A | Commanding Officer, Operations-West Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 27B | Assistant Commanding Officer, Operations-West Bureau | Commander |
Staff 27C | Assistant Commanding Officer, Operations-West Bureau | Commander |
Staff 31 | Commanding Officer, Transit Services Bureau | Deputy Chief |
Staff 31A | Commanding Officer, Transit Services Group | Commander |
Staff 31B | Commanding Officer, Traffic Group | Commander |
Radio equipment
Officers out of their cars are able to communicate over the air using portable Motorola radios nicknamed ROVERs ("Remote Out of Vehicle Emergency Radios"). These hand-held radios are currently a mix of the new Motorola APX-8000 and Motorola XTS-5000 models, with some older Motorola Astro digital SABRE models still being used by very few officers and some still inside older police vehicles. ROVERs are normally gun belt-mounted. For convenience, smaller, corded, hand-held speaker-microphones can be plugged into these radios and then clipped to parts of the uniform shirt such as a front pocket or shoulder loop.
Originally, Motorola MX-series analog handheld units were used when the transition from VHF to UHF "T-band" dispatch/tactical frequencies was made in the early 1980s. Prior to that, portable 2-way radios (known in LAPD jargon then as "CC units") were either VHF or UHF, mainly Motorola HT-200s and HT-220s, stocked in small quantities, and used mainly by specialized units such as the Metropolitan Division, SWAT, Special Investigation Section and Narcotics divisions as stakeout tools. Another use was for foot patrol units, mainly in Central Division, in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Digital frequencies
After the parade in Los Angeles celebrating the Los Angeles Lakers 2001 NBA championship title, the LAPD switched from analog frequencies to digital frequencies. This ended a long-lasting era of the public having easy listening access to police broadcasts that started when the department had initially set up agreements with a local, commercial AM radio station to interrupt regularly scheduled programming for a crime broadcast. Officers were tuned to a specific radio station. However, as the amount of broadcasting needed increased, the department established its first transmission tower in Elysian Park and eventually began broadcasting over dozens of frequencies in the 400 MHz and 500 MHz ("T-band") ranges. These digital transmissions can be monitored on a proper Uniden Bearcat or Radio Shack digital scanner.
Ranks
Rank | Insignia | Notes[12][13] |
---|---|---|
Chief of Police | The Chief is in charge of the entire Department. Appointment made by the mayor of Los Angeles, with majority approval of the Police Commission. Should have a college degree and at least 12 years of progressively responsible law enforcement experience. Since 1876, there have been 57 appointed chiefs of the LAPD. William H. Parker was the longest serving police chief in LAPD history, serving as chief for 16 years.[14] | |
Assistant Chief of Police | Assistant Chiefs and Deputy Chiefs are in charge of specific police areas or support areas within the Department | |
Deputy Chief | ||
Police Commander | Eligibility for rank promotion achieved after completion of required probationary periods. | |
Police Captain | ||
Police Lieutenant | ||
Insignia are worn as metal pins on the collars of a shirt and as shoulder marks on a jacket. |
Rank | Insignia | Notes[12] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Police Detective III | At least two years service as Sergeant II or Detective III before eligibility for promotion to Lieutenant I. | |||
Police Sergeant II | ||||
Police Detective II | ||||
Police Sergeant I | ||||
Police Detective I | ||||
Police Officer III+1 ‡ | Certain Police Officer III in special or hazard pay situations are denoted by a Police Officer III insignia and star. These roles can include traffic follow-up investigators, canine training officers, SWAT platoon element leaders, and Senior Lead Officers who coordinate geographical areas.[15] | |||
Police Officer III ‡ | At least four years service as a Police Officer before becoming eligible for promotion to Sergeant I or Detective I (which requires an additional examination and interview). | |||
Police Officer II | No insignia | At least three years service as a Police Officer before eligibility for promotion to Police Officer III. | ||
Police Officer I | Automatic promotion to Police Officer II upon satisfactory completion of an 18-month probationary assignment (6 months at the academy plus a 12-month field assessment). | |||
Insignia are worn as embroidered chevrons on the upper sleeves of a shirt or jacket. |
- Specialized unit insignia are worn at the top of the sleeve beneath the shoulder for officers assigned to the traffic divisions. Officers assigned to area patrol divisions have historically not worn any departmental shoulder patch on their uniforms.
- Service stripes are worn above the left cuff on a long-sleeved shirt. Each silver stripe represents five years of service in the LAPD.
Supervisory terminology
The following names are used to describe supervision levels within the LAPD:[16]
Position | Description |
---|---|
Staff Officer | Any rank above commander |
Commanding Officer | Any officer in charge of a bureau, a group, a geographical area, or a division |
Director | An officer commanding an office of the LAPD |
Incident Commander | Any officer who takes command at an emergency situation or who is in command at a planned special event |
Watch Commander | An officer in charge of a specific watch within a division or geographical area |
Supervisor | An officer engaged in field supervision or in general supervision of a section or unit |
Officer in Charge ‡ | An officer in charge of a section, incident or unit |
‡ As detectives are considered specialists within the LAPD, they are normally considered to be separate from the uniformed line of command. The senior-most detective is therefore permitted to take charge of an incident when it is necessary for investigative purposes, superseding the chain of command of other higher-ranking officers in attendance.[16]: 125
Technology and policing systems
Predictive policing
Predictive policing is an approach to policing that uses algorithms to predict when future crimes are most likely to occur. Through artificial intelligence, data is gathered and used to identify suspicious patterns, locations, activity, and individuals. The technology is based on network models and risk models. Network models predict specific types of crime using information based on time and location to predict when and where to look for crimes. The prediction model utilizes geo-spatiality to provide information on crimes.[17][18] In 2008, then-Chief William Bratton began working with federal agencies to assess the use of a more predictive approach to policing. Though certain cities such as Santa Cruz, Oakland, and New Orleans banned predictive policing over concerns surrounding its disproportional effects on racialized communities, the practice continues in the LAPD.[19]
Los Angeles' Strategic Extraction and Restoration Program
The Los Angeles’ Strategic Extraction and Restoration Program (LASER) began in 2011 and is a strategy that includes location-based and offender-based models. It began in 2011 and was funded by the Smart Policing Initiative.[20] This program uses a point based system where individuals are assigned a LASER score, which is later used to evaluate their potential risk. This system was created with the intention of targeting individuals who are most likely to commit a crime based on data around crime history. Points are designed based on gang membership, violent crimes committed, and “quality” interaction with the police. Through this system, when individuals scored a high enough LASER score, they were put on a “chronic offenders bulletin” which was available to LAPD officers. After a report in 2018 found that 84% of the 233 people with high enough LASER scores to be labeled a "chronic offender" were Black and Latino, the LAPD shut down LASER.[21]
PredPol
The LAPD started using PredPol, a predictive policing software, in 2012. PredPol uses an algorithm to analyze data from LAPD record management systems and predict future crimes. It uses the near repeat model, which suggests that once there is a crime in a location, the surrounding area is immediately at increased risk for more crimes. Three aspects of offender behavior are incorporated into the algorithm that is informed by a decade of research on criminal patterns:
- Repeat victimization: if a crime is committed one day, the risk of it happening again goes up. This is based on the understanding that if an offender is successful in one area, they will come back because it is now less risky.
- Near-repeat victimization: if a crime is committed next door, neighboring homes are now at higher risk because of the close proximity.
- Local search: crimes tend to cluster together, because criminals are not likely to travel far from their key activity points such as home, work, and play.[22]
Palantir
Palantir is a platform where the LAPD uses data to send out reports to officers.[20] The platform works by merging data from crime and arrest reports, automated license plate reader (ALPR), rap sheets and other sources.[19] This platform uses “tagging,” which allows officers to tag people, vehicles, addresses, phone numbers, documents, incidents, citations, calls for service, ALPR, and field interview cards of interest. Through having Palantir on their cell phones, officers are automatically notified of warrants or events that involve the tagged entities.
References
- ^ "Request 20-3440 - NextRequest - Modern FOIA & Public Records Request Software". recordsrequest.lacity.org. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
- ^ Service • •, City News. "Officers Likely Erred In Weighing Explosives In South LA Blast, LAPD Chief Says". NBC Los Angeles. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ Siler, Steve (March 17, 2014). "Arresting, in More Ways than One: The LAPD Now Has a Lamborghini Cop Car". Car and Driver. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ "LAPD Blog: Mayor Garcetti And City Departments Commit To Largest City-Owned Fleet Of Pure Battery EV Vehicles In America". Lapdblog.typepad.com. September 11, 2015. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
- ^ a b Brandom, Russell (September 11, 2015). "The LAPD has a Tesla now". The Verge. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
- ^ "LAPD picks BMW i3 over Tesla Model S: Here's why". Motor Authority. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ Lee, Kristen. "The Los Angeles Police Department's barely used BMW i3 EVs keep flying off of used-car lots". Business Insider. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ "LAPD's Central Area to Activate 1-Adam-12 Patrol car". LAPD Online. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ "Air Beat Magazine - How LAPD Handles Aircraft Maintenance". Archived from the original on May 4, 2007. Retrieved May 3, 2007.
- ^ "LAPD Air Support — Police Helicopter Pilot". Policehelicopterpilot.com. Retrieved April 29, 2016.
- ^ "Los Angeles County, California (CA) Scanner Frequencies and Radio Frequency Reference". www.radioreference.com. Retrieved January 27, 2022.
- ^ a b "The LAPD Career Ladder". Join LAPD. Archived from the original on August 23, 2011. Retrieved August 18, 2011.
- ^ "LAPD Sworn Police Officer Class Titles". LAPD. Retrieved September 28, 2020.
- ^ "Brief biography". Los Angeles Police Department. Retrieved August 11, 2008.
- ^ "Quality of Life Issues". Los Angeles Police Department. Retrieved August 18, 2011.
- ^ a b "Supervision". Los Angeles Police Department. Retrieved November 21, 2012.
- ^ Janowicz, Krzysztof; Gao, Song; McKenzie, Grant; Hu, Yingjie; Bhaduri, Budhendra (April 2, 2020). "GeoAI: spatially explicit artificial intelligence techniques for geographic knowledge discovery and beyond". International Journal of Geographical Information Science. 34 (4): 625–636. doi:10.1080/13658816.2019.1684500. ISSN 1365-8816. S2CID 207914865.
- ^ Walczak, Steven (2021). "Predicting Crime and Other Uses of Neural Networks in Police Decision Making". Frontiers in Psychology. 12: 4110. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2021.587943. ISSN 1664-1078. PMC 8529125. PMID 34690848.
- ^ a b Hvistendahl, Mara (January 30, 2021). "How the LAPD and Palantir Use Data to Justify Racist Policing". The Intercept. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
- ^ a b Brayne, Sarah (August 29, 2017). "Big Data Surveillance: The Case of Policing". American Sociological Review. 82 (5): 977–1008. doi:10.1177/0003122417725865. ISSN 0003-1224. S2CID 3609838.
- ^ "LAPD not giving up on data-driven policing, even after scrapping controversial program". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved November 17, 2021.
- ^ "Predictive Policing Technology". PredPol. Retrieved November 17, 2021.