Warrior Police Department: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with "The '''Warrior Police Department''' serves the City of Warrior, a city of 3,210 in northern Jefferson County. The Chief of Police is Scott Praytor. The department...") |
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The department employs 11–15 sworn officers and 7 dispatchers. | The department employs 11–15 sworn officers and 7 dispatchers. | ||
In [[2023]] the Department conducted an internal investigation of alleged brutality by a Warrior officer following a car chase of a suspect in a rape and kidnapping which ended on [[Alabama State Highway 160]] in [[Hayden]]. | |||
==Chiefs== | ==Chiefs== | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
* Robinson, Carol (June 10, 2021) "Veteran lawman Scott Praytor named Warrior’s top cop." {{BN}} | * Robinson, Carol (June 10, 2021) "Veteran lawman Scott Praytor named Warrior’s top cop." {{BN}} | ||
* Robinson, Carol (June 6, 2023) "Warrior police punching of kidnapping, sex assault suspect under investigation, chief says." {{AL}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Latest revision as of 12:20, 8 June 2023
The Warrior Police Department serves the City of Warrior, a city of 3,210 in northern Jefferson County. The Chief of Police is Scott Praytor.
The department employs 11–15 sworn officers and 7 dispatchers.
In 2023 the Department conducted an internal investigation of alleged brutality by a Warrior officer following a car chase of a suspect in a rape and kidnapping which ended on Alabama State Highway 160 in Hayden.
Chiefs
- Ray Horn, 1996–2021
- Scott Praytor, 2021–
References
- Robinson, Carol (June 10, 2021) "Veteran lawman Scott Praytor named Warrior’s top cop." The Birmingham News
- Robinson, Carol (June 6, 2023) "Warrior police punching of kidnapping, sex assault suspect under investigation, chief says." AL.com
External links
- Warrior Police Department at cityofwarrior.ning.com