Saturday, December 13, 2008

Asheville Police Department, APD

Chief William Hogan - Asheville North Carolina Police Department

Mission: The City of Asheville Police Department is dedicated to providing public safety and maintaining order; enforcing the laws of North Carolina, upholding the United States Constitution and enhancing national security. The City of Asheville is committed to supporting a safe city with safe neighborhoods.

Guiding Principles: The Asheville Police Department will achieve its mission by committing to excellence through:

Integrity - Honesty, compassion, trust, and accountability. Police officers have the courage to do what is morally, ethically, and legally right regardless of risk.

Fairness - The Police Department will treat everyone impartially without favoritism or bias.

Respect - The Police Department will treat everyone with dignity and courtesy without prejudice.

Professionalism = The Police Department will deliver quality services through cooperation, open communication and a commitment to continuous improvement.

About the Department: The Asheville Police Department is made up of 241 sworn and non-sworn men and women. The department also utilizes the strengths, experiences and specialties of more than 150 volunteers. The Asheville Police Department is a nationally accredited police department through the Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies. Review the Asheville Police Department's 2006 Annual Report. * If you have an emergency, call 9-1-1. *

Contact Information: Asheville Police Department Chief William Hogan, Location: 100 Court Plaza, Asheville, NC, 28801. Mailing: P.O. Box 7148, Asheville, NC 28802. Office Hours: 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday-Friday. Non-emergency: (828) 252-1110 Chief’s Office: (828) 259-5880 Chief's E-mail: whogan@ashevillenc.gov. For more info, please visit http://www.ashevillenc.gov/

1 Comment:

Anonymous said...

dear chief i think the fairness of your officers is a bit wrong with some of your younger officers i had a run in with sean p davis friday and he was not fair at all. you look at the officers and think their your friend and will help you but when a officers forces you to do something that your not phyically able to do and your arrested for it, how can you look at the police department any different then how i see them, theres only so much a person can do with a foot thats been broken, it never heals right, iam not saying you dont have some fine officers and most do a great job but some need more sensitive turn to partially handicapp people

 
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