Monterey County Sheriff's Office

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Monterey County Sheriff's Office
Abbreviation MCSO

Patch of the Monterey County Sheriff's Office
Agency overview
Formed 1850
Legal personality Governmental: Government agency
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdiction* County (US) of Monterey in the state of California, USA
Legal jurisdiction Monterey County, California
General nature
Operational structure
Sworn members 250
Unsworn members 50
Sheriff responsible Stephen Bernal
Facilities
Jails 1
Website
Official Site
Footnotes
* Divisional agency: Division of the country, over which the agency has usual operational jurisdiction.

The Monterey County Sheriff's Office is the county law enforcement agency for Monterey County, California. It provides protection and law enforcement to the non-municipal areas of Monterey County.

The Sheriff's Office provides Monterey County with a special weapons and tactics (SWAT) team, a search and rescue team (SAR), a coroner's division, a court services division, a detention division (jail), a civil services division, a narcotics division, an investigations division, a crime prevention unit, a hostage/crisis negotiation team (HNT), a mounted search unit (volunteer), a K-9 unit, a motor squadron (volunteer), an aero squad (volunteer), and a homeland security division. Each of these is organized into one of three Bureaus: the Administrative Bureau, the Enforcement Operations Bureau, and the Custody Operations Bureau.

The Sheriff's Office was founded in 1850; and as such the department is one hundred and fifty-eight years old. The Sheriff's Office is one of the oldest law enforcement agencies in the state of California. The Sheriff's Office has about 450 employees and a budget of over 50 million dollars.

History of the Office of the Sheriff, Monterey County

The Office of the Sheriff, Monterey County was founded in 1850 when Sheriff William Roach was elected. William Roach was considered by many to be a very controversial sheriff. He was a part of the New York Regiment of volunteer soldiers sent to fight in the Mexican-American War. However, the regiment arrived too late to fight the war. Many of the soldiers decided to stay and become a part of the California gold rush. When Roach decided to run for Sheriff, he had a large percent of the vote due to the large population of New York Regiment soldiers living in Monterey County. Roach later became involved in a feud known as the Roach-Belcher feud. The Monterey County Sheriff's Office, like many offices, was small (1-3 men) even into the 1910s. The department didn't even obtain uniforms until the late 1930s. They were obtained through a traveling uniform peddler and each deputy was allowed to choose his own badge from a catalog. The Monterey County Sheriff's Office was considered a largely unprofessional office until 1962, when sheriff Davenport was elected. Davenport chose a man named James Rodriguez to be his Undersheriff. Rodriguez was a World War II veteran, an Officer in the California National Guard a former Monterey Police Department Captain and was a very strict taskmaster. He instituted reforms large and small. Small point, being Deputies wear required to wear the regulation Stetson, cowboy hat at all times and large, being that Deputies could no longer drink on the job (no matter how well they held liquor). He also required Deputies to carry firearms at all times even if they were off duty. This time period is considered to be the beginning of the present Monterey County Sheriff's Office by many. The Sheriff's Office was sued in order to force it to comply with the new federal Peace Officer safety regulations. The department lost and all officers were equipped with “bullet-proof” vests. The Sheriff's Office now has a staff of 400+, sworn Deputy Sheriffs, each armed with semi-automatic weapons.

List of Monterey County Sheriffs

List of Fallen Monterey County Sheriff's Officials

Organization of the Office of the Sheriff, Monterey County

The Office of the Sheriff, Monterey County is divided into three bureaus, each answerable to the Sheriff. The three bureaus are the Administrative Bureau, the Enforcement Operations Bureau, and the Custody Operations Bureau. Each bureau of the department is headed by a chief. The Administrative Bureau contains the Fiscal Division, the Civil Division, the Coroner Division, the Training Division, the Records Division, the Recruiting Division, and the Professional Standards Division (internal affairs). The Enforcement Operations Bureau contains the Sheriff's Patrol Division, the Homeland Security Division, the Investigations Division, the Narcotics Division, the Crime Prevention Unit, the Hostage/Crisis Negotiation Team, the Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) Team, the Search and Rescue Team (SAR), the Mounted Search Team, K-9 Unit, the Motor Squadron, and the Sheriff's Aero Squadron. The Custody Enforcement Bureau contains the Detention Division and the Court Services Division.

Key Monterey County Sheriff's Office Divisions

References

  1. The November 3, 1864 edition of the San Francisco Alta had this say, "Died in Office: Aaron Lyons, Sheriff of the County of Monterey died at six o'clock yesterday evening"
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