by Laura Lieff
The Glendale Police Department started 2022 off with high honors. At the January 4 Glendale City Council meeting, officers from multiple divisions — including dispatchers, patrol officers, detectives, victims advocates, evidence technicians, and records technicians — were awarded a Unit Citation for their outstanding performance in two complex cases from 2017 and 2019.
“Everyone worked extremely hard on these complicated cases and that thoroughness resulted in identifying suspects and getting confessions,” says Chief William Haskins.
In October 2017, the manager was shot at Shotgun Willie’s when a small group was denied entry. As soon as the Glendale PD dispatchers received the call, they began collecting information which allowed officers to get to the club quickly and restore order in a chaotic situation. Haskins says the officers collected statements from people who were on scene and then detectives began digging through the information.
“Unfortunately, situations happen when there just isn’t enough information to show prosecutors,” Haskins explains. “But in this case, everyone continued pursuing every lead available until they were finally able to identify the suspect who was already in custody in federal prison on unrelated charges. Our detectives got a confession, and the suspect took a plea bargain for 18 years.”
Diligence And Hard Work
In November 2019, the Glendale PD received several calls at 3 a.m. about shots fired in the area. Officers arrived on scene and found a car, riddled with bullet holes, that had driven off the side of the road. The driver had also been shot to death. Although Haskins describes the amount of evidence as minuscule, Glendale detectives eventually figured out that the shooting was part of a much larger series of incidents involving the MS-13 crime gang operating in Colorado.
“We worked with other jurisdictions, the violent crimes task force, and ATF because the criminal subculture around MS-13 is that they don’t talk,” says Haskins. “By coordinating with these other agencies — and through good old-fashioned policework — they were able to identify the suspects and bring forth charges.”
As a result of the Glendale PD’s hard work and persistence, the District Attorney’s office felt they had enough evidence to prosecute. Although the MS-13 case is still ongoing, and hasn’t gone to trial yet, the Glendale team was able to put the pieces of the large, complex puzzle together and identify suspects.
FBI Training
In addition to the effort put into the 2017 and 2019 cases, the Glendale PD’s Command Staff — including Chief Haskins, one captain, and two lieutenants — took time to sharpen and update their skills by completing FBI Law Enforcement Executive Development Association (LEEDA) courses. According to the website, the FBI LEEDA provides executive law enforcement continuing education for police leaders across the United States.
LEEDA’s core training curriculum is comprised of three classes: Supervisor Institute, Command Institute, and Executive Institute. The Supervisor Institute covers personality diagnostics, leadership case studies, mentoring, performance and risk management, and credibility. The Command Institute discusses discipline and liability, dealing with problem employees, and leading change within an organization. The Executive Institute teaches trends in law enforcement, implications of the 21st Century Policing Report, bias and diversity, employee wellness, and transformational leadership.
According to Haskins, successfully completing just one of the three FBI LEEDA courses is a huge accomplishment for an individual. Completing all three — also known as the Trilogy Award — is extremely impressive. When an entire command staff takes law enforcement education even further by achieving all three, that is another level of excellence.
“When I took over as chief, I wanted Glendale to be the best police force in the nation, and that includes ongoing training at various levels,” Haskins explains. “This is a huge achievement for our department because it enables everyone to use the same tools to move the agency forward.”
Adds Mayor Mike Dunafon, “It’s an honor to work alongside the men and women of the Glendale Police Department. They work tirelessly to keep the citizens and businesses of Glendale safe and truly embody the spirit of the motto ‘to protect and serve.’”