San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department

San Bernardino County Sheriff-Coroner Department
Common name San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department
Abbreviation SBSD
Patch of the San Bernardino County Sheriff-Coroner Department.
Motto Dedicated to Your Safety
Agency overview
Formed 1853
Employees 3,700
Annual budget 440 Million
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdiction* County (US) of San Bernardino in the state of California, United States
Size 20,186 sq mi (52,280 km2).
Legal jurisdiction San Bernardino County, California
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters San Bernardino, California
Sworn members 2,000
Unsworn members 1,200
Sheriff responsible Rod Hoops
Facilities
Stations 16
Website
[1]
Footnotes
* Divisional agency: Division of the country, over which the agency has usual operational jurisdiction.

The San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department (SBSD) serves San Bernardino County, California, which is geographically the largest county in the lower 48 states. SBSD provides law enforcement services to the unincorporated areas of the county and contract law enforcement services to 14 of the county's cities, serving a total of 1,029,466 of the county's 2 million residents. The department also operates the county jail system, provides marshal services for the county superior courts, and has numerous other specialized divisions to serve the citizens of San Bernardino County.[1][2]

Contents

History

When San Bernardino County was established in 1853, its first Sheriff was a Mormon, Robert Clift, who served until 1857. On January 12, 1856, a volunteer militia unit known as the San Bernardino Rangers was organized under the command of Captain Andrew Lytle to aid the Sheriff in suppressing raids by Indians and the gangs of outlaws like the Flores-Daniel Gang that plagued the County.[3][4] Sheriff Clift left for Utah that year and was followed in office by Joseph Bridger who held the office until 1859.

Valentine Herring was next as Sheriff until the fall of 1860. Herring was replaced by Charles W. Piercey who held the office until he resigned in October 1860 to run for the State Assembly. Anson Van Leuvan served as Sheriff from 1860 to 1862. He had difficulties enforcing the law in Belleville and the other boom towns of the Holcomb Valley gold rush and with the turbulence caused in the County by the secession crisis and the beginning of the American Civil War. Eli M. Smith elected in the fall of 1861, was known for his pursuit of a gang of horse thieves who had been operating in the county for several months stealing horses made precious by the wartime need for horseflesh. On one occasion Sheriff Smith rode into an outlaw camp, recovering a herd of stolen horses and arresting three thieves. By the end of his term in office he had convicted 18 men of horse theft and sent them to prison. Sheriff Benjamin F. Mathews served from 1863 to 1864.

George T. Fulgham was Sheriff from 1864 to 1869. In September, 1865 the outlaw James Henry of the Mason Henry Gang and his gang of rustlers, robbers and murderers were in the county, camped out near San Bernardino. Sheriff George T. Fulgham and his posse led by John Rogers (a gang member sent to town to obtain provisions and captured after drunken boasting), found and surprised Henry camped in Railroad Canyon, (then called San Jacinto Canyon), about twenty-five miles from town. At sunrise on September 14, 1865, the posse approached cautiously but Henry awoke and fired three shots, striking one posse member in the foot. Henry died in a hail of gunfire, sustaining 57 wounds. His corpse was taken back to town, photographed and his body was displayed to the public in Old West fashion.[5][6]

Some of the other men holding the office of Sheriff in the early years were, Newton Noble (1869–1873), J. C Curry (1873–1877), William Davies (1877–1879), John C. King (1879–1882), J. B. Burkhart (1882–1884), Nelson G. Gill (1884–1885), Edwin Chidsey Seymour (1888–1892), James P. Booth 1892-1894), Charles A. Rouse (1894–1895), John C. Ralphs (1902–1915), J. L. McMinn (1915–1918).

Statistics

Organizational structure

The current Sheriff of San Bernardino County is Sheriff Rod Hoops, who replaced Gary Penrod who retired on January 31, 2009. Serving below the Sheriff is the Undersheriff, who is the second in command of the department. Beneath the Undersheriff are two Assistant Sheriff's. One Assistant Sheriff is in charge of Operations and the other is in charge of Support. SBSD is further organized into seven bureau's. Each bureau is commanded by a Deputy Chief. The bureau's are:

Administrative Services Bureau

This bureau operates the following divisions:

Court Services Bureau

Detentions and Corrections Bureau

SBSD operates a total of 9 jail facilities throughout the county. The average daily inmate population is 5,600. In 2006, 107,606 people were booked into these jails. The bureau operates the following Type-II jails that are used for long term housing:[9]

Field Support Bureau

Patrol Operations Region I

This bureau provides law enforcement services to the densely populated southwest corner of the county, which includes parts of the San Bernardino Valley, Pomona Valley, Cucamonga Valley, and the communities in the San Bernardino Mountains.[10] This area also operates a Type I Jail booking facility.

Patrol Operations Region II

This bureau provides law enforcement services to the large Mojave Desert portion of the county [10]. The deputies at many of these stations operate in remote areas. This area also operates 3 of SBSD's Type I Jail booking facilities.

Specialized Operations Bureau

Aviation

Aviation provides services including general law enforcement support, surveillance, fire suppression, medical transport, and search and rescue duties. It operates the following aircraft:

Members Killed on Duty

Ten SBSD deputies have been killed in the line of duty. SBSD established the Frank Bland Memorial at its headquarters to honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice while serving the citizens of San Bernardino County [11].

See also

California portal
Law enforcement/Law enforcement topics portal


References