Police of The Wire

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The Police of The Wire includes many starring characters who play a major role in the fictional HBO drama series The Wire. The fictional Baltimore City Police Department has been examined in great detail across several departments and there are also many supporting characters in the Department.

Contents

[edit] Command

The department is led by a Police Commissioner assisted by Deputy Commissioners of Operations (often shortened to Deputy Ops) and Administration. The Police Commissioner answers directly to the city mayor and outlines the departmental goals enforced by the Deputy Commissioners. The Deputy Ops wields a great deal of power and is responsible for the day to day activity of the department's district and investigative unit commanders. The Admin Deputy oversees the Internal Investigations Division (IID) and other units. The chain of command from the Commissioner downwars is Deputy Commissioner, Colonel, Major, Lieutenant, Sergeant, and Officer. Detectives fall into a rank that coincides with their administrative position. The Criminal Investigations Division commanded usually by a Colonel is the division responsible for the Homicide unit, Narcotics unit, and Major Crimes Unit (MCU) amongst others. The IID, homicide unit, and narcotics unit are each led a Major while MCU is commanded by a lieutenant. A Majors commands each of the nine patrol districts - the Central, Northern, Northeastern, Eastern, Southeastern, Southern, Southwestern, Western and Northwestern districts.

[edit] Current department commanders

[edit] William Rawls
Main article: William Rawls

Rawls is Acting Commissioner on a temporary basis. Rawls is caucasian and Mayor Tommy Carcetti is unwilling to attempt a permanent promotion fearing that it would not be acceptable to the politically influential and largely African American ministers. Rawls is a careerist and is feared by many of his subordinates. He has been to known to punish anyone who crosses him with transfers to undesirable posts. Rawls is played by John Doman.

[edit] Cedric Daniels
Main article: Cedric Daniels

Daniels is the Deputy Commissioner of Operations. He was a direct commanding officer of many of the show's characters in earlier seasons. Mayor Carcetti is grooming him to be the next Police Commissioner. Daniels previously worked as a lieutenant in the Eastern District Drug Enforcement Unit, CID Narcotics Unit, and was the first commander of the MCU. Daniels was promoted to Major and Western District Commander after his successful case work in the MCU. He drew Carcetti's attention as a young and capable African American commander and was quickly promoted to CID Colonel. He is still considered too inexperienced for immediate promotion to commissioner and is being prepared with a stint as Deputy Ops. Daniels is played by Lance Reddick

[edit] Stanislaus Valchek
Main article: Stanislaus Valchek

Valchek is the Deputy Commissioner of Administration. Valchek was previously the South Eastern District commander and his grudge against Frank Sobotka led to the formation of a specialised detail which became the Major Crimes Unit. Valchek is well connected with the city's politicians, and was promoted because of his friendship with Mayor Carcetti. Valchek is played by Al Brown.

[edit] Bobby Reed
  • Played by: Tony D. Head
  • Appears in:
Season one: "The Buys"; "Lessons" (uncredited); "The Hunt" and "Cleaning Up".
Season three: "Time after Time"; "Dead Soldiers"; "Reformation"; "Middle Ground" and "Mission Accomplished".
Season four: "Misgivings" (uncredited)

Reed is a Major in the Baltimore Police Department and commands the Internal Investigations Division. He is very loyal to Ervin Burrell's command often more emphasized in protecting Burrell's command status than rigorously investigating individual officers. He often appears with discrediting evidence about officers for Burrell to use as blackmail.

In the first season Reed investigates the brutality charges made against Roland "Prez" Pryzbylewski for blinding a teenager in one eye. Reed dismisses the witnesses based upon their criminal records but suspends Prez from street duty pending a Grand Jury hearing. Reed then intervenes when the Barksdale detail stop State Senator Davis' driver (who received a bag full of cash from a Barksdale soldier) and again when Daniels tries to withhold the location of a Barksdale stash house to protect his investigation.

In the third season, Reed attends the weekly comstat meetings of Ervin Burrell and William Rawls. In the fourth season, Reed briefly appears when Burrell is contemplating the best method to keep his appointed position as commissioner.

[edit] Former members

[edit] Ervin Burrell
Main article: Ervin Burrell

Burrell is a by the book careerist officer who reached the level of Commissioner. Initially appointed as an Acting Commissioner, Burrell negotiated for a permanent posting with the Royce administration. When Carcetti replaced Royce he immediately began looking to depose Burrell. He is eventually forced to resign in a scandal over manipulation of crime statistics but receives a highly paid replacement job in order to leave quietly. Burrell is played by Frankie Faison.

[edit] Warren Frazier
  • Played by: Dick Stilwell
  • Appears in:
Season one: "The Hunt".

Frazier is the Commissioner in season one. He gives the order for city-wide raids following the shooting of Kima Greggs. As actor Dick Stilwell died after the filming of this episode, the character retires and is replaced by Ervin Burrell as commissioner.

[edit] Raymond Foerster
Criminal Investigations Division Commander Colonel Raymond Foerster played by Richard DeAngelis
Criminal Investigations Division Commander Colonel Raymond Foerster played by Richard DeAngelis
  • Played by: Richard DeAngelis
  • Appears in:
Season one: "The Target"; "The Detail"; "The Buys"; "The Wire"; "The Cost"; "The Hunt" and "Sentencing".
Season three: "Time after Time "; " All Due Respect "; "Dead Soldiers"; "Straight and True"; "Homecoming"; "Slapstick" and "Mission Accomplished".
Season four: "Refugees"

Raymond Foerster was a Major and unit commander of the Baltimore narcotics division in season one. According to Season 4, he served 39 years on the force suggesting he joined the BPD in 1967. When Judge Phelan questioned Deputy Commissioner Burrell about the Barksdale operation, it was Majors Foerster and Rawls who faced his subsequent wrath and demands for more information. Foerster's response was to ask his shift lieutenant Cedric Daniels for a report and he then assigned Daniels and his team to the Barksdale detail.

When Daniels' investigation became drawn out and relied upon wiretaps and surveillance, Foerster took the side of Deputy Commissioner Burrell against Daniels when he tried to explain the necessity of this technique to reach the heads of the organization. Foerster's and Burrell's insistence on using buy busts led to the operation that resulted with the shooting of Detective Greggs. Foerster visited Greggs in the hospital with many other command officers and appeared anxious when trying to find a tape recorder to replay the last transmissions before she was shot.

Foerster was promoted to colonel and took over as commander of the criminal investigations division when Rawls was promoted to deputy commissioner of operations. He was replaced as the Narcotics Major by George Smith, an associate of Major Colvin. He attended Rawls' weekly comstat meetings and worked with Sergeant Jay Landsman in running the homicide division. He was put under intense pressure to keep the murder rate down.[1]

In season four, Foerster continued to command CID. He was involved with the management of the murder of a state's witness that became a politically important case. Burrell ordered Foerster to replace veteran investigator Ed Norris with Kima Greggs, now a rookie homicide detective. Foerster realizes Burrell hopes to slow the investigation. He asssumes Burrell's intent was to prevent the investigation from revealing the victim's witness status as a possible motive for the murder before the upcoming mayoral election. Foerster argues with Burrell and Rawls about the decision and discussed it with Jay Landsman. Foerster suffered from cancer during this time and was often absent from work. Repeated courses of chemotherapy failed to cure the disease. Landsman announced the Colonel's death to the homicide unit stating that he served 39 years in the department without leaving a trace of bitterness or hatred with any officers, a miraculous career by BPD standards. A police wake was held at an Irish bar in his honor. He was replaced as C.I.D. colonel by Cedric Daniels at a promotion ceremony following his death.

Actor Richard DeAngelis died of cancer after filming scenes for the fourth season.[2]

[edit] Major Crimes Unit

The Major Crimes Unit was established by Cedric Daniels in season three as part of a prior agreement with Commissioner Ervin Burrell. The unit's main responsibility is to build cases against high profile targets responsible for murder, drug distribution and money laundering in Baltimore. The unit was originally formed by a group of detectives dumped upon Daniels by shift Lieutenants to make a case against Avon Barksdale. It is currently under the command of the Criminal Investigation Division and is run by Lester Freamon even though on paper it is commanded by Lieutenant Asher.

In the first season the detail's office is located in the basement of a downtown building where the only redeeming features are working telephones and electricity. In the second season, the detail is moved into an old building located at 1911 South Clinton Street in the southeastern part of town leased by the transit police courtesy of Major Valchek. The office remains the permanent location of the unit when it is formed in season three.

[edit] Current members

[edit] Command

[edit] Jimmy Asher
  • Played by: Gene Terinoni
  • Appears in:
Season four: "Boys of Summer"; "Home Rooms" and "That's Got His Own."
Season five: "More With Less"

Asher is a lenient lieutenant who was handpicked to command the Major Crimes Unit by Lester Freamon with the approval of Cedric Daniels. He normally lets the detectives do as they wish while working on his beach house in Delaware. He was briefly reassigned to a telephone unit and replaced by Lieutenant Charles Marimow for purposes of properly "supervising" the Major Crimes Unit under the orders of Deputy Commissioner Rawls. With Daniels' promotion to C.I.D. colonel, Asher is reinstalled as commander of the unit again as Freamon feels he will effectively let the detectives do what they need to make a case without interference from the commissioner's office.

[edit] Lester Freamon
Main article: Lester Freamon

Freamon is a quiet and methodical older detective who makes major contributions to the series investigations. He is the unit's true commander as he lays out their investigative strategies and purposely chose Lieutenant Asher to be the shift Lieutenant due to his lenient non-conflicting attitude.

[edit] Thomas "Herc" Hauk
Main article: Thomas "Herc" Hauk

Herc was a capable narcotics detective but his tendency towards brutality and acting without thinking held up his career progression as a member of the Barksdale and Sobotka details. To improve his chances of making sergeant he transferred to the Mayor's security detail. He returned to the Major Crimes Unit as a newly promoted sergeant. Herc is currently suspended from the department with pay pending an Internal Investigation Division hearing.

[edit] Detectives/Officers

[edit] Kenneth Dozerman
Major Crimes unit officer Kenneth Dozerman played by Rick Otto
Major Crimes unit officer Kenneth Dozerman played by Rick Otto
  • Played by: Rick Otto
  • Appears in:
Season three: "Time after Time;" "All Due Respect" and "Back Burners".
Season four: "Refugees;" "Alliances;" "Know Your Place;" "Misgivings;" "That's Got His Own" and "Final Grades".
Season five: "More With Less", "Clarifications", "Late Editions", and "–30–."

Dozerman is a plainclothes officer in the Baltimore police department. In season three he worked narcotics in Sergeant Ellis Carver's drug enforcement unit squad in the Western District. He became friends with Herc and Carver while working in the squad accompanying them in various activities off duty. Dozerman was shot and injured in a buy bust operation gone awry and decommissioned from duty for the rest of the season. His attempted murder was the catalyst for Major Colvin's "Hamsterdam" experiment as Colvin wanted to reduce crime and not see any more of his men get hurt. Dozerman's service weapon was also stolen, prompting Bunk Moreland to have to search for it. When the weapon was found, it was returned to Dozerman at a press conference.[1]

In season four, Dozerman transferred to the Major Crimes Unit when his friend Herc transferred in, filling the gap left by Greggs and Freamon leaving. Dozerman took part in Lieutenant Charles Marimow's first series of failed raids as unit commander. Following these raids he helped Herc to set up video surveillance of Marlo Stanfield. Dozerman remained in the unit as an ally to both Herc and Leander Sydnor who mentored Dozerman on his investigative strategies. All three detectives maintained a dislike for Marimow's caustic command style often fearing the repercussions that he had threatened them with. Dozerman remained in the unit following Marimow's departure and Herc's suspension under the new leadership of Lester Freamon.

In Season five, Dozerman is still with Major Crimes working with the detail on the row house serial murders. He still meets his old Western district DEU buddies for drinks along with Herc. After Major Crimes is disbanded, Dozerman is sent to tactical division by Colonel Daniels.

[edit] Caroline Massey
Major Crimes Unit administrative officer Caroline Massey played by Joilet F. Harris
Major Crimes Unit administrative officer Caroline Massey played by Joilet F. Harris
  • Played by: Joilet F. Harris
  • Appears in
Season three: "Time after Time"; "All Due Respect"; "Dead Soldiers"; "Reformation" and "Middle Ground".
Season four: "Boys of Summer"; "Soft Eyes"; "Refugees".

Officer Massey joined the show in season three as a member of the Major Crimes Unit under Lieutenant Cedric Daniels. Massey is a world-weary officer with a penchant for sarcasm and cutting coupons. She was particularly adept at deciphering the slang used by Barksdale drug dealers on wiretaps of cellular phones. Her diligent work manning wiretaps earned the respect of Lester Freamon when she was part of his successful undercover operation to supply pre-wiretapped phones to the Barksdale organization.

In season four, Massey continued to work with the Major Crimes Unit and settled into her role. When the unit was assigned Lieutenant Marimow as a commander, Freamon transferred out. Massey and Sydnor were left to face Marimow closing down their wiretaps and ordering raids on weeks old targets.[1][3]

[edit] Jimmy McNulty
Main article: Jimmy McNulty

McNulty is a dedicated Baltimore police officer with many personal problems.

[edit] Leander Sydnor
Main article: Leander Sydnor

Sydnor is a young, married detective in the Baltimore Major Crimes Unit with a talent for investigative work and the stomach for drawn-out cases. Sydnor has been part of the Major Crimes Unit throughout seasons one, three, and four of the show.

[edit] Former Members

[edit] Command

[edit] Cedric Daniels

Daniels left the unit when he was promoted to Major, taking the District Commander post in the Western.

[edit] Charles Marimow

Marimow is a lieutenant in the Baltimore Police Department. He is installed as the commander of the Major Crimes Unit by William Rawls based on his hostile reputation to properly supervise the unit's detectives and prevent them upsetting politicians. Marimow renews the unit's focus on more obviously violent drug dealers and closes down their wiretaps on Marlo Stanfield. His caustic command style drives away Lester Freamon and Kima Greggs, the unit's best two detectives, leaving him with only Leander Sydnor and Caroline Massey. His unit's staffing problems are solved when Sergeant Herc Hauk transfers back, bringing Officer Dozerman with him. Marimow and Herc develop an immediate mutual dislike which worsens over their tenure.

Marimow is one of the most disliked commanders of the Baltimore PD as he has a reputation for being a "Trojan Horse", "Virus", and a "Unit Killer". It is stated by Sergent Landsman that "Marimow does not cast off talent lightly. He heaves it away with great force". Marimow is also unafraid to threaten his subordinates' careers as a means of punishing them for insubordination or similar defiances. He prides himself on being a streetwise commander and having worked his way up through the ranks. While Marimow has worked hard to earn his rank, his hostile command style has established his negative reputation throughout the department.

He believes it would be easy to topple Marlo Stanfield, but his first series of raids failed spectacularly because he underestimates his targets. Marimow orders his men to take Stanfield down, leading Herc to break several rules by hiring a lip reader to spy on Stanfield, and using a video camera without a court order or Marimow's approval. Marimow accurately suspects Herc of lying to him about the source of his information. Herc also has Internal Investigations Division (IID) complaints sent to the office for attempted arrests based on misinformation. Marimow vows to Herc that he would be happy to attend his "execution" at an IID trial if he could prove he was lying. Marimow leaves the Unit when Cedric Daniels becomes the Criminal Investigations Division colonel and reinstalls Lester Freamon and Lieutenant Asher.

Show creator David Simon left the Baltimore Sun after a bitter feud with editor William K. Marimow. Simon chose to name an unsympathetic character after his old enemy.[4]

[edit] Detail members

[edit] Ellis Carver
Main article: Ellis Carver

A detective on Daniels narcotics shift who followed him into the Barksdale and Sobotka details. He left the detail in season 2 for a drug enforcement unit sergeant posting in the Western District.

[edit] Patrick Mahon

Mahon was an elderly detective from the property unit who briefly worked with the Barksdale detail. Dubbed as a departmental "hump", he and his partner Polk had not made a single case in property crimes over their last ten years. The two were also regarded as a pair of drunks who were incapable of driving soberly. He is punched by Bodie Broadus, a young drug dealer, when the detail raid the low rise projects. Mahone takes early retirement following his injury, and is last seen encouraging Polk to do the same.

[edit] Augustus Polk
Season one: "The Detail"; "The Buys"; "Old Cases"; "The Pager" and "The Wire".
Season two: "Collateral Damage" (uncredited) and "Hot Shots" (uncredited).
Season five: "Late Editions".

Polk was an aging detective from the property unit who worked briefly in the Barksdale and Sobtoka details. He is often called "Auggie" by his partner Pat Mahon. He is generally regarded as a "hump", since he has not made a single case in property crimes over their last ten years. He is also an alcoholic.

After his partner Mahon retired due to injury, Polk considers deliberately injuring himself to follow in his partner's footsteps. Unable to follow through on his plan, he becomes despondent and goes on a drinking binge. He misses several days' work and finally shows up drunk at 9AM. Lieutenant Daniels tells him to take sick leave for his alcohol problem or work "wet". Polk opted for sick leave and is off until the case is closed.

In the second season, he is briefly assigned to the first Sobtoka detail under Lieutenant Grayson. When Major Valchek complains about the unit being full of humps, Daniels is put in command and Polk is moved back to property.

In the ninth episode of the fifth season, Polk makes a small cameo, as the officer running the evidence control locker in one of the precincts. After helping Commissioner Daniels locate a crucial piece of evidence, Daniels tells Polk that he's "glad he landed okay". Displaying his usual sarcasm, Polk replies "Yeah.. beats working".

It is unclear whether the name of the pair, "Polk/Mahon", is intentionally homonymic with the Irish expression "pogue mahone" ("kiss my ass"). It could make sense though as the pair appeared Irish with an uncommitted attitude towards police work.

Michael Santangelo

For a full character description see Western District section, below.

Original Barksdale detail member partnered with Jimmy McNulty. He was dumped from homicide by Major Rawls for refusal to act as an insider in on Rawls behalf. Santangelo took a post driving the narcotics wagon in the Western District.

[edit] Unit members

[edit] Shakima "Kima" Greggs
Main article: Kima Greggs

Daniels' female protege who mentored Herc and Carver while in Narcotics. She transferred to homicide when Lieutenant Marimow came into the unit as he was a caustic commander who was difficult to work for. When Marimow left, she remained in homicide due to the higher pay.

[edit] Roland "Prez" Pryzbylewski

Prez was the son-in-law of deputy commissioner Stan Valchek who had a knack for tracing phone patterns and money accounts but was inept on the streets. Prez left the department after accidentally shooting a plainclothes African American officer Derrick Waggoner.

[edit] Homicide unit

The Homicide Unit of the Baltimore City Police Department is responsible for the investigation of all unexplained deaths that take place within Baltimore City. (They are also responsible for investigating all police-related shootings, and, because the homicide unit is generally regarded as containing the best detectives on the police force, they are often given high-profile cases which are not necessarily homicides.) A clearance rate of 50% or more for the year is aimed for and the Unit is amongst the most demanding in the Criminal Investigations Division. Sergeant Landsman's squad is typically the focus of the show, though there is at least one other squad (according to David Simon's book, there are typically three homicide squads in Baltimore, on rotating shifts). The unit is currently under the C.I.D. supervision of Colonel Cedric Daniels.

Like the real department described in David Simon's Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, the unit uses a red-black system of tracking cases where red is the color for an open/not cleared case and black is the color for a closed/cleared case (green, the color for cases left open longer than one year, does not appear to be in use on The Wire's board). Additionally similar slang such as "dunkers" (easy cases), "whodunits" (difficult cases), and "redball" (media attention gaining cases) are used to describe the various cases.

A running practical joke within the unit is to cut a sleeping detective's necktie with scissors and pin them to a notice board in the unit office. Detectives often fall asleep in the office (or on stakeout) because of the overtime demands and have at times worked double and triple shifts as they have dealt with multiple murders. This was used most prominently in the third season.

[edit] Current members

[edit] Jay Landsman

Landsman is a squad sergeant in the homicide unit who must divide his loyalties between his men and his superiors.


[edit] Frank Barlow
  • Played by: Michael Stone Forrest
  • Appears in:
Season one: "The Target"
Season five: "Not for Attribution;" "Took" (uncredited); "Clarifications"

Frank Barlow is a Caucasian detective in the homicide unit who first appeared as the primary detective at the trial of D'Angelo Barksdale. Despite having two witnesses, Barksdale is found not guilty due to witness intimidation in the court room. Barlow appears later in the series with open murders of homeless men that his colleague Jimmy McNulty ties into his fabricated serial killer. Barlow then sees that McNulty is falsifying paper work on the homeless murders case to provide resources for detectives to investigate unrelated cases. Barlow blackmails McNulty into providing funds for him to take a long weekend to play golf in South Carolina.

[edit] Christeson
  • Played by: Dennis Hill
  • Appears in:
Season five: "More with Less;" "Took"; "Clarifications"; "Late Editions"; and "–30–."

Christeson is a young African American detective who is the homicide unit's newest detective. He first appears assisting detectives Moreland and Norris on a "polygraph-by-copier" where an idiotic suspect confesses to a homicide. Christeson is the first detective which Jimmy McNulty covers for the "homeless killer" and he is granted overtime to solve a case which the department's upper command interferes with.

[edit] Michael Crutchfield
Cantankerous homicide detective Michael Crutchfield played by Gregory L. Williams
Cantankerous homicide detective Michael Crutchfield played by Gregory L. Williams
  • Played by: Gregory L. Williams
  • Appears in:
Season three: "Moral Midgetry;" "Back Burners;" "Slapstick" and "Mission Accomplished."
Season four: "Home Rooms;" "Soft Eyes;" "Refugees;" "Alliances;" "Margin of Error;" "Unto Others;" "Corner Boys;" "A New Day" and "Final Grades".
Season five: "More With Less;" "Unconfirmed Reports", "Not for Attribution", "Took;" "Clarifications;" and "–30–."

Crutchfield is an African American detective in the homicide unit whose name is mentioned earlier in the series but who does not appear on screen until season three. He was the primary detective at the murder that took place in Major Colvin's "free zone" and withheld the investigation at Colvin's request. Colvin then helped create a "dunker" case having his suspect turned in after threatening the drug dealers in the "free zone".

In season four, Crutchfield played a bigger role appearing with Vernon Holley getting an identification of Omar Little as a murder suspect from Old Face Andre. When Bunk Moreland wanted to re-examine the case, Crutchfield displayed his anger over Bunk wanting to reverse one of his clearances. Crutchfield then promised to reverse a clearance of Bunk's as payback for going back on a solved case. When Ellis Carver left a message for Bunk, Crutchfield deliberately threw it away, causing a lengthy delay in the discovery of the bodies being left all over the city by the Stanfield Organization. Crutchfield ended season four investigating murders at the hands of the Stanfield Organization.

In season five Crutchfield remains with Sergeant Jay Landsman's homicide squad. Crutchfield helps Bunk to manipulate a confession from DeShawn Williams. Crutchfield buys Monell, another involved party, a McDonalds' meal and parades the boy in front of Bunk's interrogation room to lead Bunk's suspect to believe his friend had turned against him.[5][6] When departmental cut backs lead to withholding of overtime Crutchfield secures part time work as a security guard to replace his lost pay. Crutchfield is assigned a triple homicide case and partnered with Detective Kima Greggs. The victims are Junebug, his wife and bodyguard and Crutchfield notes that the killing was a professional hit.[7]

According to Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, there was actually an African American detective in the Baltimore Police Department homicide division named Michael Crutchfield.[citation needed]

[edit] Shakima "Kima" Greggs
Main article: Kima Greggs

Greggs is a tenacious investigator and a rookie homicide detective. She was a key member of the Major Crimes Unit and proved herself on both the Barksdale and Sobotka investigations. She struggles to balance her life as a police officer with her role as a potential mother with her partner.

[edit] Vernon Holley
Homicide detective Vernon Holley played by Brian Anthony Wilson
Homicide detective Vernon Holley played by Brian Anthony Wilson
  • Played by: Brian Anthony Wilson
  • Appears in:
Season one: "The Wire" and "The Hunt".
Season two: "Port in a Storm" (uncredited).
Season three: "Amsterdam"; "Slapstick"; "Reformation" and "Mission Accomplished".
Season four: "Soft Eyes"; "Alliances"; "Margin of Error"; "Unto Others"; "Corner Boys", "A New Day" and "Final Grades".
Season five: "React Quotes", "The Dickensian Aspect", "Took", and "–30–."

Holley is an African American detective in the Baltimore Police Department homicide unit under the command of Major Rawls and later Colonel Foerster followed by Cedric Daniels. Holley often works with Norris, Bunk, or Crutchfield and is one of the unit's more short tempered and physically intimidating detectives. He first appeared with partner Ed Norris and caught the case of the murder of Omar Little’s boyfriend Brandon. They recognized a connection to the recent murder of Omar’s crew member Bailey because both corpses were found in Kevlar vests. They called in their colleague Jimmy McNulty and the Barksdale detail's work secured a conviction for the murder against soldier Wee-Bey Brice.

Following the shooting of detective Kima Greggs, Holley found her confidential informant Bubbles paging her from a payphone. Holley assumed he was a suspect and had uniformed officers bring him in for an interrogation. Believing Bubbles to be the shooter, Holley came into interrogate Bubbles in an accusatory and threatening manner and when Bubbles was unable to respond to his questions, Holley quickly lost his temper and started to beat him. The beating kept on until Sergeant Landsman restrained Holley with Bubbles asking for McNulty. When Jimmy came up, the situation was cleared up and Holley lied about Bubbles trying to attack him as a means of justifying the beating.

In season two Holley was briefly seen investigating the murder of Frank Sobotka. In season three he is assigned to investigate the murder of Tosha Mitchell and Tank and later the shooting of Stringer Bell, both working with Bunk Moreland. During this season, he was also seen called to duty for other investigations as the city's homicide rate was rapidly approaching 300 murders for the year.

In season four, Holley initially works as the secondary investigator on Norris' case of a murdered state's witness named Braddock that becomes a "red ball" case. Later in that investigation, he is replaced by Kima Greggs for political reasons. Holley and Crutchfield are then seen catching the case of a delivery woman murdered in the convenience store of Old Face Andre. They interview Andre who quickly identifies Omar Little as the killer in a photo array. When Omar is arrested he manages to convince Bunk Moreland he is innocent and Bunk asks Crutchfield and Holley to re-open the case. Crutchfield refused to entertain the idea[1] but Holley agrees that Andre was a possible drug dealer and went with Bunk to the crime scene reluctantly. At the scene revisitation, Bunk viewed evidence confirming Omar's innocence in the shooting as he stated that Andre's store was a drug stash house, Andre's story made no sense, and he most likely did the implication of Omar for ripping of his stash. Holley and Bunk then reappeared with a grand jury summons where at the courtroom, Holley managed to intimidate Andre both physically and legally to have him confess his role in lying about the murder. Holley ends Season 4 assisting Crutchfield, Norris, and Bunk in the investigations of murders caused by Marlo Stanfield's crew.[8]

According to Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets, there was actually an African American detective in the Baltimore Police Department homicide division named Vernon Holley.

[edit] William "Bunk" Moreland
Main article: Bunk Moreland

Bunk is a well liked and proficient member of the homicide unit. Although he is a great detective, Bunk is a known alcoholic with a penchant for infidelity.

[edit] Ed Norris
Veteran homicide detective Edward Norris played by Ed Norris
Veteran homicide detective Edward Norris played by Ed Norris
Season one: "The Wire"; "The Cost"; "The Hunt" and "Sentencing".
Season two: "Stray Rounds"
Season three: "Time after Time"; "All Due Respect" and "Dead Soldiers".
Season four: "Boys of Summer"; "Soft Eyes"; "Alliances" (uncredited); "Margin of Error"; "Unto Others;" "A New Day" and "Final Grades."
Season five: "More With Less", "Transitions", "React Quotes", "The Dickensian Aspect" (uncredited), "Took", and "–30–."

Norris is a homicide detective who has been in the unit for 15 years since 1991 according to Season 4. Norris and his squad mate Vernon Holley first appeared assigned to the case of the murder of Omar Little’s boyfriend Brandon. They recognized a connection to the recent murder of Omar’s crew member Bailey because both corpses were found in Kevlar vests. They called in their colleague Jimmy McNulty and the Barksdale details work secured a conviction for the murder against soldier Wee-Bey Brice.

Norris was also lead detective on the shooting of Wendell "Orlando" Blocker and Kima Greggs this time working with Detective Ray Cole. This case was also solved when Wee-Bey confessed to the shooting.

In season two he appeared briefly when investigating the shooting of a child by a stray bullet. In season three he attended the wake of his colleague Ray Cole. Norris remains with the homicide unit in season four when he is the lead investigator in the politically important murder of a state's witness. He is briefly taken off the case and replaced with Greggs, now a rookie in the squad, in order to slow progress because of pressure from the Mayor. Norris is soon reinstated when this story is leaked to the press. He works alongside Greggs to maintain a coverup story that they were always working together. Norris secures an informant for the witness murder, but his attempt to break the story right before the election leads to him and Greggs being sent off to a security detail at a polling station for the day. Norris continues to pursue this lead after the election, however Greggs solves the case with a careful recanvassing of the crime scene before he is able to make progress. She earns Norris' respect with her work although he responds to the knowledge that the shooting was random with incredulity because of the political ramifications it had.[1]

Norris is played by convicted felon and ex-police commissioner of Baltimore Ed Norris.[9] His cameo appearances are a source of irony on the show, and he is often given dialogue bemoaning the state of the Baltimore police department.[10]

[edit] Winona
  • Appears in:
Season two: "Ebb Tide"

Winona is a recurring background character, probably an administrative assistant, who maintains The Board at the offices of the BPD Homicide Division. A fan favorite, she is a middle-aged African-American woman with a distinctive, bouffant red hairdo (color appears to be "Tahitian Sunset"). Her name is first mentioned by Detective McNulty in episode 201. In season 4, Winona appears in 403 "Soft Eyes," 405 "Refugees," 408 "Corner Boys," 409 "Know Your Place," 411 "A New Day," and 413 "Final Grades."

[edit] Former Members

[edit] Ray Cole
Season one: "The Target" (uncredited); "The Detail" (uncredited); "The Wire"; "The Cost" and "The Hunt".
Season two: "Ebb Tide"; "Collateral Damage" and "Undertow".

Ray Cole was a somewhat inept member of Sergeant Landsman's homicide squad under the command of William Rawls.

Cole was the lead investigator of the death of Anton "Stinkum" Artis. His colleague Bunk Moreland told him that there was information about the case as part of a wiretap investigation that Bunk's partner Jimmy McNulty was involved in. The information would jeopardize the wiretap so they promised they would give it to Cole when the case closed. McNulty never intended to give Cole the information because the perpetrator was his informant Omar Little.

Cole was secondary investigator on the shooting of Wendell "Orlando" Blocker and Detective Kima Greggs. Cole achieved a clearance in the case working alongside lead investigator Detective Ed Norris when the case was solved with a confession from Wee-Bey Brice.

Cole was initially assigned the fourteen Jane Doe homicides that Rawls had tried to avoid. Jimmy McNulty was responsible for proving the cases fell under Rawls' jurisdiction. McNulty called Cole collateral damage when discussing Cole's misfortune with Bunk. Landsman reassigned the case to Bunk and Lester Freamon because he felt he needed his most capable detectives on it.

Cole died unexpectedly and the department held a wake for him. Landsman gave a eulogy for Cole at the wake.[1]

Cole was played by the show's late executive producer, Robert F. Colesberry, who died unexpectedly of complications from heart surgery. The character's wake was in part a tribute to Colesberry. In all subsequent seasons, the opening titles showed Cole's photo next to his coffin at the wake.

[edit] Lester Freamon
Main article: Lester Freamon

Freamon is an older methodical detective who was very skilled at homicide investigations but was once kicked out of the unit for angering the Deputy of Operations. He was let back in by William Rawls on two occasions transferring out on both to be of more assistance in leading the Major Crimes Unit.

[edit] Jimmy McNulty
Main article: Jimmy McNulty

McNulty was one of the homicide unit's better detectives until his insubordinate back burning attitude drew the ire of his commander Major Rawls. Rawls had him transferred out of homicide permanently at the end of season one.

[edit] William Rawls
Main article: William Rawls

Rawls was a Major in homicide promoted to Criminal Investigations Division Colonel and then Deputy Commissioner of Operations. He was a ruthless and feared commander of the unit who expected nothing less than unwavering loyalty and competence from his detectives.

Michael Santangelo

(for full character description see Western District section, below)

Santangelo is a former homicide detective who was unable to meet Major Rawls' clearance demands. He transferred to the Western District where he then drove a patrol wagon.

[edit] Western District

The Western District of Baltimore is the city's most violent district and centered in the middle of West Baltimore at 1034 North Mount Street. This district has been examined in greater depth than any other on The Wire and was the epicenter of the major investigations in seasons one, three and four.

[edit] Current staff

[edit] Command

Currently, the Western District is administered by Major Dennis Mello, former deputy to Howard Colvin, who was forced into retirement.

[edit] Dennis Mello
Western District Major Dennis Mello played by Jay Landsman
Western District Major Dennis Mello played by Jay Landsman
Season 2: "Stray Rounds" (uncredited).
Season 3: "Time after Time"; "All Due Respect"; "Dead Soldiers"; "Amsterdam"; "Straight and True"; "Homecoming"; "Back Burners"; "Reformation"; "Middle Ground" and "Mission Accomplished".
Season 4: "Boys of Summer;" "Margin of Error;" "Misgivings;" "A New Day"; "Final Grades."
Season 5: "More With Less", "Took"

Mello first appeared on the series as Western District administrative lieutenant and Major "Bunny" Colvin's second in command and confidante before Colvin's forced retirement. Mello then ran the district until Major Daniels was named district commander. Mello ran briefings for the Western district at roll call maintaining a sense of humor, typically dismissing the men with "don't get captured" and jokingly referring to them as "humps" and "mopes." Mello was once again given command of the Western district after Daniels' promotion to C.I.D. colonel at least until a new Major is given district command. Incidentally, the actor who plays Dennis Mello is a retired Baltimore detective named Jay Landsman, and was the real-life basis for the character of the same name in the show.

Mello appeared with Colvin during the accidental shooting of a nine year old child going off of Colonel Rawls' command to shake the district down for all known drug dealers to get a murder suspect. Mello comments that it was too bad a child had to die before locking all the drug dealers up while Colvin questions what it is they are really doing.

He accompanied Colvin to comstat meetings. Mello was aware of Colvin's "Hamsterdam" free zone where he allowed drug dealing to go unpunished. Mello was worried, but did not report Colvin's actions to his superiors. Colvin protected Mello following the discovery of Hamsterdam by their superiors and after Colvin's departure, Mello was temporarily promoted to Western District Commander. The two remained friends.

In season four Mello returned to his post of administrative lieutenant as Major Daniels was granted the district commander post. Mello worked closely with Daniels and the two tried to convince Officer McNulty to take a position in their operations unit. Both rated his capabilities highly but could not convince him to leave his position in patrol. Daniels however remembering McNulty's past insubordination viewed McNulty's position as a patrolman as a self-redeeming job and was more understanding of McNulty's desire to work as a patrolman. Mello was given command of the Western district again when Daniels was promoted to Criminal Investigations Division colonel. Mello continues to give charismatic roll call briefings including readying his men for polling station duty and introducing the murder warrant for Omar Little. When Commissioner Burrell tried to reassert his command of the force by "juking the stats", the district commanders were told to increase the number of arrests in their districts whether they be felonies or minor infractions. After seeing his officers at work, he went to Daniels to discuss the orders patrol had been given. Mello was personally opposed to this statistical posturing claiming that while the troops were increasing the minor infraction arrests, they were locking up the neighborhood people in the process. Claiming that half of his officers felt the same way, he then asked who they were doing this for as the election was over. Daniels informed Mayor Carcetti who then initiated a new order for the department to no longer make arrests based on statistical quotas but rather quality felonies, something Daniels had been lobbying for. Mello then was later seen commanding the Western troops to do the complicated (by Baltimore Police standards which Mello jokingly states is uncomplicated only if officers went to college or were born by women who did not drink alcohol while they were pregnant) task of searching empty homes for bodies at the request of former district major Cedric Daniels and detective Lester Freamon.[1][11]

The character is named after Capt. Dennis Mello who was the Western District commander when Ed Burns was an officer.[12]

[edit] Ellis Carver
Main article: Ellis Carver

Sergeant Carver is SIC (Sergeant in Charge) of the Western District under Major Mello. At the end of the series Carver is promoted to Lieutenant.

[edit] Uniformed Patrolmen

[edit] Brian Baker
  • Played by: Derek Horton
  • Appears in
Season three: "Time after Time"; "All Due Respect"
Season four: "Misgivings;" "A New Day" (uncredited).
Season five: "Took" (uncredited)

Baker is a rookie patrolman assigned with Castor to the Western District under the command of Bunny Colvin in Season three. He and Castor are both forced by Colvin to carry a compass until they can correctly identify the north direction. In Season four, Baker teams with officer Jimmy McNulty to arrest two people for a string of felony church burglaries. McNulty allows him credit for the arrest, later concurring with Bunk Moreland that Baker could be "good police".

[edit] Bobby Brown
Volatile veteran patrolman Bobby Brown played by Bobby J. Brown
Volatile veteran patrolman Bobby Brown played by Bobby J. Brown
  • Played by: Bobby J. Brown
  • Appears in
Season one: "The Target" (uncredited); "The Wire" (uncredited) and "The Cost" (uncredited).
Season three: "Middle Ground" (uncredited).
Season four: "Refugees;" "Know Your Place;" "A New Day" (uncredited).
Season five: "More With Less;" "Unconfirmed Reports;" "Clarifications"; "Late Editions"; and "–30–."

Bobby Brown is a Western District uniformed officer. He was the first officer on scene at the shooting of William Gant. He was also at the Brandon Wright crime scene. Detective Jimmy McNulty later enlisted Brown to help watch the home of Wallace. In season 3 when Major Colvin institutes the Hamsterdam initiative Brown is one of the officers freed up to be assigned to investigate complaints rather than perform radio car patrols and he solves a church burglary case.

Brown was later present with Sergeant Ellis Carver to both warn and arrest Namond Brice for selling drugs on a pre-indicted corner. In season five Brown is livid about the withholding of his overtime pay and is insubordinate in Carver's first roll-call briefing as Sergeant in charge. Brown is involved in a parking lot brawl with another officer over the poor state of a vehicle he hands over.[13] [6] Later, Brown is the first officer at a suspicious death that is investigated by Detective McNulty - the death is later ruled natural as predicted by Brown and McNulty.[7]

[edit] Aaron Castor
  • Played by: Lee E. Cox
  • Appears in
Season three: "Time after Time"; "All Due Respect" and "Moral Midgetry" (uncredited)
Season five: "More With Less;" "Unconfirmed Reports"

Castor is a rookie patrolmen, assigned with Baker to the Western District under the command of Howard Colvin in season three. He and Baker are both ordered by Colvin to carry a compass until they can correctly identify the north direction. He is apparently the nephew of former Baltimore Police officer Lloyd Castor, whom Major Colvin has dubbed as "good police." In season five Castor is first seen warning his new Major, Dennis Mello, about a brawl in the district parking lot.[14] Later, Castor is the first officer at the triple homicide of Junebug and his wife and associate investigated by Detective Kima Greggs. Castor fails to notice a child hiding in a closet when he secures the scene and Greggs hears the child when she arrives.[15]

[edit] Michael Santangelo
Good natured patrolman Michael Santangelo played by Michael Salconi
Good natured patrolman Michael Santangelo played by Michael Salconi
  • Played by: Michael Salconi
  • Appears in
Season one: "The Target"; "The Detail"; "The Buys"; "Old Cases"; "The Wire"; "One Arrest"; "Game Day"; "The Cost"; "The Hunt"; "Cleaning Up" and "Sentencing".
Season two: "Port in a Storm".
Season three: "Straight and True"; "Homecoming"; "Slapstick" and "Mission Accomplished".
Season four: "Boys of Summer;" "Margin of Error;" "Misgivings;" "A New Day".
Season five: "Transitions", "Took", and "–30–."

Mike "Sanny" Santangelo is an Italian American officer responsible for driving the district arrest van in the Baltimore Police Department's Western District.

In season one, Santangelo is an eight-year veteran in the Homicide Unit.[16] Santangelo was sent with Jimmy McNulty into the Barksdale detail by William Rawls to spy on McNulty. Rawls sent him to the detail because Santangelo was one of the unit's more inept homicide detectives, with a less than 40% clearance rate whose excuse for his performance is a lack of easy cases. He tries to resist, stating that it isn't his job to inform on a fellow cop and Rawls orders him to solve one of his open cases, all of which are difficult cases, inform on McNulty or leave the Homicide Unit altogether. Sergeant Landsman recommends a psychic, Madame LaRue, and Santangelo desperately tries her. Santangelo follows her instructions to bury a doll at the cemetery. That evening, McNulty solves one of the open cases, and Santangelo doesn't understand why a different case got solved. Landsman informs him that Bunk and McNulty did his work for him through an informant named Omar Little. With the clearance, Santangelo is able to refuse Rawls's demands and is grateful enough to inform McNulty that Rawls actively wants to fire him.

Santangelo is demoted to patrol officer at the end of season one for failing to give Rawls anything else useful. In season two, he is seen briefly as a beat officer, arresting Bubbles and Johnny when they try to steal medical supplies from an ambulance responding to an overdose. In season three, he drives the Western district prisoner transport vehicle under the command of Major Colvin. When he encounters former Barksdale Squad members McNulty and Kima Greggs, Santangelo mentions that he is apparently happy at being a patrolman as his job is easier. As he is no longer a detective, he no longer deals with difficult commanders like Rawls and still takes home the same pay and pension contributions. He remains a patrolman in the Western District in season four, when McNulty transfers in alongside him. During a counter-terrorism seminar, he was the first officer to point out the uselessness of Western District officers learning anti-terrorism tactics in a crime ridden district. Santangelo is also one of several officers present for the arrest of Omar Little on a murder warrant.[1]

[edit] Eddie Walker
  • Played by: Jonnie Louis Brown
  • Appears in:
Season four: "Soft Eyes;" "Margin of Error;" "Unto Others;" "Misgivings;" "A New Day."

Walker is a corrupt African American patrolman in the Western District. He appears very hateful towards poor African Americans (He told the children to "get back on the reservation") and is known as being both crooked and antagonistic on the street. He is feared and loathed by Namond, Michael, and the other young drug dealers as he is seen brutalizing them often with or without provocation. He is first seen stealing money from Randy. Later, he steals bootleg DVDs from Bubbles. He is the arresting officer for Omar Little, stealing a ring from him in the process. After Walker breaks Donut's fingers merely for giving him more paper work to do after a car chase, Michael orchestrates an act of revenge on him, robbing him at gunpoint of money (and the ring) and throwing yellow paint on him. Walker tells fellow officers that he was attacked by Bloods. Walker's attitude earns him the respect of more zealous officers and the dislike of officers such as Jimmy McNulty.

[edit] Plainclothes Officers

[edit] Anthony Colicchio
Abrasive Narcotics Officer Anthony Colicchio played by Benjamin Busch
Abrasive Narcotics Officer Anthony Colicchio played by Benjamin Busch
  • Played by: Benjamin Busch[17]
Season three: "Time after Time;" "All Due Respect;" "Dead Soldiers;" "Amsterdam;" "Straight and True;" "Homecoming;" "Back Burners;" "Moral Midgetry;" "Slapstick" and "Mission Accomplished".
Season four: "Boys of Summer;" "Alliances" (uncredited); "Margin of Error;" "Misgivings;" "That's Got His Own" and "Final Grades."
Season five: "More With Less", "Transitions"

Anthony "Tony" Colicchio is a narcotics officer in Sergeant Ellis Carver's drug enforcement unit squad in the Western District of Baltimore. He was often partnered with fellow squad members Herc Hauk and Lloyd "Truck" Garrick. Colicchio is part of the operation that resulted in the shooting of Officer Dozerman. Along with the rest of the squad, Colicchio is involved in policing drug tolerant zones set up by his district commander Major Colvin without the knowledge of his superiors. It is Colicchio who inspires the name "Hamsterdam" after citing Amsterdam's liberal drug laws as a metaphor for Colvin's new policies. As Colicchio is zealously committed to using brute force to fight the war on drugs, he describes the drug-free zones as "moral midgetry."

Colicchio remains in Carver's squad in season four, and Carver tries to bring him around to his new way of doing things—getting to know the street dealers and cultivating informants. Colicchio takes part in Lieutenant Marimow's failed raids in the Western district. Colicchio is also present for the arrest of Omar Little on a murder warrant, relishing finally bringing in the legendary criminal.[1] With his overzealous attitude, Colicchio is delighted to participate in the arrest hike ordered by Commissioner Burrell to appease the city's politicians. He appears outside a bar with other officers, causing a near riot with their "quality of life violation" arrests against people with open alcohol containers. (Major Colvin had compared "Hamsterdam" to the practice of not enforcing violations of open-container laws.) Colicchio's method of policing, however, supports the Broken Windows Theory, as his priorities focus more on making arrests to fight the war on crime.[18]

In season five, Colicchio remains in the Western District drug enforcement unit.[14] He continues to take a combative approach to his work. He is the subject of an Internal Investigation Division investigation after he attacks a teacher who had asked him to move a vehicle while he was making an arrest. Carver refuses to back Colicchio when he shows no remorse for his action, and actually charges him with conduct unbecoming an officer and excessive force. Colicchio accuses Carver of being a rat, but Carver is not put off by the damage to his reputation.[19]

[edit] Lloyd "Truck" Garrick
  • Played by: Ryan Sands
  • Appears in:
Season three: "Time after Time"; "All Due Respect"; "Homecoming"; "Back Burners"; "Moral Midgetry"; "Slapstick"; "Reformation" and "Mission Accomplished".
Season four: "Boys of Summer" and "Final Grades."
Season five: "More With Less;" "Clarifications;" "Late Editions"

Lloyd "Truck" Garrick is an African American narcotics officer in Sergeant Ellis Carver's squad in the Western District of the Baltimore Police Department, often partnered with fellow squad members Herc, Lambert and Colicchio. Garrick was part of the operation that resulted in the shooting of Officer Dozerman. Along with the rest of the squad Garrick was involved in policing drug tolerant zones set up by his district commander Howard "Bunny" Colvin without the knowledge of his superiors. He was with Herc when he phoned the paper to report Colvin's actions and again when he met with a reporter. In season 4, Truck appeared briefly at a useless lesson for Western police on counter-terrorism and once assisting Herc and Carver.[1] In Season 5, Truck appears with the Western District officers who are frustrated by the lack of overtime pay due to city cutbacks. During Detective Jimmy McNulty's homeless killer case, McNulty has Western District Sergeant Ellis Carver detail officers to track Marlo Stanfield's crew including officers Brown, Dozerman, and Truck.

[edit] Lambert
  • Played by: Nakia Dillard
  • Appears in:
Season three: "Time after Time"; "All Due Respect"; "Homecoming"; "Back Burners".

Lambert is an African American narcotics officer in Sergeant Ellis Carver's Drug Enforcement Unit in the Western District of the Baltimore Police Department, often seen with fellow squad members Herc, Anthony Colicchio, and Lloyd "Truck" Garrick. He was part of the operation that resulted in the shooting of Officer Dozerman. After Dozerman's shooting the D.E.U.'s hand to hand operations were suspended as Major Colvin did not want to see anymore of his men come close to death over a minimal amount of drugs.[1]

[edit] Former staff

[edit] Major Howard "Bunny" Colvin
Main article: Howard "Bunny" Colvin

Colvin was the veteran Major and District commander who was forced out of the department due to his "Hamsterdam" experiment that de-criminalized drugs, despite this causing a reduction in felonies.

[edit] Kenneth Dozerman

Dozerman was a friend of Carver and Herc in the DEU that moved into the Major Crimes Unit in season 4.

[edit] Thomas "Herc" Hauk
Main article: Thomas "Herc" Hauk

A former D.E.U. member who was a partner of Ellis Carver. He left the Western District to work on the Mayor's security detail.

[edit] Jimmy McNulty
Main article: Jimmy McNulty

McNulty was a former beat officer who became a detective. He returned to patrol in season 4 but after the death of an informant, he rejoined the Major Crimes Unit.

[edit] Others

The following are former officers or assistant police not part of a District, Administrative, or Criminal Investigation Division.

[edit] Walter Cantrell
  • Played by: Dave Trovato
  • Appears in
Season one: "The Detail" and "Sentencing" (uncredited).
Season four: "Unto Others" (uncredited).

Walter Cantrell is a Major and the Southern District commander. He is first seen in season one where he is a lieutenant and commands Roland "Prez" Pryzbylewski and Leander Sydnor. Lieutenant Cedric Daniels bargains with Cantrell to have Sydnor assigned to the Barksdale detail to compensate for taking the erratic Pryzbylewski. Cantrell and Daniels are both candidates for the next Major post and because of Daniels insubordination while conducting the Barksdale investigation Cantrell receives the promotion at the end of the first season. He is seen again in season four commanding the Southern District and preparing new Mayor Tommy Carcetti for a ride along.

[edit] Claude Diggins

Diggins is a Baltimore police department Marine Unit officer who partners Jimmy McNulty when he is assigned to the unit. He advises McNulty on how to make the best of the situation, but McNulty hates the fumes. Diggins is forgiving of McNulty's time away from the unit and shares his own boat with Bunk Moreland and McNulty to pose as a fishing craft when observing Spiros Vondas.

[edit] Randall Frazier
Season one: "The Detail"
Season two: "Collateral Damage"; "Hot Shots" and "All Prologue"
Season three: "All Due Respect"

Frazier is a Baltimore police department medical examiner. He is involved in the investigation of the death of William Gant. Later he was responsible for the autopsies of fourteen unidentified women found at the Baltimore docks. He helped Jimmy McNulty to prove that the deaths occurred in the city jurisdiction by establishing time of death based on the air supply in the container the bodies were discovered in. He also linked the bodies to a specific plastic surgery clinic by identifying a breast implant type that several of the women shared and tracing the serial number. This information helped the detectives to establish that the women were sex trade workers.

[edit] Beadie Russell
Main article: Beadie Russell

Russell is a port authority police officer and a single mother who develops an interest in case work following a chance discovery.

[edit] Marvin Taylor
  • Played by: Barnett Lloyd
  • Appears in
Season three: "Time after Time"; "All Due Respect"; "Dead Soldiers"

Taylor is an African American Major who was the acting commander of the Eastern District. Under pressure from the Mayor's office, Ervin Burrell is told to start coming down on the department to reduce the crime rate by any means possible. As Taylor's district had a low number of felony arrests and handgun confiscations in addition to a high number of homicides in a very short period of time, Deputy Rawls angrily tells him that he had eight hours to get a grip on his district or he would be fired. Cedric Daniels and Jimmy McNulty then arrested an eastside drug dealer named "Cheese" whom they suspect of being responsible for some of the murders in his district. When insufficient evidence against "Cheese" or any other suspected murderers is present, Rawls berates him one last time at a Comstat meeting, after which Commissioner Burrell relieves Taylor of command. This is intended as an example to all the other commanders in the department, that if they did not improve their statistics they will also be replaced.

[edit] Torret
  • Played by: Derren M. Fuentes
  • Appears in
Season one: "The Hunt", "Cleaning Up"
Season two: "Stray Rounds"
Season three: "Middle Ground", "Mission Accomplished"

Lieutenant Torret is an African American officer who appears in charge of the Quick Response Team (QRT) when they are required for raids and arresting criminals. He first appeared in Season 1 leading the search for Savino and then commanding the unit to surround Avon Barksdale's strip club during his arrest. In Season 2, he appeared leading the raid on the Franklin Terrace towers when a nine year old child was accidentally shot and killed by a stray round in a shootout between drug dealers. In that raid he had the unit arrest everyone in "The Pit" as he assumed them a suspect for being around that area. In Season 3, he appeared at the rank of Major commanding QRT and Tactical units city wide no longer actively participating in the raids. He helped plan and lead the raid to shut down "Hamsterdam" at the orders of Deputy Rawls. He was present with Rawls finding the body of drug addict Johnny Weeks who was then taken to the morgue in a squad car as a means of preventing the media from linking the death to the "Hamsterdam" experiment.

[edit] Relatives

[edit] Cheryl
  • Played by: Melanie Nicholls-King
  • Appears in
Season one: "The Target"; "The Cost"; "The Hunt" and "Sentencing".
Season two: "Ebb Tide"; "Hot Shots"; "Hard Cases"; "All Prologue"; "Storm Warnings" and "Port in a Storm".
Season three: "All Due Respect" and "Back Burners".
Season four: "Know Your Place"
Season five: "Transitions",

Cheryl is Kima Greggs' live-in partner; she works in the television news industry and often worries about Kima's safety as a police officer. She hopes that Kima will take a less dangerous job and start a family with her. She also appears to do most of the cooking and cleaning in the relationship.

After Kima's shooting, Cheryl insists that she take a desk job. Kima acquiesced for a time, but eventually returned to investigative work in the second season. Cheryl finds this hard to understand, until Kima showed her the conditions in which fourteen girls were murdered. Cheryl jealously insists on accompanying Kima when she went to interview a contact in a strip club.

In season two, Cheryl becomes pregnant by artificial insemination, and in season three, the couple have a young baby boy. Kima begins to spend less time at home, and Cheryl was left to deal with motherhood alone. Kima eventually realizes she does not want to be a parent, and moves out of their shared home. Kima is behind on her child support for much of season four, but gets some overtime in homicide and visits Cheryl, who is now happy with her new partner.

[edit] Elena McNulty
Season one: "Old Cases" and "The Cost".
Season two: "Hot Shots"; "Hard Cases"; "Undertow"; "All Prologue" and "Backwash".
Season three: "Time after Time"; "Amsterdam" and "Straight and True".
Season four: "Misgivings"
Season five: "React Quotes"

Elena is Jimmy McNulty's estranged wife. They have two children together Sean and Michael.

Elena is angered by Jimmy due to catching him in bed with another woman. She uses her lawyer to try to destroy Jimmy throughout the first season as much as she can. She is also protective of her sons and worries that Jimmy is a dangerous influence on them because of his drinking. When he exposed them to danger by having them tail the subject of his investigation, Stringer Bell, she filed for an emergency order to prevent him from seeing the boys. At the court hearing the judge convinced them to work out arrangements between themselves.

In season two Elena was seen at work as a realtor showing a house to Nick Sobotka. Jimmy tried to initiate a reconciliation with Elena and considerably cleaned up his drinking habits and behaviour. The two slept together but in the morning Elena asked Jimmy to leave as she felt it would be unfair on her sons for them to see him in the house.

In season three, Elena is established as seriously dating a man named Dennis who appears at Orioles Baseball games in the front row wearing a suit and spending most of the game talking on a cell phone. Jimmy's partner Bunk Moreland suspects that Dennis is a downtown lawyer due to his appearance and mannerisms.

In season four, Elena saw that Jimmy was becoming more stable as a patrolmen and stated to him that "If I knew you were going to be a grown up, things may have worked differently."

[edit] Sean McNulty
  • Played by: Eric Ryan
  • Appears in:
Season one: "The Wire"; "Lessons" and "Sentencing".
Season two: "Hot Shots".
Season three: "Time after Time"; "Straight and True" and "Slapstick".
Season four: "Misgivings"
Season five: "React Quotes"

Sean is Elena and Jimmy McNulty's oldest son. He lives with his mother and his brother Michael following his parents separation but still sees his father. Jimmy teaches his sons the front and follow technique and when he spotted Stringer Bell in a market he had them follow him. Michael and Sean managed to record Stringer's number plate, which aided their father's investigation. In a brief appearance in the fourth season, he says he wants to be a rock star.

[edit] Michael McNulty
  • Played by: Antonio Cordova
  • Appears in:
Season one: "Old Cases"; "The Wire" and "Lessons".
Season three: "Time after Time"; "Amsterdam"; "Straight and True" and "Slapstick".
Season four: "Misgivings"
Season five: "React Quotes"

Michael is Elena and Jimmy McNulty's younger son. He lives with his mother and his brother Sean following his parents separation but still sees his father. Michael plays soccer and Jimmy tries to attend his games. Jimmy teaches his sons the front and follow technique and when he spotted Stringer Bell in a market he had them follow him. Michael and Sean managed to record Stringer's number plate, which aided their father's investigation. In a brief appearance in the fourth season, he says he wants to be a video game designer.

[edit] Actual BPD Officers who have appeared

The following is a list of actual Baltimore Police Department officers who have appeared on the show at some point. Many of these officers were either commanders of the department or featured officers in the David Simon's books of The Corner and Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets.

[edit] Gary D'Addario

recurring character

Former Baltimore Police Department Major who was featured homicide unit shift lieutenant in David Simon's Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets. He appears recurringly as a grand jury prosecutor named Gary DiPasquale.

[edit] Leonard Hamm
Season five: "Not for Attribution"

Former Baltimore Police Department Commissioner who appears as a midnight shift homicide detective in Season 5.

[edit] Jay Landsman

recurring character

Former Baltimore Police Department Sergeant who was featured homicide unit sergeant in David Simon's Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets. He appears recurringly as Western District Administrative Lieutenant turned Major Dennis Mello.

[edit] Edward Norris

Recurring character

Former Baltimore Police Department Commissioner who appears as a recurring character of the same name working as a homicide detective.

[edit] Jimmy Rood
Season four: "Boys of Summer"

Baltimore Police Department C.I.D. Major who appears as a patrolman in Season 4 who encounters mayoral candidate Tommy Carcetti.

[edit] Donald Worden

Mentioned in :Season three: "Slapstick"

Season five: "Not for Attribution"

Former Baltimore Police Department homicide detective featured in David Simon's Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets who appears as a midnight shift homicide detective in Season 5.

[edit] Other Officers mentioned

The following is a list of other Baltimore Police Department officers who have been mentioned on the show at some point. Many of these officers were either commanders of the department or featured officers in the David Simon's books of The Corner and Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets.

[edit] Ed Burns

Mentioned in: :Season three: "Slapstick"

Former Baltimore Police Department narcotics detective turned school teacher who co-authored The Corner with David Simon.

[edit] Michael Crutchfield

recurring character of the same name

Former Baltimore Police Department homicide detective mentioned in David Simon's Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets who spawned a character of the same name played by actor Gregory L. Williams throughout the series.

[edit] Vernon Holley

recurring character of the same name

Former Baltimore Police Department homicide detective mentioned in David Simon's Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets who spawned a character of the same name played by actor Brian Anthony Wilson throughout the series.

[edit] Roger Nolan

Mentioned in :Season one: "The Target"

Former Baltimore Police Department Sergeant who was featured homicide unit sergeant in David Simon's Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets. Nolan's name is mentioned as the sergeant of another homicide unit in the department.

[edit] Rick Requer

Mentioned in :Season five: "Transitions"

Former Baltimore Police Department homicide detective featured in David Simon's Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets who spawned a character of the same name played by actor Roscoe Orman in Season 5. Requer was the basis for the character of Bunk Moreland.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Org Chart - The Law. HBO (2004). Retrieved on 2006-07-22.
  2. ^ Actor De Angelis of 'The Wire' Dies at 73. Yahoo! News (2006). Retrieved on 2006-01-01.
  3. ^ Character profile - Officer Caroline Massey. HBO (2004). Retrieved on 2006-07-22.
  4. ^ David Simon at My Nemesis (Stoop Storytelling Series)
  5. ^ Character profile - Detective Michael Crutchfield. HBO (2008). Retrieved on 2008-01-14.
  6. ^ a b "More with Less". Joe Chappelle, Writ. David Simon (story and teleplay), Ed Burns (story). The Wire. HBO. 2008-01-06. No. 1, season 5.
  7. ^ a b "Unconfirmed Reports". Ernest Dickerson, Writ. William F. Zorzi (story and teleplay), David Simon (story). The Wire. HBO. 2008-01-13. No. 2, season 5.
  8. ^ Character profile - Vernon Holley. HBO (2008). Retrieved on 2008-02-12.
  9. ^ Neil Drumming. High Wire Act. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved on 2006-09-27.
  10. ^ Character profile – Detective Edward Norris. HBO (2006). Retrieved on 2006-10-29.
  11. ^ Character profile - Lieutenant Dennis Mello. HBO (2004). Retrieved on 2006-07-22.
  12. ^ King, Jim (2006-12-04). 3rd Exclusive David Simon Q&A. Borderline Productions. Retrieved on 2008-03-15.
  13. ^ Character profile - Officer Bobby Brown. HBO (2008). Retrieved on 2008-01-14.
  14. ^ a b "More with Less". Joe Chappelle, Writ. David Simon (story and teleplay), Ed Burns (story). The Wire. HBO. 2008-01-06. No. 1, season 5.
  15. ^ "Unconfirmed Reports". Ernest Dickerson, Writ. William F. Zorzi (story and teleplay), David Simon (story). The Wire. HBO. 2008-01-13. No. 2, season 5.
  16. ^ Character profile - Michael Santangelo. HBO (2008). Retrieved on 2008-01-28.
  17. ^ Cast & Crew - Benjamin Busch as Anthony Colicchio. HBO (2008). Retrieved on 2008-01-24.
  18. ^ Character profile - Anthony Colicchio. HBO (2008). Retrieved on 2008-01-24.
  19. ^ "Transitions". Dan Attias, Writ. Ed Burns (story and teleplay), David Simon (story). The Wire. HBO. 2008-01-27. No. 4, season 5.