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Police Chief
Ellis C. Jackson commands and leads the Thomasville Police
department. Chief Jackson has been with the department since 1976
serving the community for 32 years. He has gained his experience by
serving the agency as a patrol officer, Corporal, Detective, Patrol
Sergeant, Lieutenant: Watch Commander, Criminal Investigations
Commander, Captain, Patrol Division Commander, and was appointed to
the Chief of Police in February 2007. Chief Jackson has a
bachelor’s degree in Criminal Justice from Thomas University, 1984
graduate of the FBI National Academy: 136 session and a 2005
graduate of the Georgia Command College: Class 17.
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From the Office of
the Chief of Police
Greetings,
February
16, 2007, I was named Police Chief of Thomasville. I
began my career with the police department on October 26
1976. During the past thirty years, I have seen this
community and agency change in many different ways.
Crimes today are a lot different, so the way our agency
responds to crime had to change with society. The
department has been fortunate to have Community leaders
and Chiefs that have always been able to think ahead
making forecasts as to what paths must be taken to
insure the needs are met. My mission remains the same as
my predecessors; it is to provide the highest standards
of service in partnership with the community in which I
serve. In my strive to meet the challenges of tomorrow
and today, the agency must understand what are the
concerns in the community, and do we have the proper
training and equipment to get the job done. The
Thomasville Police Department has always listened to the
community to address concerns.
Some years ago former Chief John Perry introduced a new
concept to the department called Community Oriented
Policing (COP). The concept involved a new way in
which officers conducted their day-to-day duties that
involved all sectors of the department from
Administration, to Criminal Investigation and Patrol
Division. We had to transition from “secret police
stuff” to actually sharing information with the
public and receiving feedback from all the sectors of
the community to help provide a better and higher
quality of service for the citizens of Thomasville.
Former Chief David Huckstep accepted the concept of
COP and took it to the next level. The department
began to turn its focus on actual problem resolution in
the community to make the city safer. Neighborhood Watch
groups were revitalized and new ones added, School
Resource Officers were added to City Schools, and new
technology was introduced to aid in the proactive
strategies to combat criminal activity. The agency has
strived to become futurist thinkers to continue the
efforts to provide the best police service in South West
Georgia.
It is my intention to continue in our efforts to provide
the quality of service that our citizens have always
expected from this agency. I believe the concept of
COP is what makes the community proud of its
department. It is the responsibility of the Police Chief
to insure the men and women employed with the
Thomasville Police understand my definition and
philosophy of this renewing concept from year-to-year.
My philosophy of community policing is citizens and
police officers working together in creative ways to
help solve existing community problems related to crime,
fear of crime, social and physical disorder, and
neighborhood decay. From this perspective, change is
called for not only in police responsibilities but also
in the goals, operations and management of the police
department from the Chief’s office. It is my objective
to properly equip our officers with the necessary tools
it takes to meet the goals we set. These goals include
having a sound quality of life environment, safe
neighborhoods, arresting those that violate the laws of
the State or violate Local Ordinances, and stopping
neighborhood decay by actively participating with other
departments of city government. There is a lot more to
COP than attending the next neighborhood watch
meetings and responding to calls for service. I expect
for our officers to go the extra mile in finding the
solutions for neighborhoods that are infested with drug
sales and usage, complaints of loud music, thefts from
vehicles, burglaries, speeding vehicles, assaults,
rapes, reporting street lights out, signal lights
malfunctioning, high visibility at accident prone
intersections, finding assistance referrals, finding
resources for people in need, and etc.
We are the cutting edge of COP. Our department
has been the model for other agencies to follow since
the very start of COP. COP does not represent
turning our heads or closing your eyes on crime. It
represents being proactive all the time in strategizing
to lessen the opportunities for criminal activity. It
means listening and taking notes to analyze intelligence
to predict and prevent crimes from taking place. It
means using intelligence to put together an undercover
surveillance team on drug dealers and gathering enough
evidence to secure an arrest warrant. COP has
been the lifeblood of the department. The COP concepts
will continue to be the fuel that makes our citizens
proud of their agency, all because we care about the
quality of life in our community.
Ellis C. Jackson
Chief of Police
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