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The police chief of a small Oklahoma town and the entire police department resign with little explanation

The police chief of a small Oklahoma town and the entire police department resign with little explanation

The police chief and three officers who form the entire foursome Police department of the city of Geary, Oklahoma, and two of the city’s council members have resigned with little explanation.

Former Police Chief Alicia Ford did not elaborate on the specific reasons for Thursday’s firing, but wrote in a social media post that the decision was difficult.

“It is with great sadness that I and the rest of the Geary police officers will no longer serve this community,” Ford wrote, “but it was the right decision for me and the other officers.”

Ford, without elaborating, encouraged residents of the town about 50 miles northwest of the city, home to nearly a thousand people. Oklahoma City to get to know the municipal council “and to be as involved as possible in the city, especially by attending the municipal council meetings.”

Ford did not immediately return a phone message seeking comment Saturday.

A woman who answered a call Saturday to a number for Mayor Waylan Upchego said “not at this time” when a reporter asked to speak to Upchego about the resignation.

The city in a statement thanked the former chief and officers while wishing them well and said an interim police chief has been chosen and the Blaine County and Canadian County sheriffs will help patrol the city.

“We want our citizens to know that we are doing business as usual,” the statement said. “If you have an emergency, please contact 911 as usual and an officer will be dispatched to assist you.”

City council members Glen “Rocky” Coleman Jr. and Kristy Miller also announced their resignations, leaving the four-member council with just one member due to a previous vacancy.

Coleman wrote on social media that his values ​​do not align with the city’s direction and said communication between the administration and the City Council was “significantly lacking,” but provided no further explanation.

“Council members are about the last to know,” Coleman wrote. “There are often times when I don’t know anything is planned before the meeting starts.”

Miller did not immediately return a call to a number listed for her.

The city did not identify the interim chief, but JJ Stitt — who described himself as a 27-year law enforcement veteran, county deputy, member of a task force investigating Internet crimes against children and a distant cousin of Governor Kevin Stitt. – told The Oklahoman that he is interim chief.

Stitt did not return a call to a number listed for him, but told the newspaper he hopes to add agents in the coming days. He said he has “the ability” to pick up the phone and have experienced officers come to town to help.

“I’ve been in the game a long time,” Stitt said.

The resignations come more than a year after the entire police department of the small town of Goodhue, Minnesota, resigned due to low wages.