Princeton Police Department awarded reaccreditation

Date:

Share post:

The Princeton Police Department has been reaccredited by the New Jersey State Association of Chiefs of Police.

The Princeton Police Department gained its initial accreditation in 2014, and was reaccredited in 2017 and 2020. Accreditation is valid for three years.

- Advertisement -

Police Chief Jon Bucchere was pleased with the reaccreditation news, following a visit from the New Jersey State Association of Chiefs of Police assessment team in April.

When the former Princeton Borough and former Princeton Township police departments were merged, one of then-Police Chief Nicholas Sutter’s top priorities was to become an accredited agency, Bucchere said.

“We were first accredited in 2014 and we have been building on it ever since,” Bucchere said. “Accreditation is one of the highest forms of recognition of law enforcement professional excellence.”

The police chief praised accreditation manager Lt. Matthew Solovay for preparing the Princeton Police Department for reaccreditation.

“Lt. Solovay’s time management skills and attention to detail were simply outstanding,” he said. “His leadership was instrumental in our receiving this achievement.”

The New Jersey State Association of Chiefs of Police’s assessment team visited the Princeton Police Department in April. The team reviewed written material and interviewed police department employees. They visited offices and other places where compliance with state standards could be observed.

Comments on the Princeton Police Department’s performance were solicited from employees and the public.

The assessment team brought back its review of the police department to the full commission to decide whether or not it should be granted accredited status.

Verification by the assessment team that the Princeton Police Department met the commission’s “best practices” standard was part of a voluntary process to remain an accredited police department, Bucchere said.

Accreditation results in greater accountability within the police department, reduced risk and liability exposure and stronger defenses against civil lawsuits, he said.

It also results in increased community advocacy and more confidence in the police department’s ability to operate efficiently and respond to community needs, Bucchere said.

Stay Connected

1,436FansLike
7,706FollowersFollow

Current Issue

Latest News

Related articles

Sponsored: Could You Be at Risk for Breast Cancer?

When actress Olivia Munn revealed in March that a breast cancer risk assessment started a path to her...

Hit the ‘trail’ and learn about New Jersey’s Black history

by Jay Watson, Co-Executive Director, New Jersey Conservation Foundation James Still always wanted to become a doctor, but as...

Common calendar, Packet papers, May 31

Burlington, Mercer, Middlesex, and Somerset counties New Jersey Blood Services (NJBS), a division of New York Blood Center, which...

Protesters disrupt Princeton University alumni festivities

Pro-Palestinian/anti-Israel protesters were true to the word that they would "see you at Reunions" when they briefly held...