Mission
and Values
Professional Standards
Partnership with the Community
History
Related Links
.
Our Mission
"Building on a century of service and achievement,
we are dedicated to reducing and preventing crime,
serving our community in partnership with the City
of New Haven."
Our Values
Values are ethical statements of principle
that bind us together as an organization. Values
form the ethical basis for our decision-making.
As individuals and as an organization, we subscribe
to these values:
Integrity:
Basing our decisions on what is legally and ethically
right, safeguarding the legal rights, privileges and
dignity of all people.
Trust:
Maintaining the highest level of trust and
honesty with those we serve by holding ourselves to
the highest standards of performance.
Commitment:
Exhibiting the spirit of determination and dedication
that leads to professionalism and the achievement
of excellence in every endeavor.
Courage:
Sustaining the mental, moral and physical strength necessary
to carry us through the challenges of policing.
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Professional Standards
The Yale University
Police Department takes very seriously its obligation to
investigate all allegations of police misconduct and
will take appropriate action when warranted. The
process for reporting any complaint against any member
of the department is simple and straightforward. Community members
should contact Police Communications at 432-4400 and request
to see a supervisory officer. A supervisor will respond and
take the initial complaint which most often can be resolved
expeditiously at that level. Should any complaint require
additional investigation, the matter will be referred
to the Office of the Chief who will assign the matter for
investigation.
Filing
a Civilian Complaint
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Partnership with the Community
The Yale University
Police Department takes great pride in being
part of the Greater New Haven community. Each of our
officers has full jurisdiction throughout the city of New
Haven, as conferred by the New Haven Board of Police Commissioners.
Our commitment to maintaining this relationship is best
exemplified in our mission statement:

"Building on
a century of service and achievement, we are dedicated to
reducing and preventing crime, serving our community in partnership
with the City of New Haven."


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History
In the late 1800's, relations between Yale students and townspeople
were particularly strained. Frequent confrontation between
them occurred. Many of these encounters were violent. Yale
students were extremely distrustful of the New Haven
Police Department since New Haven officers were often sent
to quell the disturbances. Many students felt that
the officers were prejudiced against them and that
they favored the side of the City.
The situation came
to a head early in 1894 when a rumor was circulated through
the City that Yale medical students had been removing recently
buried bodies from local cemeteries for use as cadavers. The
result was a mass riot in which many students and townspeople
were injured. As a result of the riots, a committee of
townspeople and Yale officials was formed. The committee recommended
that two New Haven police officers be assigned to the Yale
campus. The goal of the recommendation was the improvement
of relations between students and the police.
When a notice soliciting
volunteers was posted at the New Haven Police Department,
only two officers stepped forward, Bill Wiser and Jim Donnelly.
When both officers walked onto the campus in September 1894,
there were many who thought that they would never return.
In some ways, they were right.
In his 1914 book,
Yale Memories, Bill Wiser wrote:
"In 1894, Jim Donnelly and I were assigned by the chief
of the New Haven police to duty the Yale campus. No policeman
before this time had ventured on these sacred grounds, and
the campus had come to be considered a place of refuge for
students fleeing from the wrath of the city police. Naturally,
the boys would be outraged and they would keenly resent the
appointment. All of this was foreseen by the New Haven Board
of Police Commissioners, for various reasons, it seemed to
them absolutely necessary that such a step should be taken.
No one was over eager to be offered as the victim in working
out the proposition. The whole scheme was peculiar, the
situation untried and from what was known regarding the relationship
between students and city police, the appointment as patrol
of the campus was undesirable from any standpoint. The general
belief on the force was that the Yale boys would never permit
two policemen to live on campus."
Despite the perceived
tensions, Bill Wiser and Jim Donnelly entered the campus and
established the first University police department. At first,
students looked on them with distrust.

-Wiser
(left) & Donnelly (right) in Yale Police Headquarters,
Middle Hall, 1894
"From our very
first appearance on the campus, we felt that we were obnoxious
to the college boys. They, one and all, from freshman to seniors,
never lost an opportunity to make us realize that we were
not wanted. We were, in a way, a mystery. They did not know
by what authority we had been placed there. They did not know,
but strongly suspected, that the object was to watch them
or to spy on their actions, and they heartily resented this.
Had they not always been exempt from interference of any kind
while on their own ground? Why, then, should these two cops
be permitted to enter the charmed and secret enclosure?"
Bill Wiser and Jim
Donnelly had their work cut out for them. They were both
experienced police officers and had volunteered for this unwanted
and unpleasant assignment. They were determined to make the
best of it. Commenting on the qualifications necessary for
the assignment, Wiser wrote, "The commissioners fully
realized the situation. They knew that the men appointed to
this duty must have some judgment, tact, and good horse sense,
and even so, there could be no assurance of success."
Faced with the the
fact that they were tackling a job that no one else wanted
and in addition, a job possessing such a dismal outlook, Bill
Wiser and Jim Donnelly did their best to set about their tasks.
Arriving in September of 1894, a few days before classes started,
Wiser and Donnelly "felt as green perhaps as
the incoming freshmen but determined to do or die." Wiser
and Donnelly felt that they had been placed into a defensive
position between the whole Yale campus undergraduate body
and college and police authorities. They determined that
their duties were to, "protect the students, their property,
and all college property from injury." There had
been a history of thefts from student rooms. "Vagrant
peddlers and other objectionable persons had been allowed
on the college grounds, had access to student rooms and could
steal with little fear of detection." When Yale
officials realized the magnitude and obstacles Wiser and Donnelly
faced, they took measures to aid them. "The Yale authorities,
realizing the ground we had to cover, and the many things
we had to distract our attention, and take us from the
campus, decided that our whole time at Yale should be devoted
to safeguarding Yale buildings and premises. After a
short trial, that arrangement was made permanent. Then Jim
and I found ourselves real officials of Yale and housed on
campus."
As their first order
of business, Wiser and Donnelly kept people who did not belong
on campus, off campus. After that, Wiser and Donnelly began
to establish rapport with the students. At first, this
was difficult. After all, they were members of the New Haven
Police Department.
"As we were
first wholly on the City patrol we were obliged to report
at police headquarters like other roundsmen on the force.
To get to headquarters, we had to cross the green. The students
seeing us, concluded that we went to report all that we knew
about them. Then too, we were in constant communication with
the Dean as well as police, so it was hard for the boys to
believe that it was anyone but us who reported them."
In time, Wiser and
Donnelly, to everyone's surprise, established a rapport with
the students and gained their trust.
Their initial success
engendered other problems:
"As our acquaintance and friendship with the boys was
constantly on the increase, it came to our knowledge that
our success had excited envy in many quarters. The position
which we had made for ourselves by hard work, constant service,
civility, kindness, and patience, so attracted others that
we had trouble of a different nature to fight. Members of
the regular force, now that students did not openly resent
our presence, desired to take our places on the campus, and
were watching for an opportunity to turn things their way.
Pressure had been brought to bear on the commissioners to
transfer Jim and myself, and appoint others to our places.
We promptly resigned from the City police force, were
made special constables, and adopted a uniform of our own
choosing and design."
Thus began the history
of the Yale University Police Department as an independent
law enforcement agency uniquely and intimately tied to the
City of New Haven and its police department, serving both
the University and New Haven communities.
Bill Wiser and Jim
Donnelly would not recognize the City, campus, or the police
department today. Many things have changed in the past hundred
plus years.
While many things
have changed, some things never do:
"I should advise any young man intending to take a college
course, to come to New Haven. Come to Yale and drink from
this wonderful fountain. Come to the best place to learn life's
lesson. Come and patrol the Yale Campus with Jim Donnelly
and yours truly, Bill Wiser."
In the intervening
years, thousands of students and hundreds of police officers
have answered Bill Wiser's call. Yale students have established
the reputation of the University as a world-class institution
of higher learning. The police officers that followed Bill
Wiser and Jim Donnelly have created a diverse, professional,
and respected law enforcement agency.
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Related Links
Local Agencies
Yale University
Doorway to a wealth of information about Yale University
City
of New Haven
Information about New Haven including news, development, and
a guide to the city
New
Haven Police Department
Link to information about the department and its programs
and resources for the community
South
Central Criminal Justice Administration
SCCJA Home Page; Agency provides management support services
to the 18 municipalities of South Central Connecticut; Information
on Testing, Training, Regional Coordination, & Research
Yale
Police Benevolent Association
The YPBA is an independent labor union that represents the
sworn officers and detectives of the Yale University Police
Department.
State Agencies
State
of Connecticut
Provides information on the Connecticut government, agencies
& organizations, towns & cities, education, and other
areas of interest
Connecticut
Department of Public Safety
Provides information on the Connecticut State Police, the
Division of Fire, Emergency & Building Services, &
the Division of Scientific Services as well as other information
concerning the function and services of the department
Connecticut
Department of Motor Vehicles
Provides information on vehicle registration, emissions, driver's
licenses, etc.
Police
Officer Standards & Training Council
Find information on various police agencies, basic recruit
training, in-service training, etc.
Connecticut
Police Chiefs Association
Provides information about the association, membership, news,
and the annual expo
National Agencies
Federal
Bureau of Investigation
Provides a wealth of information about the agency, including
press releases, the most wanted list, a library & reference
section, etc.
U.S. Immigration & Naturalization Service
Provides information on immigration services, law enforcement
& border management, public affairs, etc.
Bureau
of Alcohol, Tobacco, & Firearms
Provides information on the bureau, recent news, most wanted,
regulations, publications, etc.
Additional Resources
National
Criminal Justice Reference Service
Provides information on law enforcement, drugs & crime,
juvenile justice, victims of crime, statistics, etc
Office
of Postsecondary Education Campus Security Statistics Web
Site
U.S. Department of Education's OPE Campus Security Statistics
web site; Provides information on reported criminal offenses
for over 6000 U.S. colleges and universities
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