Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

’22 was renewal year, say police in Fort Smith

Department rebuilding, and serious crimes down by 10%

- MONICA BRICH

FORT SMITH — After years marked by floods and the covid-19 pandemic, 2022 was a time for rebuilding and renewal for the Fort Smith Police Department, according to Chief Danny Baker.

Baker said the department was able to refocus its efforts on several issues and gave examples as part of the department’s annual report to city directors Tuesday.

Baker said the department received 144,789 calls in 2022, 64,098 of which were 911 emergency calls. He said these calls included 5,813 patrol requests, 6,773 animal control requests and 15,227 Fire Department requests.

Baker said the department was within five positions of being fully staffed in early 2020, and then George Floyd died at the hands of Minneapoli­s police.

“Anti-police sentiment nationwide was at the highest that I’ve seen in my 25 years in this profession,” Baker said. “The pressure, whether real or perceived, resulted in another mass exodus of police officers from our ranks. The creation of several other small police agencies within our city limits also contribute­d to the loss of officers from our department.” The department was down 40 police officers, he added.

Baker said the department stepped up to the challenge and revamped its recruiting and hiring process, hiring 38 police officers in 2022 and reaching full staffing. He said the department is continuing to attract and retain officers, which he thinks is due in part to its intense focus on officer health and well-being.

“We’ve taken a number of intentiona­l steps to ensure that we protect our most valuable investment and resource: our employees. Supervisor­s are trained and admonished to make sure officers and dispatcher­s who had been exposed to critical incidents receive timely, profession­al counseling and wellness opportunit­ies,” Baker said.

Baker said the department saw an over 10% decrease in serious crimes, which include homicide, sexual assault, robbery, arson, burglary, larceny and motor vehicle theft. He said the department reduced the number of people incarcerat­ed by over 50%, and he noted the number of foster care children in Sebastian County dropped by 38%.

“Aggravated assaults, sexual assaults and motor vehicle thefts continue to dominate our crime stats in 2022, but I think it’s important to note that the vast majority of those assaults are domestic, familial or drug-related, they’re not assaults by strangers,” Baker said. “Vehicle thefts by and large result from owners leaving their vehicles unlocked with the keys either in the ignition or in the vehicle, and most generally the suspects have been juveniles.”

Baker said traffic incidents slightly decreased from 3,061 in 2021 to 2,928 in 2022. He said the criminal investigat­ion division was assigned 2,727 cases and cleared 2,529 for a 92.74% clearance rate.

Baker said narcotics continues to be a significan­t concern for the department, and it is committed to combating drug-related offenses.

“We work very closely with state and federal partners to disrupt the internatio­nal drug trade,” Baker said. “The top three illegal drugs seized by the narcotics unit in 2022 were methamphet­amine, fentanyl and marijuana. This is consistent with drug trends in our region of the nation.”

Ward 4 Director George Catsavis recalled 10 to 15 years ago when the Police Department was short roughly 50 officers and had many vehicles out of order. He asked Baker why the department has come such a long way.

“For one, we live in a very supportive community,” Baker said. “People love their Police Department. … As a younger officer coming up through it, it certainly wasn’t pleasant to experience some of the things that we went through, but if I’ve learned anything at this point in my life, nothing good comes from being comfortabl­e, and out of discomfort there’s always growth.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States