Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office | |
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Badge of the Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office
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Motto | Expect the Best |
Agency overview | |
Legal personality | Governmental: Government agency |
Jurisdictional structure | |
Legal jurisdiction | Milwaukee County, Wisconsin |
General nature | |
Operational structure | |
Headquarters | 821 W. State Street Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53233 United States |
Sworn members | 250 |
Sheriff responsible | vacant |
Bureaus |
4
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Website | |
www |
The Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office is the principal law enforcement agency that serves Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. At one time it was the largest sheriff's department in the state of Wisconsin, with about 720 Deputy sheriffs. By 2015 the agency had reduced the number of sworn personnel to approximately 225. The sheriff's office of Milwaukee County was recently headed by, David A. Clarke, Jr., who resigned on August 31, 2017. Clarke's successor will be appointed by Governor Scott Walker, at a later date.
The Administrative Services Bureau contains the Open Records Division, Central Records Unit, Media Relations, Clerical Staff, Traffic Desk and Special Events.
The Detention Bureau handles inmate health, transportation, food services, inmate housing, property, jail records, visiting, classification, central booking records and warrants.
In addition to countywide patrol services; the Police Services Bureau oversees the Airport Division, Explosive Ordnance Disposal/Bomb Unit, Drug Enforcement, Civil Process Unit, TEU, Motorcycle Unit and K9 Operations.
Additionally, the Courts Division has been incorporated into the Police Services Bureau and provides Bailiff services for the largest court system in the State of Wisconsin.
Since the establishment of the Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office, 12 officers have died in the line of duty. For 11 years, the Milwaukee County Law Enforcement Executives Association, in conjunction with the Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Office and the Milwaukee Police Department, has hosted the Greater Milwaukee Law Enforcement Memorial Ceremony annually in May. The event, which honors Milwaukee County law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty, is part of the National Law Enforcement Memorial Week.
Weapons and other duty equipment
Vehicles: