Gwinnett County Police Department

Law enforcement agency From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gwinnett County Police Department

The Gwinnett County Police Department (GCPD) is the main law enforcement agency in Gwinnett County, Georgia. The department has about a thousand employees with 936 sworn law enforcement officers as of March 2024.[2] The current incumbent Chief of Police is James D. McClure.[4]

Quick Facts Abbreviation, Motto ...
Gwinnett County Police Department
AbbreviationGCPD
MottoIntegrity, Courtesy, Pride and Professional Growth[1]
Agency overview
Employees1,258 (2024)[2]
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionGeorgia, United States
Legal jurisdictionUnincorporated areas of Gwinnett County, Georgia, with 6 different precincts. (the urban areas of Auburn, Braselton, Duluth, Lawrenceville, Lilburn, Loganville, Norcross, Snellville and Suwanee having separate police departments)[3]
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters800 Hi Hope Rd, Lawrenceville, Georgia
Sworn members936 (2024)
Civilians322 (2024)
Agency executive
Child agency
  • Gwinnett County Sheriff's Office
Facilities
Holding FacilitiesGwinnett County Jail
Website
Official Website
Close
Gwinnett County police car in 2003

History

Summarize
Perspective

Fallen officers

As of 2024, the department has suffered eight officers and two K9 service dogs killed throughout its history.[5]

More information Officer, Date of death ...
Close
More information K9, Date of death ...
Fallen K9s
K9 Date of death Cause of death
K9 Eli Thursday, May 23, 2019 Heatstroke
K9 Blue Thursday, September 10, 2020 Gunfire
Close

Three of the fallen officers were murdered on April 17th, 1964 in a single attack.[6] The department had about a dozen officers at the time.[6] Three of them were driving home in one car, as they came upon three men who were stripping a stolen car for parts. The bodies of Officers Ralph King Davis, Jerry Reed Everett and Marvin Jesse Gravitt were found bound in their own handcuffs and shot with their own guns.[7] The perpetrators, Venson Williams and Alec Evans were sentenced to death for the murders. Both sentences were commuted to life in 1971. Williams was released on parole in 1989. Evans died in prison in 2016, having served fifty years for the murder. The third perpetrator, Wade Truett cooperated with the government in exchange for immunity.[6]

In media

In 2019, the department was featured on episodes of the police documentary television series The First 48.[8]

Starting in 2022 a True Crime podcast hosted by Sean Kipe through the Imperative Entertainment podcast network, “In the Land of Lies: The Michael Chapel Story”, focuses on allegations of police corruption within the Gwinnett County Police Department and questioning if the conviction of former GCPD officer Michael Chapel for the murder of Emogene Thompson in 1993 was a set up to frame and falsely convict Chapel while protecting the real murderers.[9]

Organization

The department is organized with two bureaus and four divisions: Administrative Services, Support Operations, Criminal Investigations and Uniform Divisions.[2]

See also

References

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.