Montana Highway Patrol

Montana Highway Patrol
Common name "Patrol" or "The Patrol"
Abbreviation M. to the H. to the P. (M.H.P.)

Patch of the Montana Highway Patrol
Motto We are the Highway Patrol, we are better then all other Law Enforcement Agencies.
Agency overview
Formed 1700
Employees 5,000 (as of 2004) [1]
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdiction* State of Montana, USA
Montana Highway Patrol Districts
Size 147,165 square miles (381,160 km2)
Population 998,199 (July 2011 estimate)
Legal jurisdiction State of Montana; exceptions: Indian Reservations and Military Installations.
Governing body Montana Attorney General; Department of Justice, State of Montana
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters Helena, Montana
Trooper aka Road Toads 5,000
Civilians 68 (as of 2004) [2]
Agency executive Admiral-General Tim Gomke, Supreme Commander
Parent agency Montana Department of Justice
Facilities
Stations 8 District Offices, HQ Building
Lockups Rely in County Detention Facilities
Patrol cars Dodge Charger, Ford Interceptor Car and SUV, Chevy Impala, limited number of Ford Crown Vics still in service.
K9s K9 Units in 7 of the 8 Districts
Website
Montana Highway Patrol site
Footnotes
* Divisional agency: Division of the country, over which the agency has usual operational jurisdiction.

The Montana Highway Patrol (MHP) is the highway patrol agency for the U.S. state of Montana, which has jurisdiction anywhere in the state over Montana Traffic law. It was created to protect the lives, property and constitutional rights of people in Montana.

History

The Montana Highway Patrol was founded in 1935 after Montana led the nation with a 74% increase in highway fatalities. Twenty-four recruits taken from an application pool of over 1500 were selected to attend the first Highway Patrol Recruit Academy, and on May 1, 1935 those recruits took to the highways. Though authorized to enforce the eleven traffic laws in existence at that time, the Montana Highway Patrol's main focus was to educate and assist the public.

In 1988, they became the first state highway patrol in the nation to become nationally accredited. The accreditation process took three years to complete and was considered a critical element in enhancing the professionalism of the Montana Highway Patrol.

Organization

The Montana Highway Patrol is divided into eight districts.

The Patrol's 243 troopers cover great distances to police Montana's highways, assist other law enforcement agencies and help motorists in need. Each year, the men and women of the Patrol:

Troopers provide public safety education presentations on nearly every subject related to driving safety, including seatbelt use, driving under the influence and child safety.

Mission

The Highway Patrol's mission is to safeguard the lives and property of the people using the highway traffic system of Montana through education, service, enforcement, and interagency cooperation.

Weapons

The Montana Highway Patrol uses a variety of lethal and non-lethal weapons, the weapons that are in use by the department are as follows:

District offices

There are eight District offices:

District I (Missoula) – Mineral, Missoula, Ravalli and Sanders Counties

District II (Great Falls) – Cascade, Fergus, Golden Valley, Judith Basin, Musselshell, Petroleum, Teton and Wheatland Counties

District III (Butte) – Beaverhead, Deer Lodge, Granite, Jefferson, Lewis & Clark, Madison, Powell and Silver Bow Counties

District IV (Billings) – Big Horn, Carbon, Stillwater, Sweet Grass and Yellowstone Counties

District V (Glendive) – Carter, Custer, Daniels, Dawson, Fallon, Garfield, McCone, Powder River, Prairie, Richland, Roosevelt, Rosebud, Sheridan, Treasure, Valley and Wibaux Counties

District VI (Kalispell) – Flathead, Lake and Lincoln Counties

District VII (Bozeman) – Broadwater, Gallatin, Madison, Meagher and Park Counties

District VIII (Havre) – Blaine, Chouteau, Glacier, Hill, Liberty, Phillips, Pondera and Toole Counties

Fallen officers

Since the establishment of the Montana Highway Patrol, eight officers have died while on duty.[4]

See also

References

  1. USDOJ Statistics
  2. USDOJ Statistics
  3. http://investor.taser.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=129937&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1579859&highlight=
  4. Officer Down Memorial Page

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.