List of defunct law enforcement agencies of Massachusetts
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{{For|current Massachusetts law enforcement agencies|list of law enforcement agencies in Massachusetts}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2025}}
The following is an overview of defunct law enforcement agencies of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Three of these agencies (Registry of Motor Vehicles Division of Law Enforcement, Massachusetts Capitol Police, and the Metropolitan District Commission Police) were merged in 1992 by Chapter 412 of the Massachusetts Acts of 1991 along with the former Department of Public Safety - Division of State Police to form the current Department of State Police. All officers of the three departments became Massachusetts State Troopers at the time of the merger.
The remaining agencies have been either outright abolished/eliminated, merged with other agencies, had their duties absorbed by other agencies, or were de facto eliminated by refusal to renew the police powers of their personnel.
Blandford Police Department
In July 2018, the entire (four-person) police department of the town of Blandford, Massachusetts resigned simultaneously, citing "unsafe working conditions."{{cite web|title=Entire four-member Blandford Police Department resigns, blaming town for creating unsafe working conditions|url=https://www.masslive.com/news/2018/07/blandford_police_department_re_1.html|website=MassLive|publisher=Advance Local|access-date=2025-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230603034606/https://www.masslive.com/news/2018/07/blandford_police_department_re_1.html|archive-date=2023-06-03|quote=...we have been dealing with unsafe working conditions.}} While the town government initiated proceedings as to how the situation would be handled, the neighboring town of Chester, Massachusetts offered to assist by patrolling Blandford with Chester Police Department personnel. The Chester Police Department chief was sworn-in as the interim chief of the Blandford Police Department within months, and hired as the permanent police chief by mid-2019. The two towns began exploring joining the two forces together, officially, and by December 2019 this was accomplished. With Chester as the "lead town," the Blandford Police Department was dissolved, its assets merged into the newly re-named "Chester-Blandford Police Department." The agency would be the second dual-town police department in Massachusetts after the 2014 creation of the Hardwick-New Braintree Police Department.{{cite web|title=Last summer, an entire Massachusetts town's police force resigned. What's happening there now?|url=https://www.masslive.com/news/2019/08/last-summer-an-entire-massachusetts-towns-police-force-resigned-whats-happening-there-now.html?outputType=amp|website=MassLive|publisher=Advance Local|access-date=2025-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190805151640/https://www.masslive.com/news/2019/08/last-summer-an-entire-massachusetts-towns-police-force-resigned-whats-happening-there-now.html?outputType=amp|archive-date=2019-08-05}}{{cite web|title=Chester-Blandford Shared Police Force Sworn In|url=https://thewestfieldnews.com/chester-blandford-shared-police-force-sworn-in/|website=The Westfield News|publisher=The Westfield News|access-date=2025-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191217184339/https://thewestfieldnews.com/chester-blandford-shared-police-force-sworn-in/|archive-date=2019-12-17}}
Boston Municipal Police
Image: BostonMunicipalPolicePatch.png
The Boston Municipal Police (BMP) were founded in 1979 and were armed and sworn police officers. The BMP served as the security police agency of the City of Boston, originally under the Public Facilities Department, but later the Property Management Department. BMP personnel were responsible for law enforcement and security services on most city-owned properties and buildings (to include Boston Police Department properties and buildings). The BMP was dissolved on January 1, 2007 and replaced by the Boston Municipal Protective Services (BMPS), an unarmed security force.
As of 1 January 2007, BMPS officers initially held special police powers via the Boston Police Department's "Rule 400/400A" licensing scheme. All BMPS personnel lost such police powers due to the passage of the 2021 Massachusetts Police Reform Law and establishment of the POST Commission.{{cite web|title=Boston Police Reforms - September 2021 Community Update|url=https://www.boston.gov/news/boston-police-reforms-september-2021-community-update|website=Boston.gov|publisher=City of Boston|access-date=2025-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240926000732/https://www.boston.gov/news/boston-police-reforms-september-2021-community-update|archive-date=2024-09-26}} BMPS personnel remain under the Property Management Department and are now an unarmed, non-sworn safety, security, and property management service.
Boston School Police
Image: BostonSchoolPoliceFinalPatch.png
The Boston School Police (BSP) previously served K-12 schools as the security police agency of the Boston Public Schools. The Boston Public Schools were served by a non-sworn "safety and security" force until the BSP’s official establishment in 1982.{{cite news |last=Zhao |first=Amy |date=November 11, 2021 |title=Boston School Surveillance |newspaper=The Harvard Crimson |publisher=The Harvard Crimson, Inc. |url=https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2021/11/11/boston-school-surveillance/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211111171422/https://www.thecrimson.com/article/2021/11/11/boston-school-surveillance/ |archive-date=November 11, 2021 |access-date=January 8, 2025}} Like the Boston Municipal Protective Services post-merger, BSP personnel held police powers under the Boston Police Department’s "Rule 400 and 400A" special police officer licensing scheme. BSP officers were always unarmed. BSP officers lost their police powers effective July 1, 2021, when the Boston Police Department declined to renew their special police licenses under the auspices of the Massachusetts Police Reform Act and newly-created POST Commission. The Boston Public Schools, faced with the prospect of a non-sworn, unarmed "police" agency, transitioned the BSP into the "Office of Safety Services," (OSS) effective July 1, 2021; The OSS manages safety and security issues across the Public Schools system via unarmed and non-sworn safety and security officers, crossing guards, etc. The OSS is supplemented, where and when needed, by armed and sworn Boston Police school resource officers.{{cite news |last=Daniel |first=Seth |date=July 15, 2021 |title=Boston School Police Quietly Phased Out from All BPS Schools |newspaper=The Boston Sun |publisher=The Independent Newspaper Group |url=https://thebostonsun.com/2021/07/15/boston-school-police-quietly-phased-out-from-all-bps-schools/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210715171422/https://thebostonsun.com/2021/07/15/boston-school-police-quietly-phased-out-from-all-bps-schools/ |archive-date=July 15, 2021 |access-date=January 8, 2025}} As of 2023, the Boston Public Schools had advised the mayor of Boston that re-creating their own, stand-alone law enforcement agency should be considered. As of {{currentyear}}, this recommendation has not been acted-upon.{{cite news|last=Thornton|first=Claire|title=Boston public schools officials consider creating their own police force|url=https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2023/01/20/boston-public-schools-police-force-report-recommendation/11089774002/|work=USA TODAY|date=January 20, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230120123045/https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2023/01/20/boston-public-schools-police-force-report-recommendation/11089774002/|archive-date=January 20, 2023}}
Department of Public Safety - Division of State Police
This is the former statewide police department for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, which was founded in 1865; the M.D.C. Police, Registry of Motor Vehicles Police, and Capitol Police merged with this department to form the new Department of State Police in 1992. Prior to being known as the Massachusetts State Police, from 1865 to 1879 the agency was known as the "Massachusetts State Constabulary," or simply the "Massachusetts Constabulary." From 1879 to 1919 it was known as the "Special District Police of Massachusetts." From 1919 the agency assumed its current name, the "Massachusetts State Police."{{cite web|author=Downey, Brian|title=Officer Profile on Antietam AOTW|url=https://antietam.aotw.org/officers.php?officer_id=1157|website=Antietam on the Web|publisher=Antietam on the Web|access-date=2025-01-12|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240813084405/https://antietam.aotw.org/officers.php?officer_id=1157#note_2_ref|archive-date=2024-08-13}}
Massachusetts Capitol Police
The Massachusetts Capitol Police (MCP) functioned as the security police force of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, providing security and law enforcement services to the Massachusetts state capitol complex in Boston, Massachusetts as well as the grounds around it, in addition to any other state properties the Commonwealth assigned to the MCP. MCP officers were armed and fully-sworn police officers throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The MCP provided vehicle cruiser, motorcycle and traffic patrols, criminal investigations and executive protection services. In 1992, the MCP was amalgamated into the Massachusetts State Police, with personnel either leaving or becoming Massachusetts Sate Troopers. As of 2019, two former MCP officers remained with the Massachusetts State Police, though both retired within the following years.{{cite press release |url=https://www.facebook.com/MassStatePolice/posts/roots-run-deep-in-the-massachusetts-state-police-trooper-vern-hubbard-left-of-th/3211596192257675/ |title=Roots run deep in the Massachusetts State Police. |author=Massachusetts State Police |location=Boston, Massachusetts |publisher=Commonwealth of Massachusetts |agency=Facebook |date=2020-08-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240918074402/https://www.facebook.com/MassStatePolice/posts/roots-run-deep-in-the-massachusetts-state-police-trooper-vern-hubbard-left-of-th/3211596192257675/ |archive-date=2024-09-18 |quote=Trooper Vern Hubbard (left) of the Marine Unit and Trooper Lionel Davis of State Police-Logan Airport, two very hard-working Troopers, have a long history of proud service that dates back prior to the 1992 merger of several other state law enforcement agencies into the MSP. Trooper Hubbard and Trooper Davis (seen here in a 2019 photo) are the last two MSP Troopers who previously served in the Capitol Police, one of the agencies that was merged into the MSP. They continue to be as squared-away today as they were back in the day and are fine mentors to younger Troopers, and we are grateful for their service. }}
Massachusetts Convention Center Authority Police
The Massachusetts Convention Center Authority Police Department was formed during the creation of the authority in 1982. The department patrolled the Convention Center Authority owned property including the John B. Hynes Convention Center. The department was disbanded with the opening of the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center in 2004 and contracted security guards were hired to patrol properties. The contracted guards were replaced by the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority Public Safety Department in 2010.
Metropolitan District Commission Police
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Image:Massachusettes Metropolitan Police.jpg
The Metropolitan District Commission's (MDC’s) police department; the MDC Police was formed in 1893. The MDC Police had the primary jurisdiction of law enforcement on all MDC controlled properties, roadways and all Massachusetts Water Resources Authority (MWRA) facilities, Reservoirs and Watersheds. Additionally, the MDC Police had patrol jurisdiction on US Route 1 in Chelsea and Revere, Interstate 93 in Boston and Milton (Central Artery and the Southeast Expressway). MDC Police also had full jurisdiction in cities and towns wherever there were MDC facilities or property.
MDC Police were the third largest police agency in New England with over six hundred officers working primarily throughout Metropolitan Boston. They were commonly referred to as The Mets. In addition to patrol functions The Mets provided tactical assistance to area cities and towns in the form of regional SWAT teams, the Marine Unit and tactical operations units. Examples include Tactical Officers assigned to the city of Boston during court ordered school desegregation, assignment as the primary security agency for the Department of State with the responsibility of providing security and escorts for visiting dignitaries and annual assignments to assist cities and towns during the Boston Marathon.
Image:Metropolitan_District_Commission_policemen_stopping_a_car_diver_in_Cambridge.jpg
MDC Police also maintained a full-service detective unit to investigate crimes on its primary jurisdiction as well as providing Detectives and undercover agents to area cities and towns, area Drug Task Forces, the (state) Governor's Auto Theft Strike Force, the DEA Boston Drug Task Force, the Secret Service and the FBI.
The last chief of the MDC Police was former Boston Police Commissioner William J. Bratton, who later was NYPD Commissioner and Los Angeles Police Department chief.
The following current Massachusetts State Police Barracks were MDC Police districts:
{{plainlist|
- · MSP Barracks A4 − Medford (Middlesex Fells MDC District)
- · MSP Barracks A5 − Revere (Revere Beach MDC District)
- · MSP Barracks H4 − Boston (Lower Basin MDC District)
- · MSP Barracks H5 − Brighton (Upper Basin MDC District)
- · MSP Barracks H6 − South Boston (Old Colony MDC District)
- · MSP Barracks H7 − Milton (Blue Hills MDC District)
- · MSP Barracks C7 − Belchertown (Quabbin MDC District)
}}
Additionally, the following State Police Units are based out of former MDC Police facilities:
{{plainlist|
}}
The following former MDC police stations were closed within the first few years of the consolidation/merger:
{{plainlist|
- · Wachusett District (Wachusett and Sudbury Reservoirs and watersheds)
- · Nantasket Beach District (Nantasket Beach, Hull)
- · Nahant Beach Substation (Nahant Beach, Nahant)
- · Mounted Unit Stables (Stoneham and Milton)
}}
Massachusetts Parking Authority Police
Image: Massachusetts Parking Authority Police patch.png
The Massachusetts Parking Authority Police patrolled the Boston Common Garage, Charles Street and parts of the Boston Common, from 1975 until the Parking Authority was disbanded and the garage turned over to the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority in 1982. The agency was absorbed by the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority Police (itself created in 1982 and disbanded in 2004).{{cite news |last=Joe |first=Battenfeld |url=https://www.bostonherald.com/2024/09/26/battenfeld-eliminate-scandal-scarred-state-police-and-replace-it-with-civilian-led-force/ |title=Battenfeld: Eliminate scandal-scarred state police and replace it with civilian-led force |work=Boston Herald |publisher=Digital First Media |date=2024-09-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241002111211/https://www.bostonherald.com/2024/09/26/battenfeld-eliminate-scandal-scarred-state-police-and-replace-it-with-civilian-led-force/ |archive-date=2024-10-02 |quote=There was even a Massachusetts Parking Authority Police, which was disbanded in 1982. }}
Registry of Motor Vehicles Division of Law Enforcement
Image:Massachusettes State Registry of Motor Vehicles Police.jpg
The Registry Police had the primary function of enforcing motor vehicle safety laws statewide, drivers license testing, crash investigation, enforcing laws & regulations on Registry property, and commercial vehicle inspection, although that had full police powers statewide.
Inspectors of the Registry Police were unique in the fact that as Registry employees they were able to suspend an operator's license on the roadside.
The Registry Police Statewide HQ was located at 100 Nashua St., Boston.
Massachusetts Department of Developmental Services Police
The Massachusetts Department of Developmental Services (DDS) Police patrolled properties operated by DDS such as the Wrentham Developmental Center in Wrentham, Massachusetts. Select personnel were sworn as "special state police officers."{{cite web |title=Massachusetts General Law, Part I, Title II, Chapter 22C, Section 59 |url=https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleII/Chapter22c/Section59 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250220071817/https://malegislature.gov/Laws/GeneralLaws/PartI/TitleII/Chapter22c/Section59 |archive-date=2025-02-20 |quote=The colonel may, upon petition of the commissioner of mental health or the commissioner of developmental services, appoint as special state police officers employees of the department of mental health or the department of developmental services or employees of various institutions under the respective jurisdictions of said departments, who shall have the same power to make arrests as the state police for any criminal offense committed in or upon lands or structures within the charge of said departments or of the various institutions under the respective jurisdictions of said departments.}} DDS Police personnel carried most standard law enforcement equipment but did not carry firearms. Rather than comply with the new standards set by the 2020 "Massachusetts Police Reform Law," the DDS and its parent agency, the Executive Office of Health and Humans Services, elected to disband the DDS Police, replacing them with non-sworn, un-armed security personnel, despite the Massachusetts POST Commission exempting the DDS Police from the new law.{{cite report |title=CONSTRUCTION OF SCOPE OF CHAPTER 6E OF THE MASSACHUSETTS GENERAL LAWS |author=MASSACHUSETTS PEACE OFFICER STANDARDS AND TRAINING COMMISSION |publisher=MASSACHUSETTS PEACE OFFICER STANDARDS AND TRAINING COMMISSION, Commonwealth of Massachusetts |date=2022-04-04 |location=Boston, MA, USA |url=https://399759da.delivery.rocketcdn.me/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Construction-of-Scope-of-Chapter-6E-Approved-April-4-2022.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250216193844/https://399759da.delivery.rocketcdn.me/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Construction-of-Scope-of-Chapter-6E-Approved-April-4-2022.pdf |archive-date=2025-02-16 |page=5 |quote=Individuals not subject to the statute... Special State Police officers who derive their powers from a section of M.G.L. c. 22C other than § 58 and 63, including: ...Public Health Department employees serving under § 60... Mental health or developmental services department employees serving under § 59... Soldiers' home employees serving under § 62.}}
Massachusetts Department of Mental Health Police
The Massachusetts Department of Mental Health (DMH) Police patrolled properties operated by DMH such as the Worcester Recovery Center and Hospital, Massachusetts Mental Health Center, Bridgewater State Hospital, and the Dr. Solomon Carter Mental Health Center. Select personnel were sworn as "special state police officers." DMH Police personnel carried most standard law enforcement equipment but did not carry firearms. Rather than comply with the new standards set by the 2020 "Massachusetts Police Reform Law," the DMH and its parent agency, the Executive Office of Health and Humans Services, elected to disband the DMH Police, replacing them with non-sworn, un-armed security personnel, despite the Massachusetts POST Commission exempting the DMH Police from the new law.
Massachusetts Department of Mental Retardation Police
The Massachusetts Department of Mental Retardation (DMR) Police patrolled properties operated by DMR such as the Walter E. Fernald Developmental Center in Waltham, Massachusetts. Select personnel were sworn as "special state police officers." DMR Police personnel carried most standard law enforcement equipment but did not carry firearms. The DMR was re-named to the Massachusetts Department of Developmental Services around 2007, with the DMR Police becoming the DDS Police.
New Braintree Police Department
The formerly-independent police department of New Braintree, Massachusetts was absorbed by the neighboring police department of Hardwick, Massachusetts, effective July 1, 2014. The Hardwick Police Department was re-designated the Hardwick-New Braintree Police Department. The final New Braintree Police Department chief retired immediately prior to the merger. As of {{currentyear}}, the Hardwick-New Braintree Police Department and the Chester-Blandford Police Department are the only (municipal) law enforcement agencies to serve two towns in Massachusetts. The Hardwick-New Braintree Police Department was the first dual-town agency in Massachusetts.{{cite web|title=Hardwick, New Braintree sharing police chief|url=https://www.telegram.com/story/news/local/north/2014/08/21/hardwick-new-braintree-sharing-police/36624710007/|website=Telegram & Gazette|publisher=GateHouse Media|access-date=2025-01-12|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20240828002731/https://eu.telegram.com/story/news/local/north/2014/08/21/hardwick-new-braintree-sharing-police/36624710007/|archive-date=2024-08-28}}
Worcester Airport Police
The Worcester Airport Police patrolled the grounds Worcester Regional Airport. The department was unique in that in provided both law enforcement and firefighting services to the airport. Unique among Massachusetts law enforcement, officers of the Worcester Airport Police were required to be certified as Massachusetts "special state police officers" as well as firefighters. The Worcester Airport Police were disbanded some time after the 1 July 2010 Massachusetts Port Authority-takeover of the airport. Police services at the airport are now covered by the Massachusetts State Police and the Massachusetts Port Authority Police. Firefighting services are covered by the Massachusetts Port Authority Fire Rescue.
Soldiers' Home Police
Image:MassachusettsSoldiersHomePolicePatch.jpgThe Soldiers' Homes (now known as "Veterans' Homes") in Holyoke and Chelsea, Massachusetts, were both patrolled by dedicated security police departments. Soldiers' Home Police officers were sworn as "special state police officers." Both agencies were disbanded in 2024 due to the Massachusetts Police Reform Law, despite Soldiers' Home special state police officers being exempted from the new law, and the Veterans' Homes are now patrolled by unarmed, non-sworn security guards with assistance from relevant local law enforcement when necessary.
Others
- Holyoke Medical Center Security (select personnel were formerly sworn as SSPOs; as per 2021's Massachusetts Police Reform Law, Holyoke Medical Center declined to comply with the new standards required to obtain SSPO licensure)
- Springfield Park Rangers
- Worcester Housing Authority Police
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [https://archive.today/20121228003134/http://home.comcast.net/~mmrubino/site/ M.D.C. Police / Massachusetts Metropolitan Police History and Photos]
- [http://mysite.verizon.net/vzeopzls/policecars/index.html French and Electric Blue Pictures of the Men and Women who served with the Boston Police, Metropolitan District Commission Police Department, Capital Police and Registry Police Departments]
- [http://archives.lib.state.ma.us/actsResolves/1991/1991acts0412.pdf Massachusetts Acts of 1991 Chapter 412 - "An Act to Consolidate Certain Police Forces in the Commonwealth"]
- [http://www.statetrooperplates.com/massachusetts.html Historic Massachusetts government license plates and history]
{{Capitol police}}
{{Military and Police Auxiliary Organizations within the United States}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Defunct law enforcement agencies of Massachusetts}}
Category:Law enforcement agencies of Massachusetts
Category:Defunct organizations based in Massachusetts