Baltimore City Sheriff's Office (Maryland)

Last updated
Baltimore City Sheriff's Office
Agency overview
Formed1845
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionBaltimore, Maryland, USA
Map of Maryland highlighting Baltimore City.svg
Map of Baltimore City Sheriff's Office's jurisdiction
Size92.1 square miles (239 km2)
Population620,961
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters Baltimore, Maryland
Agency executive
Website
http://sheriff.baltimorecity.gov

The Baltimore City Sheriff's Office is the law enforcement arm of the Circuit Court of Maryland, serving Baltimore City, Maryland. The office is headquartered in the Baltimore City Circuit Courthouses (specifically Courthouse West) which also serves as the sites for Baltimore City branch of the Circuit Court of Maryland.

Contents

The Sheriff is an elected office without terms limits. The current Sheriff is Sam Cogen, having been in the position since 2022. [1]

Authority & Responsibility

Baltimore City Deputy Sheriffs have the same full law enforcement powers as officers in the Baltimore City Police Department. As law-enforcement officers, sworn members must meet established standards and successfully complete a rigorous training program as required by the Maryland Police and Correctional Training Commission. The Sheriff is directly responsible to the citizenry, thus only the Sheriff and Deputy Sheriffs have the authority to enforce Civil, Criminal, and Traffic Laws on behalf of the state. All sworn members of the Sheriff's Office are agents of the state of Maryland and thus have authority throughout the entire state, although their direct jurisdictional boundary is the eighth Judicial Circuit of Maryland which is also known as the Circuit Court of Maryland for Baltimore City (prior to the constitutional amendments and court reorganization in the early 1970s, previously known as the "Supreme Bench of Baltimore City").

History

The Baltimore City Sheriff's Office is unique among the other sheriff's offices in Maryland in that it was established with the sole purpose to be the enforcement arm of the court system in Baltimore City. Every other jurisdiction in the colonial Province of Maryland was established with a sheriff who had the responsibility to be fully responsible for the keeping of public peace as derived from the English "Common Law" system. With a growing port was established in 1706 and a town was founded in 1729 and laid out the following year. With the merger of three distinct villages of Jones's Town (1732) with Baltimore Town in 1745 along with Fells Point (1763) annexed in 1773. Recognizing its quick growth, the town was later incorporated as a city in 1797. The position of Sheriff of Baltimore City was created by a constitutional amendment passed in 1844. At this time Baltimore City was still a part of Baltimore County and had been served by the sheriff for the entire County of which Baltimore Town and later City was the county seat (since relocated in 1767 from old Joppa) and the central location of the courts and other law enforcement activities in Baltimore County since it was "erected" (created) in 1659. (Baltimore County Sheriff's Office). In 1845, the Baltimore City Sheriff's Office began operation and the Baltimore City Police Department was later authorized in 1853. Prior to this time a guard force of constables and night watchmen since the early 1780s were authorized to enforce town laws and arrest those in violation. In 1851, by action of the General Assembly of Maryland, the city was separated as a distinct jurisdiction and independent city within the state with the status of a county unto itself. The new county seat was moved to the town of Towson, just north of the new independent City of Baltimore and all county functions were centered there with the construction in 1854 of a new Baltimore County Court House on a square facing Washington Avenue between Pennsylvania and Chesapeake Avenues.

Sheriff's of Baltimore City


TermNameNotes [2]
1845-1848John Kettlewell
1848-1851Charles F. Cloud
1851-1853John Hayes
1853-1855John Hyndes
1855-1857Samuel Gaskins
1857-1859Thomas Creamer
1859-1861George D. Hutton
1861-1863Edward R. Sparks
1863-1865John J. Daneker
1867-1869William Thompson
1865-1867Augustus Albert
1869-1871John W. Davis
1871-1873George P. Kane
1873-1875Augustus Albert
1875-1877Samuel S. Mills
1877-1879Philip Snowden
1879-1881Alfred E. Smyrk
1881-1883John F. Hunter
1883-1885William F. Airey
1885-1887H. D. Fledderman
1887-1889George May
1889-1891George MacCaffray
1891-1893Isaac S. Sanner
1893-1895Timothy Maloney
1895-1897Stephen R. Mason
1897-1899Edmund M. Hoffman
1899-1901John B. Schwatka
1901-1903Samuel G. Davis
1903-1905William H. Green
1905-1907George W. Padgett
1907-1909Robert J. Padgett
1909-1911John J. Hanson
1911-1913Theodore P. Weis
1913-1923Thomas F. McNulty
1923-1930John E. Potee
1930-1963Joseph C. Deegan
1963-1974Frank J. Pelz
1974-1986George W. Freeberger
1986-1989Shelton J. Stewart
1989-2022John W. Anderson
2022-presentSam Cogen

Sections & Specialty Units

Field Enforcement Section

Baltimore City is divided into 21 districts. Each district is assigned a deputy to serve and execute all legal documents and orders issued for respondents living within these district areas. In addition, deputies are assigned to execute all sheriffs' sales for real property and chattels.

District Court Section

Deputies in this section are charged with the execution of all procedures originating from the Rent Court including Eviction Orders.

Child Support Section

Deputies assigned to this section serve and execute all documents received from the Child Support Enforcement Administration which deals with non-support cases.

Child Support Warrant Unit

Deputies assigned to this unit locate and arrest individuals wanted on Child Support warrants in Baltimore City.

Transportation Unit

Within this unit deputy sheriff's are responsible for providing transportation for the transfer of prisoners on a daily basis from the sheriff's holding facility to the place of incarceration, to which prisoners have been remanded.

Criminal Warrant Unit

Deputies are assigned to this unit to execute arrest warrants, such as Failure to Appear (FTA), Violation of Probation (VOP), Body Attachments and Paternity. These warrants are issued out of the Circuit Court of Maryland for Baltimore City.

Miles/Warrant Control- Baltimore City Circuit Court Warrants are housed and entered in a national and local database, which enables every law enforcement agency, throughout the State to verify criminal and warrant information quickly. This unit is staffed at all times by operators working 3 shifts.

K-9 Unit

Trained explosive detection dogs and their handlers patrol the two Circuit Courthouses and the Baltimore Juvenile Justice Center on a regular basis as part of the Sheriff's Homeland Security initiative.

Witness Protection Unit

Deputies from this unit assist the Baltimore City State's Attorney Office in the movement, safekeeping and protection of witnesses.

See also

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References

  1. Opilo, Emily (December 1, 2022). "Sam Cogen, Baltimore's first new sheriff in 30-plus years, ends policy of posting eviction notices on shared doors". The Baltimore Sun . Retrieved December 2, 2022.
  2. "Baltimore City Sheriffs, 1845-present".