Buffalo Police Department


The Buffalo Police Department is the second-largest city police force in the state of New York. In 2012, it had over nine hundred employees, including over seven hundred police officers.
The Buffalo Police Commissioner is Byron C. Lockwood after Commissioner Daniel Derenda retired to the private sector. The deputy commissioner is Joseph Gramgalia.
In 2020, the BPD was in the national spotlight after a video showed BPD officers shoving a 75-year old man to the ground, causing a skull injury and bleeding from his head while they walked past him without giving him treatment.

History

The City of Buffalo Police Department was established in 1871, taking over for the previous Niagara Frontier Police District that oversaw not only Buffalo, but also Tonawanda and Wheatfield. The first BPD force had 204 men.
Fifty-one Buffalo police officers have died in the line of duty. The first of these was George Dill who was shot and killed in 1865.
The BPD appointed its first female police officer prior to World War I.
The department hired George C. Sarsnett, its first Black policeman in 1919. He served the city for nineteen years dying of natural causes in 1937. The second Black policeman, hired that same year was Oliver M. Bragg. He was promoted to detective and stayed with the police until his retirement in 1946.
In 1930 the department changed the design of its badges. Press reports at the time indicated that Mayor Frank X. Schwab had distributed official badges to his friends causing confusion.
In 2018, the BPD, along with the Buffalo Fire Department, moved into a new joint headquarters building in the former Michael J. Dillon Federal Courthouse.

Police misconduct and other controversies

The BPD has a history of police brutality and racial profiling, in addition to other alleged controversies. In its early days, the department was alleged to primarily serve upper-class business interests in Buffalo, including to quell labor unrest; business interests controlled the police commissioners and the superintendents.
The department has also been accused of retaliation against officers who attempt to stop police misconduct. In one such prominent case, in 2006, BPD officer Cariol Horne intervened when Gregory Kwiatkowski, a white officer, was choking a handcuffed black suspect. Horne claimed that Kwiatkowski punched her in the face, while Kwiatkowski claimed Horne had jumped on him while he was struggling with the suspect. The incident was not filmed. An internal investigation resulted in no other officer supporting Horne's claims. For her intervention, she was fired and lost her pension one year before it went into effect. Kwiatkowski was eventually jailed in 2009 after using excessive force on four handcuffed black teenagers. Kwiatkowski was forced to retire after assaulting two other officers in separate incidents, but was permitted to keep his pension.
Press reports in 2019 indicated the Department had an unwritten policy since at least 1968 to not arrest Catholic priests. Although retired officers said they had never released a priest who had had sexual contact with a child, those detained for public masturbation or sexual activity with an adult were released after a phone call to the local diocese. The clergy of other faiths were not offered the same policy.

Niagara Square shoving incident

On June 4, 2020, amid the George Floyd protests in New York state, police officers from the Buffalo Police Department pushed 75-year-old Martin Gugino during a confrontation in Buffalo's Niagara Square, causing him to fall to the ground which left him bleeding from the ear. He was brought to the hospital and was in "serious but stable condition." Two days later he was still listed as being in "critical condition" at Erie County Medical Center. He suffered a brain injury as a result of the fall and was still unable to walk nearly two weeks after the assault. The BPD claimed in their official statement that the man "tripped and fell". Following the incident, Buffalo mayor Byron Brown announced impending changes to the BPD.

Squads

The department has several different squads used for specialized situations.
Crime rates in the city are above national and state averages.
Violent Crime:
Rate, BuffaloRate, New York StateRate, United States
10.223.574.0

Districts

The Department has five districts: A-District, B-District, C-District, D-District, and E-District. Each district has a certain area of the city for which it is responsible; Each district is broken further into sectors.
Each district has a chief and one or two captains:
DistrictDistrict chiefNeighborhoods covered
ARobert JoyceSouth Buffalo
BDawn KentDowntown
CAlphonso WrightEastside
DAnthony BarbaRiverside
ECarmen MenzaUniversity Heights

Equipment

;Buffalo Police Special Weapons and Tactics