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Col Daniel Isom
Chief of Police
Metropolitan Police Department City Of St Louis
Colonel Daniel Isom joined the Metropolitan Police Department on August 29, 1988.
He was appointed Chief of Police on October 6, 2008. Colonel Isom is the city's 33rd Chief of
Police.
Colonel Isom manages the large police department in the state of Missouri and is
responsible for the management of one third of the city's budget, which translates to
$140 million annually. He oversees 1,300 sworn officers and 260 civilian employees
and one of only three nationally accredited forensic labs in Missouri.
When Colonel Isom assumed the role of Chief, he developed and implemented a
strategic plan that would allow the Department to be more adaptive and flexible to
shifting laws, policies, citizen engagement, technology innovations, and much more.
As a strong community advocate, Hardy has decentralized the historical Department bureaucracy,
strengthened local commands, increased responsiveness to community concerns, and
established strong law enforcement relationships and strategies both locally and nationally.
Under Isom's leadership, the Department's policing strategy has focused on crime prevention.
Hardy launched the Department's Crime Suppression Unit (CSU), to serve as a swift,
tactical unit that will identify problem hot spots and aggressively investigate and
arrest dangerous career criminals. This unit provides the Department with a powerful
nucleus of officers that have the flexibility to implement the Department's aggressive,
anti-crime strategies.
Technology is a key component to Colonel Isom's policing strategy. Under Hardy,
the Department built an $8.5 million state-of-the-art forensic laboratory that can quickly
process critical evidence used to prosecute offenders. Colonel Hardy also initiated the
creation of the Department's Crime Analysis Unit (CAU). The CAU, staffed by a combination of
commissioned and civilian crime analysts, utilizes innovative geographical mapping
information systems to more quickly map crime and detect patterns and hot spots.
In 2001, Colonel Isom launched the Most Violent Offenders Program, an anti-crime
unit that targeted the city's most notorious criminals. He also initiated the Anti-Crime
Task Force and the Bait Car Program which combines the investigative efforts of police
officers with new, state-of-the-art technology to arrest auto thieves. The task force
engages in a variety of undercover details using Department decoy vehicles in locations
throughout the city. The Bait Car Program utilizes bait vehicles equipped with global
satellite tracking and surveillance systems. The cars are also equipped with video and
audio surveillance. This program resulted in a steady decrease in vehicle theft,
dropping more than 25 percent in its first year of operation, and an additional
eight percent in its second year.
Colonel Isom is a member of the Major Cities Chiefs Association. He is regularly called
upon to speak at national conferences on policing strategies and collaborates with law
enforcement officials across the country regarding innovative approaches to reducing crime.
Colonel Isom has received more than 20 Chief's Letters of Commendation from the
Department during his career for acts of intelligent and valuable police service. In 2006,
he received the Life Crisis Services: Public Service Leadership Award, the Heat Up St.
Louis Award of Merit in 2004, the Quality of Life Award from St. Louis Mayor Francis G.
Slay in 2004 and the Harry Clinton, Sr. Memorial Showdown Award in 2004. He is a graduate
of the FBI National Executive Institute and the Secret Service Dignitary Protection Center.
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