The Birmingham Police Department (BPD) is the police department of the city of Birmingham, Alabama, in the United States. The department operates in an area of 148.61 square miles across two counties (384.91 km2) and a population of 212,237 people.
History
Founding and early history
When Birmingham's first city government took office in 1871 under Mayor Robert Henley, he appointed a City Marshal, O. D. Williams, to direct the efforts of two patrolmen, Robert Bailey and Henry Clay Atkins. Henley made himself available to assist with patrols if needed before he was forced to resign due to tuberculosis.
The second administration, under James Powell, took office on January 6, 1873 and installed W. G. Oliver as Marshal. He initially commanding a force of three patrolmen, Ed Taylor, Robert Bailey and A. Robinson, but the young department was expanded with ten new recruits over the course of that year. Those included W. L. Cantelou, Jule Wright, James Armstrong, William Harris, J. D. Lykes, M. Hagerty, William Clay, J. L. Ellison, W. W. Coxe and John Coxe. That force held strong for the next year, but was reduced back to five men, headed by E. G. Taylor, during William Morris' second administration in 1876. Under Thomas Jeffers's administration, it was reduced back to three, with Ben Plosser commanding William Seay and John B. Lewis. Plosser was succeeded by L. M. Teal in 1878.
Mayor A. O. Lane elevated the city government beginning in 1882. He brought W. G. Oliver back as Marshal and also appointed John Thompson to serve as Captain of Police, commanding officers G. W. Merritt, J. A. Brock, J. A. Mingea, W. S. Nelson, J. S. Barksdale, C. K. Dickey, G. J. Tomlin and T. P. Hagood. The annual payroll for the department was $540 in 1882. A new set of uniforms was required to be worn while on duty.
In 1884 Frank Gafford and O. A. Pickard succeeded Oliver and Thompson as Marshal and Captain, respectively. Gafford oversaw the organization of the city's first professional Fire Department in 1885. J. H. Mingea, J. G. Smith, William Burwell, J. B. Donelson, H. U. McKinney, T. J. Boggan, A. H. Maynor and James McGee were sworn in as new officers that term. The department's payroll for 1886 had risen to $970.
For Lane's third term, Pickard was elevated to City Marshal. Newly-sworn officers included J. D. Anderson, Charles Martin, J. M. Nix, W. M. Turner, W. J. Carlisle, A. L. Sexton, R. M. Saunders, W. H. Pinkerton, T. Z. Hagood, Richard Smoot Jr, James Turner, B. R. Childers, Thomas Hart, J. S. Oldham, O. M. Hill, R. H. McCullum and James Hillary. The city's expense for the salaries and operation of the department in 1887 reached $12,500.
The first Birmingham Police officers to lose their lives in the line of duty were George Kirkley and J. W. Adams, who were killed in a shootout following the robbery of the Standard Oil offices on March 27, 1900.[2]
The Birmingham Police Department, with the help of U.S. Steel, vigorously investigated and targeted labor activities during the 1930s and 1940s. Information was fed to a "Red Squad" of detectives "who used the city's vagrancy and criminal-anarchy statutes (liberally reinforced by backroom beatings) to strike at radical labor organizers." In the 1950s, the investigations shifted from labor to civil rights activists.[3]
Racial integration
In 1963, the Birmingham campaign pushed for racial integration and faced violent responses from the police department, especially with the Children's Crusade. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote his Letter from Birmingham Jail while under arrest in Birmingham during the Civil Rights protests. In 1966 the department hired its first ever black police officer, Leroy Stover, who suffered racial abuse in his first weeks on the force but went on to become Deputy Chief of the department.[4] The second black officer, Johnnie Johnson Jr., hired the day after Stover, went on to become the city's first black chief of police. Johnson was appointed to the post by Richard Arrington, the city's first black mayor, in 1992.[5][6]
Organization
Chief of Police
The Chief of Police is a sworn member of the police department appointed by the Mayor of the City of Birmingham. All members of the Birmingham Police Department report to the Chief.
Assistant Chief
The Assistant Chief reports directly to the Chief of Police and is also the commander of the Administrative Operations Bureau.
Internal Affairs
The Internal Affairs unit is responsible for reviewing complaints of officer misconduct. Internal Affairs reports directly to the Chief of Police.
Public Information Officer
The Public Information Officer's primary responsibility is to provide information to the public and the media regarding the department.
Administrative Operations Bureau
The Administrative Operations Bureau consists of the Professional Standards Division and Support Services Division as well the Technology, Budget, Inspections, Grants and Parking Enforcement Units.
Professional Standards Division
The Professional Standards Division consists of the Payroll, Hiring, Accreditation and Training Units.
Support Services Division
The Support Services Division consists of the Records, Report Review, Property Room and Corrections Units.
Field Operations Bureau
This unit was formerly called the Patrol Bureau. About half of all the policemen in the department are assigned here. [7] It consists of the five police precincts, the Mayor's Security Detail and the Community Services Division.
Community Services Division
The Community Services Division consists of Officers Police Support for the Alabama State Fair,Youth Services, Crime Prevention Officers, Chaplains and Community Service Officers.
Investigative Operations Bureau
The Investigative Operations Bureau consists of the Homicide/Robbery Unit, Crimes Against Property, Vice Narcotics, Special Victims Unit and Forensics Services.
Captains are Commanders of a Precinct or Division.
Lieutenant
Lieutenants are Shift commanders within a Precinct, assistant commanders of a Division, or commanders of a Unit.
Sergeant
Sergeants are Supervisors
Police Officer
Chiefs of Police
Since 1871, there have been 34 appointed chiefs of the Birmingham Police Department. W.G. Oliver was appointed twice, serving from 1873-1875 and again from 1881–1882. Jamie Moore was the longest serving chief of police in Birmingham Police Department History, serving for 16 years.
Fallen officers
Since the establishment of the Birmingham Police Department in 1871, 47 officers have died in the line of duty.[9]
Rank
Name
Date of Death
Cause of Death
Age
Location
Police Officer
J. Wafe Adams
03-28-1900
Shot and killed along with Police Officer George W. Kirkley while attempting to arrest a suspect they saw commit a robbery
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
George W. Kirkley
03-28-1900
Shot and killed along with Police Officer J. Wafe Adams while attempting to arrest a suspect they saw commit a robbery
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
William P. Walton
03-18-1902
Shot and killed at the home of a suspect believed to have been part of an assault
56
On Morris Street, in between 8th Street and 9th Street
Policeman
James H. Mullin
09-27-1903
Shot and killed after arresting a man who brutally beat a woman in the street
45
N/A
Detective
Samuel H. Hamilton
05-12-1907
Shot and killed during a domestic dispute over child custody
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Willis A. Smith
03-10-1908
Shot and killed after stopping a suspect for questioning in the street
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
John W. Little
11-07-1908
Shot and killed while he and another Officer raided an illegal liquor den
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
George Clinton Eubank
11-23-1909
Shot and killed after a business owner supposedly mistook him for a robber
36
In the business district of Birmingham, Alabama; exact location N/A
Police Officer
Loner Denson Camp
06-19-1910
Shot and killed while attempting to arrest an illegal gambler
25
N/A
Patrolman
W.C. Wallace
11-08-1910
Shot and killed while attempting to arrest a man for carrying a concealed weapon
23
On 13th Street in Birmingham, Alabama
City Marshal
William Benjamin Morgan
09-29-1913
Shot and killed by a man he kicked out of a saloon earlier that day
41
N/A
Detective
Hugh Tully
10-13-1913
Shot and killed as he and two other Officers attempted to arrest a suspect for a stabbing 7 months earlier
N/A
N/A
Officer
John Aquilla Moore
12-05-1913
Shot and killed while he and his partner entered a house to investigate illegal activities
27
N/A
Officer
George A. Sims
01-22-1918
Shot and killed after getting on scene to a disorderly man call
N/A
N/A
Officer
John Dickerson Newby
10-15-1919
Succumbed to injuries sustained on 10-10-1919 after being shot in a dark alley after hearing shots
N/A
N/A
Officer
Sam P. Dobyns
09-19-1920
Shot and killed while raiding an illegal gambling house
N/A
N/A
Sergeant
Walter C. Hollums
08-15-1923
Struck and killed by a car while directing traffic
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Ray Payne
02-12-1927
Shot and killed while trying to break up a fight between 3 men
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Alexander A. Manley
05-26-1927
Shot and killed by a man he was talking to about his illegal parking
N/A
N/A
Motorcycle Officer
Elsie Turner Lewis
03-03-1928
Shot and killed while with his partner during a traffic stop with a car that ran a red light
26
N/A
Motor Scout
Henry Francis Mills
08-08-1930
Killed in a motorcycle crash
N/A
On Arkadelphia Road
Police Officer
Edward Lee Buckalew
05-23-1931
Killed in a car crash
N/A
N/A
City Warden
William Ira Latham
10-24-1932
Killed in a car crash while transporting a prisoner
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Dumas Froy Phillips
04-23-1934
Killed in a motorcycle crash after losing control while headed back from Pell City, Alabama for court
40
On Leeds Highway, 3 miles east of Irondale, Alabama
Police Officer
Forest J. Harris
02-08-1935
Succumbed to injuries sustained on 02-01-1935 during a shootout with robbery suspects
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
James M. Early
04-15-1935
Shot and killed after a robbery suspect, that he and other Officers were attempting to arrest, barricaded himself in a garage
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Homer Earnest Poore
06-30-1936
Struck and killed by a vehicle while on a traffic stop
N/A
N/A
Detective
James Tillman Moser
01-31-1939
Shot and killed with his own weapon while attempting to arrest an escaped death row inmate
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Edward Newton Wolff
07-12-1941
Killed in a motorcycle crash
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Fred R. Brockman
11-03-1953
Shot and killed after arriving on scene to a man with a gun call
52
N/A
Police Officer
Herbert C. Osborn
07-24-1962
Killed in a motorcycle crash
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Azell L. Harris
05-04-1969
Shot and killed while confronting 3 robbers at a local freight warehouse
42
N/A
Police Officer
Kenneth Lee Spencer Jr.
07-13-1969
Shot and killed with his own weapon after trying to kick a disorderly man out of a public swimming pool
26
N/A
Police Officer
Henry L. Thompson
10-16-1972
Shot and killed with his own weapon while trying to calm a disorderly customer at a bank
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Felix Underwood
10-07-1973
Shot and killed at a traffic crash by an emotionally disturbed person who killed a person before killing Officer Underwood
N/A
N/A
Detective Sergeant
William Stanley Jones
08-09-1975
Died from a heart attack while chasing a suspect
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
James Earl Rhodes
03-11-1978
Killed when another vehicle struck his motorcycle while he escorted a funeral
32
N/A
Sergeant
Albert Eugene Ballard
11-29-1979
Shot and killed while on a traffic stop with a possible bank robber
N/A
In downtown Birmingham, Alabama; exact location N/A
Police Officer
Edward K. Alley Jr.
12-25-1980
Shot and killed while attempting to arrest 2 convenience store robbers
34
N/A
Police Officer
Robert D. Patterson
10-31-1982
Accidentally shot and killed by a fellow Officer
N/A
N/A
Officer
Sharon K. Robinson
04-07-1984
Killed in a crash with Officer Marcus L. Reid while responding to a burglary call which was false
N/A
N/A
Officer
Marcus L. Reid
04-07-1984
Killed in a crash with Officer Sharon K. Robinson to a burglary call which was false
N/A
N/A
Police Officer
Frank H. Dunn
10-14-1986
Killed after hitting a tractor trailer that made a left turn in front of him
N/A
N/A
Officer
John Martin Huffman
05-21-1992
Killed after being struck by a driver under the influence of narcotics while on a traffic stop
33
On I-59; exact location N/A
Officer
Robert “Sande” Sanderson
01-29-1998
Killed by a bomb while working overtime at an abortion clinic