Los Angeles School Police Department
The Los Angeles School Police Department is a law enforcement agency in Los Angeles, California, whose duties are to provide police services to the Los Angeles Unified School District, also enforcing state and city laws. LASPD officers assist staff with disturbances and potential criminal activity on the campuses and in the surrounding communities on a daily basis.
Organization
The Los Angeles School Police Department was established in August 1948 to provide police services to the Los Angeles Unified School District. The department deploys six police divisions with assignments consisted of Canine, Youth Services Divisions, Safe Passages, Honor Guard, C.R.T., Communications, Recruitment, Training Unit, Fleet Management, Payroll Section, Budget Services Unit, Records Unit, and Crime Analysis Unit.Responsibility
24 hours a day, the LASPD is responsible for providing police services to:- A jurisdiction covering
- Approximately 618,000 students
- Approximately 72,000 teachers, administrators and additional school staff
- Approximately 1,300 schools, centers, and administrative offices
Ranks
The LASPD deploys sworn personnel in a variety of ranks:| Title | Insignia |
| Chief of police | |
| Deputy chief of police | |
| Police lieutenant | |
| Police sergeant | |
| Police detective | |
| Senior police officer | |
| Police officer | |
| Police recruit |
Assignments
Assignments within the Police Department include:- Campus Police Officer
- Patrol Officer
- Field Training Officer
- Criminal Investigation
- Canine
- Special Investigation
- Background Investigation
- Training and Support Services
- Traffic Enforcement
- Technology
- Police Explorers
- Special Response Team
- Supervising School Safety Officer
- School Safety Officer
- Police Dispatcher
- Specialist Reserve Officer
- Records, payroll, subpoena and other clerical support staff
Controversy
The Los Angeles School Police Department has accepted crowd- and disturbance-control weapons including one armored vehicle and firearms from the federal government. Superintendent Ramon Cortines of LA Unified School District confirmed in June 2015 that the district's police force has ended its involvement in a federal program that delivered military-grade weapons to school districts. The decision on the so-called 1033 Program came on the heels of President Obama‘s announcement in May that he was severely restricting the parameters of the program.On June 23, 2020, following student activism inspired by the Black Lives Matter movement, the LA Unified School District school board considered three resolutions to begin de-funding of the department. Also at issue was the departments use of pepper spray, which had been used 11 times during the 2018–19 school year.